SpaceX's new satellites allowed some people in areas effected by hurricanes to send text messages earlier this year, now it will begin expanding the service commercially.
The court will seek to determine whether qualifying rural communities should receive federally funded internet access.
But that doesn’t mean the Patent Office isn’t using AI, quite the opposite.
Brendan Carr has been auditioning to run the FCC since 2017. He wants to rewrite Section 230, give money to Elon Musk, and supports punishing TV stations on behalf of his boss.
Trump’s pick for Attorney General has a long history of going after tech companies and supporting FTC Chair Lisa Khan.
Privacy advocates, human rights groups, and multinational technology companies have all said the U.N.'s new cybercrime convention is a disaster waiting to happen.
During the pandemic, Lyft told drivers in some cities that they could make over $40 per hour. The Justice Department argued only the most hardcore drivers would make that much.
We're still having this conversation?
If she wins in November, there are indicators that Harris will keep the controversial FTC head, a new report claims.
Subscription providers will be required to inform customers what they're signing up for, obtain customer consent, and provide clear mechanisms to cancel.
Your local movie theater is about to get a whole lot nicer.
French police detained the messaging app's billionaire CEO at the Paris–Le Bourget Airport on Saturday night, per local reports.
You have to imagine the future as a dead-eyed puppet imitating your favorite content creator and spamming your feed, forever.
The new tool from a former Google engineer is designed to supercharge privacy violation lawsuits.
Another state finds itself with fewer porn options.
The lead architect of Project 2025 recently declared a 'second American Revolution' was coming.
The court has done a bang up job so far this year.
That last state you'd think to pass a porn site age verification law is getting close to doing just that.
The social video platform says the law is unconstitutional.
The open internet is, once again, protected from corporations.
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