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By the end of January, the number of states with active consumer data privacy laws will have risen from eight to 13.
From smoking at McDonald's to AI Tom Cruise, 2024 was a busy year for viral hoaxes.
Apple, Google, and Samsung all prioritized image generation and predictive text over slimmer phones and bigger camera glass.
From crackdowns on discriminatory facial recognition to protections against deepfakes, 2024 was quietly an important year for AI regulation.
These are the products that broke our hearts this year.
Russia, China, and the U.S. are all investing in nuclear weapons and an old fear from a bygone age is back in a big way.
Microsoft incubated OpenAI, but the relationship may be turning cold.
Oh yeah, Palmer Luckey's in the mix too.
Gaetz "regularly" paid women for sex, including with a 17-year-old, according to the report.
The 200 year-old company may soon go public on the back of AI-powered education products.
While some countries shrug off Trump's threats, Panama appears to be taking him quite seriously.
A federal judge ruled in favor of WhatsApp in a lawsuit the company brought against Israeli spyware maker linked to hacking of diplomats, human rights activists, and journalists.
Smart rings are an excellent way to track your stats passively, though you still have to think about how long to keep it on or take it off.
Commonwealth Fusion Systems spun out of a project at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's research labs.
Nuclear waste is spread across 94 different nuclear sites in the U.S. and has no permanent home. Big Tech is going to add more to the pile.
Musk has a history of supporting far-right causes in the U.S. Now he’s going international.
Reasoning models are supposed to fact-check themselves by producing a step-by-step plan to find a correct answer.
The latest leaks suggest Lenovo is serious about bundling as much screen as it can into its portable machines.
Hailey Welch broke her silence after the $HAWK memecoin coin crashed.
The country's defense ministry has said it is able to spot 12,000 Russian pieces of equipment a week using AI identification tools.