For most children, kicking a soccer ball around the backyard is an everyday activity. For 6-year-old Hadley McMahon, it's something her Colorado family once feared they would never see. Hadley, a ...
LOS ANGELES, June 4 (Reuters) - Los Angeles Olympic organizers will use the city's 2026 World Cup matches as a key learning opportunity for ‌transport, security and crowd movement as they prepare to ...
For decades, the federal government has used data analysis to ferret out race and sex discrimination, winning court cases and reaching settlements in housing, education, policing and across American ...
Where the field convenes. Privately. A curated private community for credentialed ethics, risk, and compliance leaders across the ECI and Compliance Week network. Ask the questions you can’t post ...
MINNEAPOLIS — Federal officials on Thursday announced charges against 15 people who allegedly targeted over $90 million from seven state-managed Medicaid programs. The latest cases are “unprecedented” ...
Microsoft released .NET 11 Preview 4, a broad update covering runtime, SDK, libraries, ASP.NET Core, .NET MAUI, C# and Entity Framework Core. The company said the fourth preview includes improvements ...
On Monday, a nine-member federal jury in Oakland, California took less than two hours to dismiss Elon Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and its chief executive Sam Altman. Crucially, the jury did not rule ...
Type to search articles, cases, and authors. Press ↵ to view all results. Courtly Observations is a recurring series by Erwin Chemerinsky that focuses on what the Supreme Court’s decisions will mean ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
Sullivan & Cromwell apologized for submitting a court document that had fake citations created by artificial intelligence. By Santul Nerkar An elite Wall Street law firm has apologized to a federal ...
One ACLU client spent six months in jail, because police relied on facial recognition technology to incorrectly identify her as a suspect. She’s the fourteenth person known to be wrongfully arrested ...