Coming in hot to a Senate floor near you: a bill targeting the super-lucrative ad networks of Google and Meta, the real cash cows.
However, both chambers will need to negotiate a compromise bill before it reaches President Biden's desk.
The latest update in a multi-state suit targeting the search giant's advertising biz sure doesn't look great for Google and Facebook.
The bill's authors say it's all about "returning power to consumers."
Most chumbox hawkers steer clear of the InfoWars brand today—but back in 2017, at least one ad company bent over backwards for them.
Enraged car owners, suddenly robbed of free parking, want to know why a New York City bike lane advocacy group is accepting funds from Uber and Lyft.
The 'Freedom from Censorship Act' hampers companies' ability to crack down on Nazi propaganda and medical misinformation, a new lawsuit claims.
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board has opened multiple investigations into fatal Tesla crashes involving its Autopilot system.
Vodafone and Telekom plans exempting partners from data caps are "contrary to the regulation on open internet access," the court ruled.
OnlyFans' first transparency report is light on specifics and a little difficult to parse.
For the second week in a row, Facebook killed a project meant to shed light on its practices.
After years of developers and consumers being forced to play by these company's rules, lawmakers want to give all of us the choices we deserve.
The FTC fired back (sort of) but plans to take no further action.
Industry groups say the Senate doesn't understand some of the information can't be reported because users are anonymous.
The Health Misinformation Act would make websites, including Facebook, liable for algorithmically amplifying some health-related misinformation.
Given Amazon’s track record of antitrust lawsuits, this kind of federal scrutiny seemed inevitable.
The current minimum benchmark speeds haven't changed since 2015.
Regulators claim the chip maker used exclusivity deals and threats of retaliation to box out its competitors.
The bipartisan package passed muster with the House Judiciary Committee this week. Here's what you need to know.
A new letter signed by 13 lobbying groups hopes to pump the brakes.