Big Tech Settles First School Lawsuit Over Student Harm
The first domino has fallen. Snap, YouTube, and TikTok are settling a landmark lawsuit accusing them of fueling student addiction and costing public schools millions. But the battle isn't over.
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The first domino has fallen. Snap, YouTube, and TikTok are settling a landmark lawsuit accusing them of fueling student addiction and costing public schools millions. But the battle isn't over.
Generative AI is a new weapon in the arsenal of sexual violence. The EU's AI Act is being scrutinized over proposed deepfake bans, with advocates pushing for stricter accountability.
What happens when deeply held beliefs collide with academic requirements? A new Utah law forces educators to confront this question, potentially reshaping how students engage with challenging ideas.
Virginia's bid to redraw its congressional map in favor of Democrats has hit a dead end at the Supreme Court. The justices offered no explanation, simply turning down the request.
The United Nations is talking AI, but are we listening to everyone? A crucial call from CDT and Cornell stresses that the future of artificial intelligence must speak every language, not just a select few.
The Supreme Court has delivered a significant ruling, reaffirming federal courts' power to confirm arbitration awards. This decision recalibrates expectations around arbitration enforcement.
So, are you ready for the EU AI Act's transparency reckoning? By August 2026, nearly every business interacting with AI, or producing AI-generated content, faces new disclosure rules. This isn't just for the 'high-risk' stuff.
The battle over congressional maps has spilled onto the hallowed grounds of the U.S. Supreme Court. Republican lawmakers are pushing back against a state-level decision, arguing that federal courts shouldn't meddle.
The Supreme Court has issued another temporary reprieve, allowing the abortion pill mifepristone to continue being mailed. This judicial wrangling over access isn't new, and the fight is far from over.
America’s innovation engine, powered by the Bayh-Dole Act, faces a critical juncture. A shift towards industrial policy and away from basic research could cost us dearly.
New age-gating laws targeting internet access are colliding with the open-source world. Linux developers, exemplified by System76, are fighting back, securing crucial exemptions and questioning the efficacy of these mandates.
Forget your day in court. Companies are quietly stripping away your rights through obscure terms of service clauses. Brendan Ballou's latest book dives into this insidious trend.