T/technology

  1. He Made a Friend on Roblox. Their Relationship Turned Sinister. Technology, Today

    At age 7, Ethan Dallas began playing the online game, where he met Nate. Deadly abuse followed, said Ethan’s mother, who blames Roblox.

  2. ‘Civil War’ Mentions Surge Online After Kirk Assassination Technology, Today

    The term has increasingly been invoked on social media after major political moments, highlighting divisions among Americans.

  3. Trump Is Copying China. That’s a Terrible Idea. Opinion, Today

    Trump is steering the U.S. model of capitalism closer to the Chinese one, swapping innovation and competition for state control and cronyism.

  4. Nike Sneakers You Earn the Right to Buy, One Free Throw at a Time Style, Today

    The artist Tom Sachs, whose longtime partnership with Nike was suspended over suggestions that he ran a hostile studio, isn’t making it easy to nab his latest design for the brand.

  5. A.I.’s Prophet of Doom Wants to Shut It All Down Technology, Today

    Eliezer Yudkowsky has spent the past 20 years warning A.I. insiders of danger. Now, he’s making his case to the public.

  6. OpenAI Takes Big Steps Toward Its Long-Planned Reorganization Technology, Yesterday

    The start-up reached a tentative deal with Microsoft, its biggest investor, and said it would give a $100 billion stake to the nonprofit that manages it.

  7. With Few Facts About Kirk Shooting, Wild Speculation Abounds Technology, Yesterday

    Social media users are spreading elaborate and entirely unsubstantiated theories about what happened to the conservative commentator.

  8. Regulators Are Digging Into A.I. Chatbots and Child Safety Technology, Yesterday

    The Federal Trade Commission said it was starting an inquiry of how six major tech companies monitor activity that could harm minors.

  9. Parents, Your Job Has Changed in the A.I. Era Opinion, Yesterday

    A.I. tools can hinder cognitive development in students. Parents are essential to fostering responsible use.

  10. Scammers Are Using Fake Reviews to Extort Small Businesses Technology, Yesterday

    Movers, roofing companies and others are being bombarded with phony one-star reviews on Google Maps. Then they’re asked to pay up.

  11. Canadian Man Falsely Named as Charlie Kirk’s Shooter on Social Media Technology, Yesterday

    The 77-year-old former banker, who lives in Toronto, said he was “shocked” by the speed at which his photograph spread online.

  12. Videos of Charlie Kirk’s Shooting Spread Rapidly on Social Media Technology, September 10

    First posted to X, they amassed millions of views on Instagram, Threads, YouTube and Telegram within hours.

  13. OpenAI Signs $300 Billion Data Center Pact With Tech Giant Oracle Technology, September 10

    The funding covers more than half of the A.I. data centers that OpenAI plans to build in the U.S. over the next several years.

  14. Senators Demand Answers From Mark Zuckerberg on WhatsApp Security Technology, September 10

    Three Republican senators sent a letter to Meta’s chief executive on Wednesday asking him to respond to whistle-blower allegations over security flaws.

  15. New York’s Ban on Cellphones in Schools Is Going ‘Better Than Expected’ New York, September 10

    In the country’s largest district to ban phones, students, teachers and parents reported some frustrations, but also benefits.

  16. Apple presenta un nuevo iPhone, más delgado, pero con menos innovaciones En español, September 9

    El gigante de Silicon Valley también presentó actualizaciones de sus celulares tradicionales, así como de sus AirPods y Apple Watch.

  17. Why Mark S. Zuckerberg Is Suing Facebook’s Parent Company, Meta Technology, September 9

    Facebook has repeatedly flagged his accounts, he says, for “impersonating” the company’s founder, Mark E. Zuckerberg.

  18. Apple Introduces New, Slimmer iPhone Technology, September 9

    The Silicon Valley giant also introduced updates to its traditional smartphones, as well as its AirPods and Apple Watch.

