News

The company wants to create a way for people to prove they’re human online. Would you trust it with a scan of your eyeballs?
If you've ever binge-watched Black Mirror with your jaw on the floor and your phone suddenly feeling like a surveillance device, you're not alone.
Florida will become the second state in the nation to prohibit fluoridation of public water supplies, reversing decades of ...
In the ruins of a health-care system, many medical facilities have become graveyards. Doctors continue to deliver lifesaving ...
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is a craft beer afficionado who loves "fighting Tories", clawing his way to the ...
The New York Times wins a Pulitzer Prize for its report on the U.S. defeat and failures in Afghanistan.
Gov. Ron DeSantis described the change as a blow for freedom of choice, but dental and health experts warn that the ban will ...
1. David Frederick Attenborough was born on May 8, 1926 in Isleworth, Middlesex, the same year as Queen Elizabeth II. 2. His ...
Artificial intelligence technologies have granted unconventional extensions to creative representations, which have long been the domain of humans. They have opened unprecedented horizons to ...
It’s about a new method police departments and federal agencies have found to track people: an AI tool that uses attributes ...
Adoption of the tech has civil liberties advocates alarmed, especially as the government vows to expand surveillance of ...
In a world where people already often step the boundary when it comes to privacy and security, a new report now reveals that Meta is planning on adding facial recognition technology to its AI ...