The federal government just committed $144 million to figure out what microplastics in humans are actually doing to us — and whether the silicone straws, baby bottles and storage bags filling American ...
Likeness detection, which scans YouTube for facial matches, will now be available to anyone 18 years or older with a YouTube account. Likeness detection, which scans YouTube for facial matches, will ...
Australian Industry Minister Tim Ayres prepares to address the National Press Club in Canberra, Wednesday, March 25, 2026. Image: AAP Image/Lukas Coch The federal government spent budget week ...
For families who have been accepted into the Texas Education Freedom Account Program, crucial summer deadlines are approaching. This is the $1 billion bill allocated to eligible families to help pay ...
Discovery by Johns Hopkins researchers of daily cloud cycle on a Hot Jupiter planet provides unique window into its make-up and evolution Sand clouds form every morning but clear up by nightfall on ...
Looking ahead: A research team in Austria has identified a new way for websites to quietly observe what users are doing on their devices using nothing more than a browser and faint signals from the ...
A criminal could be masquerading as a celebrity, web store or family member asking for your money. Detecting scams requires a new approach. Credit...Derek Abella Supported by By Brian X. Chen Brian X.
President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” state budget turmoil and new attacks on paid family caregiving have people fearing financial ruin as they fight to keep loved ones out of institutions.
Until last year, the U.S. Agency for International Development was part of a time-tested system for dealing with Ebola. In its absence, a dozen former federal employees told NBC News, the U.S.
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