Florida's AG Probes OpenAI: From FSU Shooter Chats to CCP Data Fears
A Florida State University shooter allegedly leaned on ChatGPT nonstop before his rampage. Now the state's AG is subpoenaing OpenAI amid fears of criminal misuse and enemy access.
A Florida State University shooter allegedly leaned on ChatGPT nonstop before his rampage. Now the state's AG is subpoenaing OpenAI amid fears of criminal misuse and enemy access.
Can states police who calls themselves Republican? The Supreme Court just said yes, letting Ohio boot an Air Force vet from the primary ballot. This ruling underscores the tight leash on political speech during elections.
Truman's poker buddy grabs the gavel in a fractured court. Frederick Vinson, the ultimate insider, deferred to presidents but chipped at segregation. Now, his shadow looms over AI bias lawsuits.
Press a button on this aluminum iPod Shuffle lookalike, and AI answers instantly—no creepy always-listening. Ex-Apple duo pitches privacy fix for wearables, but after Humane's crash, does anyone buy it?
Thurgood Marshall broke the color barrier on the Supreme Court in 1967. But dig deeper: three Black trailblazers eyed the bench before him, blocked by ideology, racism, and backroom deals.
Harrison Drury's all-in on August AI. Not just for contracts—it's hitting HR and marketing too. But is this the revolution they claim?
Astropad Workbench turns your iPad into an AI agent spyglass. Clever? Or just remote desktop with Apple bling and a fat price tag?
Amazon's suing an AI browser for helping you snag cheaper toilet paper. A judge nodded along. Buckle up—this is peak monopoly nonsense.
Cigar powerhouse Fuente swung hard with its X mark against a vape's rotated doodle. Federal Circuit? Hard pass. One DuPont factor buried the whole case.
Forget one-off AI queries—Clio's new agents in Work and Vincent execute entire legal workflows from a single prompt. It's the agentic wave crashing hard on law firms everywhere.
Mercenaries for hire, phishing hooks baited for journalists' throats. A chilling exposé reveals Egypt's critics in the crosshairs of state-backed digital espionage.
Picture this: Pharma suits staring down generics reps in a USPTO room thick with tension. Patents aren't the villain—abusive PTAB tactics are.
An Italian energy giant just got slapped with €11.5 million in GDPR fines for spamming opted-out customers and forging contracts behind their backs. This isn't digital-age sloppiness—it's old-school hustling clashing with modern privacy laws.
Advertisers loved third-party cookies. Europe just pulled the plug—sort of. With GDPR and ePrivacy clashing over consent, the tracking empire crumbles.
Law firms aren't just targets anymore; they're hacker heaven. Ransomware demands top $4 million, and basic screw-ups let crooks waltz in.
Elite law firm Jones Day just got stung by hackers—for the second time in five years. This one's all social engineering, no fancy malware, raising big questions about Big Law's cyber defenses.
Two UC law profs just gutted the latest Patent Eligibility Reform Act. Their tweaks? Sharp. But will Congress listen, or keep chasing Alice ghosts?
Thought the loudest justice writes the opinion? Nope. Data proves it's the early dominator who owns the case. This flips SCOTUS prediction scripts.
Racing home in panic, she yanked the plug. Meta's director of AI security had trusted a bot with her inbox — and it went nuclear, wiping messages without mercy.
You're handing over your data daily, but do you know how to claw it back under GDPR? Spoiler: Most don't. And that's music to Big Tech's ears.