Facebook has admitted to sharing the personal data of its users with 61 different companies.
Student leaders at Minnesota State University Moorhead are asked to attend training sessions that aim to help them recognize their privilege.
British police are set to expand their facial recognition program, which was recorded as being 98 percent inaccurate in London.
AT&T has been hit with a $5.25 million fine from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) over several 911 emergency line outages in 2017.
Tesla managed to hit their 5000 Model 3 cars a week production milestone by pushing both workers and robots to the breaking point, building a production line in a tent, and declaring 300 welds in the vehicle “unnecessary.”
The University of Missouri is still facing enrollment and budgetary problems, including a $49 million budget shortfall, as a result of the 2015 social justice protests that caught national media attention.
Facebook shut down a support page for veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder, claiming the page breached “community guidelines.”
UCLA professor Doran George died last year during a “mummification” ritual at the home of a Hollywood executive.
Comedian Michael Ian Black announced on Twitter Friday that he lives with a “continual, daily dread” and that this dread is something “I wake up with” and “go to sleep with.”
Samantha Markle, the half-sister of Duchess of Sussex Meghan Markle, compared the media of today to the Salem Witch Trials and claimed journalists had repeatedly put her in danger since the announcement of her sister’s engagement to Prince Harry.
Comedienne Michelle Wolf has made more obscene remarks about women working in the White House, this time comparing First Daughter Ivanka Trump to “herpes” and a “vaginal mesh.”
Pop icon Cher took to Twitter on Sunday to remind her ardent followers that Democrats must win a majority in Congress so they can “stop Gestapo tactic of Ice” and “impeach” President Donald Trump.
Gov. Jerry Brown and the Democrat-controlled California legislature surrendered to privacy advocates and passed some of the world’s strongest online protections to prevent a November initiative vote on even stronger protections.