Drew Chapin Calls BS on Popular SEO Tools
The online reputation firm founder just released a free toolkit and says the subscription model is about to collapse.
The latest technology coverage from San Francisco and the Bay Area.
The online reputation firm founder just released a free toolkit and says the subscription model is about to collapse.
A wave of startups is betting that designers need operations software, not more creative tools. The category barely existed two years ago. Now it has real money behind it.
The Sacramento Bee's AI-powered bots are publishing false earthquake and wildfire reports, raising serious questions about automated journalism accuracy.
Figure AI's Figure 03 robot walked alongside Melania Trump at a White House education summit, marking the first humanoid robot appearance there.
A federal judge dismissed Annie Altman's abuse lawsuit against Sam Altman on procedural grounds, while approving his defamation countersuit against her.
A San Francisco rider spent six minutes trapped in a Waymo while a man attacked the car. Here's what Waymo did—and didn't do—to help.
Meta is planning to cut roughly 16,000 jobs—about 20% of its workforce—to offset rising costs tied to its massive artificial intelligence investments.
Wastewater data reveals a regional norovirus surge hitting San Francisco, Marin County, and Silicon Valley. Here's what you need to know to stay safe.
While nearly every industry has embraced digital procurement tools, laboratory supply chains have remained stubbornly analog — until now. A wave of lab management platforms is finally modernizing how research teams source, order, and track supplies.
Meta is buying Moltbook, a Reddit-style social network for AI agents, while OpenAI hires one of its developers in a major AI industry shakeup.
Bay Area fintech companies are moving toward decentralized KYC as breach costs mount, drawing on cryptographic research developed at Bay Area institutions over the past decade.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong deliberately spoke prediction market trigger words during the company's Q3 earnings call, moving $84,000 in bets on Kalshi and Polymarket. The stunt drew sharp criticism from the crypto industry's own leaders and raised fresh questions about prediction market integrity.