Reports of the sudden surge in unexpected braking from Tesla owners come just days after a recall involving Teslas rolling through stop signs.
Officer Derin DeVuono's spouse, Julie DeVuono, allegedly forged vaccine credentials for $220 a pop for adults and $80 for kids.
The activist claims they were targeted five times between April and August of last year.
Trump's site markets itself as a free-speech haven, but will rely on automated tools to keep the site "family-friendly."
The D.C. and Texas lawsuits allege the "deceptive and unfair" practices may have violated local laws.
Nick Tran hadn't even been at TikTok for two years before being ushered out.
You will have to submit sensitive government documents, your Social Security number, credit history, and a face scan to ID.me, a third-party company.
The streaming service's most popular podcaster is apparently above the company's rules.
The "mechanical eyeball 100" features human-like features and can be jammed into an animatronic robot head.
Digital Rights group Access Now claims this marked the most “persistent and intensive” known use of Pegasus to target journalists to date.
The researcher claims he can remotely run commands on the affected vehicles without their owners ever knowing.
This is the first time a retail investor has been able to force Robinhood to pay up over its infamous January 2021 halts on meme stock trading.
The news comes just a day after the two companies announced plans to roll out the tech this week.
The recall affects 356,309 Model 3 sedans and 119,009 Model S vehicles.
The agreement will see Rumble provide infrastructure and video sharing for Trump's Twitter clone and upcoming streaming platform.
Just keep repeating: It doesn't work. It doesn't work. It doesn't work.
Donald Trump Jr. and Fox News hosts including Sean Hannity sent text messages to the White House begging Trump to stop the Jan. 6 riot.
A Justice Department said a prior court ruling did not legally compel the administration to lease parts of the Gulf of Mexico for oil and gas drilling.
Bitcoin's blockchain appears to be the newest tool that cybercriminals are using to make their botnets incredibly resilient.
In the past decade, newspapers have seen their resources shrink to nothing as the likes of Google suck up advertising revenue. Now they're suing.