In Pictures: Inside a thriving Shenzhen market for used iPhones
Some iPhones never die: they go to a four-story electronics mall in Shenzen, where stacks of them are sold every day.
Some iPhones never die: they go to a four-story electronics mall in Shenzen, where stacks of them are sold every day.
China is threatening to block companies from selling IT products in the nation if they fail to pass a new "cybersecurity vetting system" meant to weed out secret spying and surveillance activities.
A new initiative to encourage Chinese computer science students to study in New Zealand has won funding from the International Education Growth Fund held by Education New Zealand.
We recap the biggest security news from this past year
HP CEO Meg Whitman stressed her company’s future viability as HP tried to win Chinese business customers at an event in Beijing.
Lenovo's profit in its fiscal third quarter ended Dec. 31 grew 54 percent year-over-year, as the company saw growth in many key markets.
New Zealand exports to China in the last two years have grown faster than to any other nation over the same period in this country’s trading history. Since the signing of the Free Trade Ageement between the two countries in 2008, exports to China have grown 143 percent and between October 2008 and August 2011 were worth $5.6 billion.
Dell opened a datacentre in Shanghai this week to host public and private clouds and to provide customers with off-premise application and storage services, the company said on Wednesday.
After five days of waiting, Google is still in the dark about whether the company's operating license in China will be renewed.
China flexed its computing muscle with a supercomputer called Nebulae, rocketing to second place on the biannual Top500 list, which ranks the most powerful computers in the world.
Apple appears to have tweaked its iPhone to support a Chinese security protocol for wireless networks, as companies increasingly adopt Chinese government-backed technologies to break into the country's huge market.
The massive number of Chinese internet users running no antivirus software increased last year, a survey showed, even though online security risks continued to multiply in the country.
For the second time in two weeks, bad networking information spreading from China has disrupted the Internet.
The email accounts of eight foreign journalists working in China and Taiwan were hacked recently, leading Yahoo to suspend several of the accounts last week, the Foreign Correspondent's Club of China (FCCC) said Wednesday.
A China-based root DNS server associated with networking problems in Chile and the U.S. has been disconnected from the Internet.