Social media apps have long been accused of being harmful to children. Now those claims will come before a jury for the first time in a trial kicking off Tuesday in a Los Angeles courtroom. A key ...
The new Pew report also found that two-thirds of teens said they had used an A.I. chatbot. By Catherine Pearson Most American teenagers use YouTube and TikTok daily, according to a report released ...
While it is difficult to quantify the influencers' impact on the debate, immigration is a top election issue for voters and a central plank of Trump's campaign to reclaim the presidency.
Five-months pregnant and lugging a heavy backpack through a lawless stretch of Colombian rainforest, a migrant woman from Angola says "no" for a second time to the jungle porter offering to carry her bag for $20.
If former Vice President Joe Biden wins the race for the U.S. president, his promises to change Corporate America range from more strict regulation on auto emissions to helping lower prices for prescription medicine.
For a sign of how the internet has changed the way consumers shop for clothes, consider the “Shein haul.” It’s a social media happening where customers of the eponymous retail app shake out a big box of low-priced goods and sift through the contents. Some items are keepers; some are not. The element of surprise is arguably a thrill for fashionistas. For investors trying to work out whether Shein is worth around $50 billion or potentially quadruple that, the uncertainty is less welcome.
Attorneys at Reed Smith LLP examine whether first-party cyber and media insurance policies can provide meaningful coverage for music artists harmed by AI-generated deepfakes that misappropriate their voices and likenesses.
If U.S. President Donald Trump secures a second term in the White House, look for an auto emissions battle with California, a bid to downsize Big Tech and more strong audience ratings for cable news.
A Liberian-flagged oil tanker set sail in May from Russia's Ust-Luga port carrying crude on behalf of a little-known trading company based in Hong Kong. Before the ship had even reached its destination in India, the cargo changed hands.
During his four years as president, Democrat Joe Biden experienced a sustained series of defeats at the U.S. Supreme Court, whose ascendant conservative majority blew holes in his agenda and dashed precedents long cherished by American liberals.
David McCombs and Jonathan Bowser of Haynes Boone examine the USPTO director's restoration of strict real party-in-interest requirements for inter partes reviews and the national security concerns around the policy shift.
Ki Hong, Tyler Rosen and Aanchal Chugh of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP discuss the use of artificial intelligence to create deepfakes in politics and the limits and prospects of laws and regulations to address deepfakes.
Sol remembers her first kill for a Mexican cartel: a kidnapping she committed with a handful of other young recruits that twisted into torture and bled into murder. She was 12 years old.
The ChatGPT maker plans to burn an immense $115 bln by 2029, defying the usual startup profit path. The splurge has a certain crazed logic. Boss Sam Altman can juice more revenue from users, while only the threat of vast scale can squeeze costs – provided the funds keep flowing.
Taiwan's outgoing President Tsai Ing-wen plans to flee in a U.S. plane if war erupts with China, according to an unsubstantiated report first published in 2021 and echoed in the run-up to the island's January 2024 general election.
Contentious new Indian security rules require manufacturers of CCTV cameras to submit hardware, software and source code for assessment in government labs.
Investigators suspect a pastor's coffin broken on the rocky road home to his burial ceremony was one of the earliest super-spreader events in Congo's mushrooming Ebola epidemic.
Reuters followed the fortunes of a group of raw recruits who enlisted in the spring as part of Ukraine’s drive to refresh its depleted ranks. None of them are still fighting.
The Hong Kong-born writer reflects on how ordinary users navigate China’s shifting online landscape — and what their stories reveal about the myths both China and the U.S. project onto each other.
Sara H. Jodka of Dickinson Wright PLLC discusses how the rise of AI Barbie offers a case study of what happens when pop culture, technology, and the law collide.