Some workers could gain a plethora of workplace rights, from paid sick time and overtime to unemployment insurance.
The White House laid out guidelines for data intelligence activities to comply with European privacy law. Experts are skeptical it goes far enough.
An investigation determined that explosions were set off near the two, adjacent pipelines.
The White House's non-binding recommendations rely on developers' “proactive and continuous measures” to address algorithmic discrimination.
Who’s blasting out dubious articles blaming renewable energy for Texas' power grid woes? Several indicators strongly suggest it’s the tech-savvy Brad Parscale.
Climate disasters aren't political, and the conversation around them needs to change.
As of 2021, 19 states and territories have at least 35% of their residents living with obesity—more than double the number in 2018.
The EPA now calls PFAS 'hazardous substances,' but these chemicals widely contaminate our homes, workplaces, and bodies.
The new citizenship comes nearly a decade after Snowden blew the lid on the NSA's vast domestic and international spying apparatus.
A report finds per-acre revenue from offshore wind blows oil and gas out of the water.
There are now more than 18 million cancer survivors in the U.S., but many challenges remain in prevention, detection, and treatment.
The agency permits thousands of its employees to search database of Americans' cell phone info “for any reason,” Sen. Ron Wyden said in a letter.
Berkeley Professor Hany Farid writes that the arguments in favor of California's new children's privacy legislation are "clear and uncontroversial."
In addition to the penalty, Juul will agree to cease marketing to people under the age of 35 and no longer recruit influencers to help push its products
And in the same interview, he mentioned how he doesn’t seem to like working on Facebook much at all, and also revealed details of a new VR headset.
This new view of the cosmos is even larger than Webb's previous deep field image.
The country's top public health official is retiring in December after decades of helping to manage major disease outbreaks, including the covid-19 pandemic.
The House approved a little-discussed budget amendment requiring the Pentagon to make its data purchases public. Now the Senate will decide its fate.
From gene therapies to generics, many treatments in the U.S. carry an outrageous sticker price.
The FDA's finalized regulations will allow hearing aids to be sold without a prescription in U.S. stores as early as mid-October.
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