The best of the BBC's business, money and personal finance coverage.
Shares in the video game retailer surge after an account tied to "Roaring Kitty" claimed a large stake.
The fast fashion firm has been linked to unethical practices, including claims of forced labour.
The Canadian government is pushing hard for cities to build more "fourplex" apartment blocks.
Their data is being sold online by the same gang who this week claimed to have hacked Ticketmaster.
Its appointment booking software is everywhere in France, but Doctolib has struggled to make a dent elsewhere.
The New York Times, Wordle's owner, accuses similarly-named geography game of "creating confusion."
The company will emerge from bankruptcy smaller and with less debt.
US and EU crime agencies make arrests after suspects used information for fraud and bomb threats.
The airline is investigating after a lawsuit was filed saying all black men were temporarily removed from a flight.
How AI tools are helping people with neurodiversity live their lives.
Abercrombie & Fitch is enjoying its strongest growth streak in more than a decade.
The £39bn mega-merger between the two international mining giants collapses after a frantic back and forth.
This probably caused injuries to those without seatbelts, who rose out of their seats and fell back down.
A full-scale strike at the firm could have an impact on the global supply chains of electronics.
Ryan Salame is one of four former top bosses from Sam Bankman-Fried's firms to plead guilty to charges.
Adam Neumann had proposed to buy WeWork after it declared bankruptcy last year.
Latest generation of products not becoming part of people’s "routine internet use", researchers say.
The messaging app's boss has taken to social media to deny Mr Musk's claim it "exports user data."
Officials in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu are using AI to monitor elephant movement on rail tracks.