"It's unacceptable that these policies were advanced in the first place."
It sounds like only Trump voters would be eligible for Hawley's theoretical rebate.
A laptop will cost you more today, but maybe one day you'll get a check in the mail.
Attorneys of the families have also asked the government to fine the company $24 billion.
Legislation regulating the use of a person's likeness in computer-generated imagery has been introduced, following the Taylor Swift deepfake debacle.
Senators accused the CEO of sex trafficking and bullied him into apologizing to users, but at least Zuckerberg has a new lewk to brag about.
A bill in the Senate would bar the likes of OpenAI from legal immunity in regards to the content its products produce.
Montana’s first-of-its-kind TikTok ban suffers a major legal blow.
Prominent Republican lawmakers jumped on shoddy analyses appearing to show overwhelming pro-Palestinian bias on TikTok. The truth is more complicated.
Musk biographer Walter Isaacson says Elon is on a mission to create AGI. Plus: potential storm clouds on the robotaxi horizon.
Through the "No Section 230 Immunity for AI Act", Josh Hawley and Richard Blumenthal hope to hold AI companies accountable for their creations' creations.
Two Harvard professors imagine a political campaign in a black box and how it might subvert the will of voters.
Sam Altman said he supported the formation of a regulatory body for AI. Sen. Marsha Blackburn was more concerned with a deepfaked Garth Brooks.
Sam Altman tried to convince skeptical lawmakers to pursue light-handed AI reforms that give OpenAI room to stay ahead of competitors.
For better or worse, a national TikTok ban looks more likely than ever. All the failed bills of the past offer competing visions of how that could happen.
The dramatically named AMERICA Act would prohibit big companies from owning multiple parts of the digital ad ecosystem.
The Kentucky Senator called Republicans hypocrites for trying to "censor" the app and said doing so would be politically disastrous.
As Congress pushed around TikTok CEO Shou Chew, one representative played a video that threatened the committee, and Chew tacitly said the app sells user data.
The probable presidential candidate said Big Tech was worse than Gilded Age monopolies, a surprising echo of the Justice Department's top antitrust enforcers.
TikTok has a new tack ahead of its CEO getting grilled in Congress: arguing the app is vital to 150 million Americans' free speech and their business.