- Tech
The legal action comes days after some of the platform’s users sued the state’s attorney general, arguing the law violated the First Amendment.
The legal action comes days after some of the platform’s users sued the state’s attorney general, arguing the law violated the First Amendment.
Everything from the week beginning May 22nd, 2023 that a corporate board director needs to know ahead of a board meeting. This week we look at the questions directors need to consider ahead of a data breach to reduce the amount of time spent analyzing stolen data. Also, cybersecurity leader burnout, minimum security standards on all new U.K. consumer products, health data at risk from criminals and why a radiology company is suing its insurer over a lapsed policy.
Kohberger’s lawyer said he was standing silent when he was asked to enter a plea. The trial is set for Oct. 2.
The record privacy penalty by the EU puts pressure on Washington to complete a deal that would allow Meta to send user data stateside.
The justices are set to issue far-reaching opinions in a number of cases with major social implications in the coming weeks.
Weeks after being sentenced to eight years in a penal colony, opposition activist Roman Protasevich said he had received a pardon.
Republicans see the long-neglected Comstock Act as a still-valid ban on shipping abortion drugs anywhere in the U.S.
The rise of the Scandinavian equivalent of Pablo Escobar has tracked growing violence in Sweden. That has sparked an anti-immigration backlash.
U.S. Chief District Judge Colm Connolly’s crackdown has shaken up legal proceedings in a court busy with patent cases.
Cyberspace office says the chip maker’s products pose a major national-security risk.
The Ukrainian president’s trip to the G-7 summit was both a working visit to seek further Western military aid and a symbolic plea about the threats Kyiv faces from Russia’s leader.
Some officials and residents are in conflict with victims’ supporters over information and legislation.
Recent legal filings have zeroed in a tweet featuring Thanos, from the “Avengers” franchise, adding another layer of peculiar drama to the saga.
A federal judge ruled in favor of the Justice Department’s effort to unwind a partnership between American Airlines and JetBlue, finding that their arrangement suppressed competition in key Northeast markets.
Disclosures that the agency used a foreign spying law to gather intelligence on citizen is likely to further complicate the Biden administration’s efforts to persuade Congress to renew it.
A judge ruled that the Massachusetts Air National Guardsman, charged with taking and sharing highly classified intelligence documents, must stay in custody while his case proceeds.
The lieutenant was indicted on charges he tipped off former Proud Boys chairman Enrique Tarrio about a pending arrest warrant related to the burning of a Black Lives Matter flag.
Reviews of ‘Bruno Schulz: An Artist, a Murder and the Hijacking of History’ and ‘Nocturnal Apparitions,’ a new collection of Schulz’s stories.
Car owners sued the companies after a social-media challenge inspired thieves.
Gunmen earlier in the week opened fire on vehicles that were visiting a U.S.-funded aid project in southern Nigeria and set them ablaze.
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