Human Rights Day serves as a timely reminder that workplace rights must evolve alongside technological advancement, writes ...
A new model so sharp OpenAI put childproof caps on it. OpenAI has rolled out GPT-5.4-Cyber, a fine-tuned cousin of its ...
NBC executives reportedly have a code phrase to alert Savannah Guthrie if there is a break in the investigation into her ...
Noah Giansiracusa asks: How nutritious is your social media diet? Containing too much social media 'junk food,' he notes for Science News Explores, can have deleterious effects, and so individuals ...
On January 1, Illinois started treating AI-powered discrimination in employment the same way it treats every other form of ...
IT’S been a challenging period for social media platforms. The past year has seen numerous developments to the laws that ...
TubeBuddy, a YouTube growth tool focused on data-driven insights and automation, is helping video creators do exactly that ...
After a year in beta, its new Android app and website, Surf, go beyond simple news aggregation to incorporate content from social networking protocols like ActivityPub, AT Protocol, and good old Real ...
The second theory was unfair practice, or conduct offensive to public policy, even if not technically deceptive. Here, the evidence centered on what Meta’s own engineers and executives knew and then ...
Join Josh, Ollie, and producer Rosemary from Korean Englishman as they explore Melbourne in a red Kia Stinger, tackling an important YouTube issue: algorithmic discrimination against Korean comments.
A jury in California agreed with a plaintiff who argued that Meta and Google, two social-media giants, designed their platforms to be addictive. That opens the floodgates to more litigation and ...