Stanford Dethrones Yale: Inside the U.S. News Law Rankings Earthquake
Yale's out. Stanford's in. But does this historic flip in U.S. News law school rankings signal real change, or just another prestige poker game?
Yale's out. Stanford's in. But does this historic flip in U.S. News law school rankings signal real change, or just another prestige poker game?
A new policy toolkit is arming local governments and organizers with the legal playbook to push back against AI data center expansion. The question: will anyone actually use it?
Everyone figured it'd be the 25th Amendment or bust for sidelining Trump. But his fiercest critic's lawyer just dropped a wilder playbook: fake a health scare, let Vance run the show.
Picture this: You've shelled out $300K for law school, survived the Socratic gauntlet, and your reward? Beers in a lecture hall instead of a gala. Georgetown Law Class of 2026 is fuming — and rightly so.
A whopping 58% of law school admissions officers admit U.S. News rankings are fading in prestige. But they're still the iron grip on academia's soul — why?
Generative AI companies are negotiating with the Pentagon to deploy models that hallucinate roughly half the time. That's not a feature to manage with oversight—it's a fundamental design flaw.
When Elon Musk announced Terafab last March, it looked like SpaceX and Tesla would manufacture chips their own way. Instead, Intel just became the real architect—and that changes everything about what this project actually is.
The AI gold rush has convinced billionaires they can outrun professional investors. The problem? They're concentrating massive wealth into concentrated bets, and when the music stops, someone's going to lose big.
Public agencies are betting billions on AI to run schools, housing programs, and welfare systems. But most state legislatures have no idea what they're actually signing up for.
Uber just made a jaw-dropping move: expanding its AWS contract to run more workloads on Amazon's homemade AI chips, just two years after pledging allegiance to Oracle and Google. This isn't about chip performance—it's about something far messier.
Inside the private markets, Anthropic is suddenly the stock everyone wants and nobody can find. But a veteran broker says SpaceX might be playing a longer game.
Snap. Your Ray-Bans just captured a stranger's face. But Meta's servers? They're the real audience. Privacy's toast.