  19. United Arab Emirates Joins U.S. and China in Giving Away A.I. Technology Technology, September 9

    The Persian Gulf nation has “open sourced” technology meant to compete with OpenAI and China’s DeepSeek.

  20. Nvidia Assails Critics as A.I. ‘Doomers’ in Fight Over China Chip Sales Technology, September 9

    Rankling national security experts, the chipmaker has stepped up attacks on lawmakers who are pushing restrictions.

  21. Las empresas tecnológicas se esfuerzan por integrar el futuro sistema de defensa de Trump En español, September 9

    Las empresas tecnológicas están realizando simulacros con IA, láseres y más para demostrar que pueden formar parte de la Cúpula Dorada, el ambicioso plan del presidente de EE. UU. para un escudo antimisiles.

  22. Whistle-Blower Sues Meta Over Claims of WhatsApp Security Flaws Technology, September 8

    In a lawsuit filed Monday, the former head of security for the messaging app accused the social media company of putting billions of users at risk. Meta pushed back on his claim.

  23. Tech Companies Show Off for Trump’s ‘Golden Dome’ Technology, September 8

    Tech companies are displaying A.I., lasers and more as they compete for a piece of President Trump’s ambitious plan for a missile defense shield.

  24. A Tech Reporter’s Side Gig: Music Writing Technology, September 8

    Every so often, Mike Isaac swerves from his Silicon Valley beat to write about bands.

  25. Rusia intensifica sus campañas de desinformación y EE. UU. deja de frenarlas En español, September 8

    El Kremlin ha iniciado una campaña para influir en las elecciones parlamentarias de Moldavia, en lo que podría convertirse en un nuevo modelo de injerencia electoral en internet.

  26. Will We Follow Trump to Fantasyland? Opinion, September 8

    We’ve traveled far beyond political spin.

  27. A.I. Could Make the Smartphone Passé. What Comes Next? Technology, September 8

    As Apple prepares to release new iPhones this week, industry veterans shared their predictions for what will be the next big thing in personal computing.

  28. Nepal Bans 26 Social Media Platforms, Including Facebook and YouTube World, September 7

    Critics worry a new law could curb freedom of expression, affect tourism and cut communication with the many Nepalis who work abroad.

  29. Why Google Got Off Easy Opinion, September 7

    The message to other companies is plain: It pays to break the law.

  30. Russia Steps Up Disinformation Efforts as Trump Abandons Resistance Business, September 7

    The Kremlin has begun a campaign to sway the parliamentary election in Moldova in what could become a new model of election interference online.

  31. The Spectacular Comeback Tour of a Crypto Overlord Technology, September 7

    Ross Ulbricht, who created the Silk Road dark web marketplace and was serving a life sentence for drug distribution, has embarked on a strange and unexpected comeback after President Trump pardoned him in January.

  32. Men + Women + Apps = Bad Romance Opinion, September 6

    The two sexes are looking past each other.

  33. She Started the Debate About Kids and Phones. Now She Wants to End It. Well, September 6

    The researcher and author Jean Twenge has a prescription for the harmful effects of screen time on children. If only parents would listen.

  34. Anthropic Agrees to Pay $1.5 Billion to Settle Lawsuit With Book Authors Technology, September 5

    The settlement is the largest payout in the history of U.S. copyright cases and could lead more A.I. companies to pay rights holders for use of their works.

  35. A Failed Top Secret Mission in North Korea, and a Government Shutdown Deadline The Headlines, September 5

    Plus, your Friday news quiz.

  36. Can YouTube Handle Live Sports? The N.F.L. Is the Ultimate Test. Technology, September 5

    YouTube’s live broadcast on Friday night of the Kansas City Chiefs and Los Angeles Chargers game is set to be a major test of the platform’s programming ambitions.

  37. The Doctors Are Real, but the Sales Pitches Are Frauds Technology, September 5

    Scammers are using A.I. tools to make it look as if medical professionals are promoting dubious health care products.

