The proposal would see Googlers complete a survey aimed at increasing efficiency and getting “better results faster.”
The new legislation is a huge step forward for climate action—but Manchin is also making sure he helps out the fossil fuel industry.
The Fox News host is technically correct, but it's still a funny thing to whine about.
Chris Sembroski previously worked for Lockheed Martin and served in the United States Air Force.
The White House revealed the recipients of the medal which also include Simone Biles and Denzel Washington.
POTUS also said the filibuster should be suspended to ensure “privacy rights" are guaranteed to all Americans.
A senior White House aide testified that Trump believed "the people with weapons weren’t there to hurt him" and that he tried to hijack his own "limo".
The hearing is cloaked in secrecy over 'credible security threats' against a witness, according to the Washington Post.
The Get Out and Us director is teeing up cinematic spectacle to put butts back in theater seats.
The administration rescinded a Trump-era decision that made it much harder to protect endangered wildlife, but advocates say the White House needs to do more.
Staff members circulated an internal letter asking their company to adhere to its own “zero tolerance” policy with the company's CEO.
The leading public health official is experiencing mild symptoms, the NIH said.
The next public hearing into the January 6 Capitol insurrection will be broadcast live today.
A new trailer reveals there's much more going in Jordan Peele's new movie than we could have suspected.
Tech companies use political idiocy to their advantage while members of congress are often more concerned with soundbites than real regulation.
Gwynne Shotwell, the company’s top female executive, did not deny that the rocket company had settled with the woman who made the accusation.
An appeals court ruled against a law that would've punished online platforms for content moderation.
The vast network of pro-Russian channels and social accounts have proved a major challenge to companies trying to stamp out war misinformation.
Three U.S. federal agencies say there’s a host of DPRK-backed fake IT workers looking for backdoors into companies’ networks.
Though Trump has proclaimed he’ll stick to Truth Social, Twitter’s prospective owner said banning tweeter-in-chief was "morally wrong and flat-out stupid."