
Defence Force highlights online dangers
The Defence Force has issued a handbook to personnel with guidelines on how to use social networking sites.
The Defence Force has issued a handbook to personnel with guidelines on how to use social networking sites.
Alcohol advertising is so seamlessly blended into social media and smartphone technology that government will struggle to regulate it, a researcher says.
Kiwis bantered their way through this year's census, questioning the questions and suggesting their own:
New Zealand consumers are outpacing those in the rest of the world in terms of the uptake of American burger brand Carl's Jr, according to the global boss of the business.
Police have developed a specialist software tool which mines social media for information.
You can tune in to the Oscars. Or you can watch them with the peanut gallery on Twitter.
Gamers rejoice - PlayStation 4 is coming, writes Troy Rawhiti-Forbes. Sony's announcement yesterday confirmed some existing rumours and rubbished others, and new ones have arisen ahead of an expected launch at the end of the year.
A 20-year-old man has been arrested after allegedly using fake Facebook profiles to send inappropriate messages to at least two young teenage girls.
A pair of contestants have been subjected to racist abuse and death threats after appearing on the Australian reality TV show My Kitchen Rules.
More than 60 per cent of New Zealanders believe they're paying too much for broadband, a new survey that examines our online habits shows.
A University of Canterbury journalism expert has slammed TVNZ’s Seven Sharp programme, saying it lacks depth and drive.
TV blogger Paul Casserly says the battle for supremacy in the 7pm current affairs slot was no contest.
TV presenter Rachel Smalley is on a crusade to remove photos of herself and other New Zealand stars from weight-loss adverts on Facebook that they did not endorse.
Sensible Sentencing Trust spokesman Garth McVicar is standing by his claim that legalising gay marriage could increase crime, despite a backlash on social media.
The book that had 1990s women playing it cool has a new look. Look out, boys, says Harriet Walker
The fall in the number of UK Facebook users had led many to speculate that Facebook has hit a saturation point in developed markets like the UK and could be going backwards.
Earlier this year the Herald compiled a list of 50 top tweeters. We asked some who they follow - this is what they said.
The debate around the level of tax paid by multinational corporations, and where they pay them, has morphed into a drama involving protagonists.