  38. Melania Trump Says ‘the Robots Are Here’ Video, September 5

    The first lady, Melania Trump, issued a warning about the future of artificial intelligence during a meeting with tech executives at the White House on Thursday.

  39. Steve Hayden, Writer Behind Apple’s ‘1984’ Commercial, Dies at 78 Business, September 4

    The ad for the Macintosh computer — which ran just once, during the Super Bowl — is considered one of the most memorable commercials ever made.

  40. The Landmark Google Antitrust Ruling The Daily, September 4

    The company’s search dominance was ruled to be a monopoly. Now, it must hand over its data to rivals.

  41. Digital Dopamine Is Consuming America. It’s Time to Fight for IRL. Opinion, September 4

    As a parent and congressman, I do not want my children’s brains to be programmed by corporations.

  42. Cómo te afectarán las soluciones al monopolio de búsqueda de Google En español, September 4

    La solución de un juez federal se queda corta para hacer cambios importantes en cómo usamos los teléfonos, las computadoras y el internet.

  43. EE. UU. y China ante la amenaza inminente de la IA En español, September 4

    Aunque aún no lo saben, la revolución de la inteligencia artificial va a acercar a las dos potencias, no a alejarlas.

  44. The Message for Big Tech in the Google Ruling: Play Nice, but Play On Technology, September 3

    A federal judge ordered steps in the search monopoly case that will restrain Google but not break it up, signaling a cautious antitrust approach by courts.

  45. Amazon Pares Back Free Shipping Perk on Prime Membership Technology, September 3

    The e-commerce giant is ending a program that let Prime members share free shipping with a family member who lives somewhere else. Here’s what to know.

  46. Google evita las sanciones más duras en una histórica sentencia sobre el antimonopolio En español, September 3

    El juez Amit Mehta dijo que la empresa debe entregar algunos de sus datos de búsqueda a sus rivales, pero no forzó otros grandes cambios.

  47. Federal Courts Slow to Fix Vulnerable System After Repeated Hacking U.S., September 3

    After a 2020 breach thought to be Russia’s work, the courts told Congress that they would harden a system storing sealed documents. Five years later, the system was hacked again.

  48. Did Google Just Get Spared? Investors Think So. Business, September 3

    The nuclear option for addressing the tech giant’s search dominance — a break-up — is off the table. That’s lifting Big Tech stocks.

  49. Tom Friedman’s A.I. Nightmare and What the U.S. Can Do to Avoid It Opinion, September 3

    Without trust between America and China on A.I., the risks extend far beyond their borders.

  50. How to Rethink A.I. Opinion, September 3

    Building bigger A.I. isn’t leading to better A.I.

  51. ¿Quieres que tu aplicación de citas tome el control? En español, September 3

    Varias de las nuevas aplicaciones se basan en la idea de que lo que realmente quieren los usuarios es no tener opciones infinitas.

  52. What the Fixes for Google’s Search Monopoly Mean for You: It’s a ‘Nothingburger’ Technology, September 2

    A federal judge’s remedy stops short of making meaningful changes to how we use our phones, computers and the web.

  53. What a Ruling to Fix Google’s Search Monopoly Means for the Company Technology, September 2

    The judge’s decision positions Google to keep its search business running largely without interruption.

  54. The Government Just Walloped Google. That’s Good Business. Opinion, September 2

    Curbing Google is an overdue return to the government’s longtime role in encouraging competition among tech companies.

  55. OpenAI Plans to Add Safeguards to ChatGPT for Teens and Others in Distress Technology, September 2

    After a California teenager spent months on ChatGPT discussing plans to end his life, OpenAI said it would introduce parental controls and better responses for users in distress.

  56. Judge Orders Google to Share Search Results to Help Resolve Monopoly Technology, September 2

    In a landmark antitrust case, Judge Amit P. Mehta ruled on Tuesday that Google must hand over some of its search data to rivals, but did not force other big changes the U.S. wanted.

