CEO Brian Chesky described the "displacement and resettlement" of Afghan refugees as "one of the biggest humanitarian crises of our time."
A group using the name AppleToo claims that the company has repeatedly squashed efforts to survey coworkers.
A study of patients in California found that most completed their treatments without any follow-up care and no major adverse events.
A recent study found that acceptance of evolution among Americans has increased, even among religious fundamentalists.
Assuming health agencies sign off on it, the first doses are expected to go out by September 20.
The Phase I trial is expected to involve 56 healthy volunteers without HIV.
You might not remember it, but the app garnered a fair share of controversy before being shut down.
“It is not cut and dry. The science is far weaker than most admit.”
The update comes three years after the platform put up similar terms for its employees.
Census data shows a country moving out of locales most insulated from climate change and into the most climate-threatened regions.
The new research suggests Denisovans—a sister group to the Neanderthals—occupied the islands of southeast Asia prior to the arrival of modern humans.
The company defended its new terms by saying they were only meant to "facilitate a vibrant family history community."
Doximity is reportedly full of false claims posted by physicians stating that covid-19 vaccines are experimental, unproven, or deadly.
Across most metrics of health care, the U.S. ranked last compared to 10 other high-income countries.
This tech might help in cracking down on child pornography, but it can also be misused.
The guilt-inducing tactic has taken on a new urgency during the country's current case surge.
The shutdown affects the Lazio region, which includes the city of Rome.
He wants to release his cut of Warner Bros. Suicide Squad . #ReleasetheAyercut was circulating a while ago.
Amazon could pay roughly 4% of its 2020 net income over the violation, but the company disputes the regulator's findings.
As democratic nations fight for privacy, Americans seem ever uniquely screwed over by theirs.