  57. Anthropic Raises Its Valuation to $183 Billion in New Funding Technology, September 2

    The artificial intelligence start-up garnered another $13 billion as its valuation rose by nearly three times, from $61.5 billion earlier this year, amid a frenzy over the technology.

  58. How Elon Musk Is Remaking Grok in His Image Technology, September 2

    Mr. Musk said he wanted xAI’s chatbot to be “politically neutral.” His actions say otherwise.

  59. How ‘Clanker’ Became an Anti-A.I. Rallying Cry Technology, August 31

    The term, which was popularized by a “Star Wars” show and is rooted in real frustrations with technology, has become a go-to slur against artificial intelligence and robots.

  60. How This A.I. Company Collapsed Amid Silicon Valley’s Biggest Boom Technology, August 31

    Builder.ai went from a value of $1.5 billion to zero in a few months, amid questions over the sales of an A.I. product. Its downfall hints at a broader downturn.

  61. An Online Group Says It’s Behind a Campus Swatting Wave U.S., August 30

    Members of the group offered on Telegram to draw armed officers to schools, malls and airports, though their claims are unverified. Such false emergency calls have disrupted campus life in recent days.

  62. Disney y el declive de la clase media estadounidense En español, August 29

    Ahora más que nunca, Disney y empresas similares tienen acceso a datos que les muestran quién está dispuesto a gastar, y cuánto, por determinadas experiencias.

  63. Disney Is the Happiest Place on Earth, if You Can Afford It Opinion, August 28

    The theme-park operator, like so many other companies, is abandoning America’s middle class.

  64. Nvidia Sales Jump 56%, a Sign the A.I. Boom Isn’t Slowing Down Technology, August 27

    The chipmaker, now the most valuable public company in the world, said strong demand for its chips should continue this quarter.

  65. Google Pixel 10 Pro Review: This A.I. Phone Can Save Time if You Surrender Your Data Technology, August 27

    The new artificially intelligent Pixel can help people streamline certain tasks. But that efficiency may not be worth the data you give up, our reviewer writes.

  66. Fine-Tune Your Feed and Get News You Can Use Technology, August 27

    Apps from Google, Apple and other companies let you customize your content so you’re always up to date on the matters you care about most.

  67. 8 mujeres, 4 dormitorios y una causa: romper el techo de cristal de la IA En español, August 27

    Este verano, el proyecto FoundHer House, una casa de “hackers” exclusivamente para mujeres, ofreció a sus residentes una comunidad de apoyo para crear sus empresas emergentes.

  68. The A.I. Spending Frenzy Is Propping Up the Real Economy, Too Business, August 27

    The trillions of dollars that tech companies are pouring into new data centers are starting to show up in economic growth. For now, at least.

  69. Silicon Valley Pledges $200 Million to New Pro-A.I. Super PACs Technology, August 26

    The two PACs reflect a new level of political engagement by companies like Meta and investors such as Andreessen Horowitz, which are spending heavily on artificial intelligence.

  70. A Teen Was Suicidal. ChatGPT Was the Friend He Confided In. Technology, August 26

    More people are turning to general-purpose chatbots for emotional support. At first, Adam Raine, 16, used ChatGPT for schoolwork, but then he started discussing plans to end his life.

  71. Google Could Get Broken Up This Week. Here’s What It Would Mean. Opinion, August 26

    It will be effective if people who work at big tech companies start quitting their jobs.

  72. After U.S. Takes Stake in Intel, Trump Pledges ‘Many More’ Deals U.S., August 25

    The president said he hoped to “get as much as I can,” signaling a shift in the relationship between government and private business.

  73. Reportamos sobre la privacidad tecnológica. Nuestros hábitos musicales fueron exhibidos En español, August 25

    Las “Panama Playlists” pusieron al descubierto los hábitos de escucha de Spotify de personas famosas y de dos periodistas que no sabían tanto sobre la protección de su privacidad como pensaban.

  74. Elon Musk’s xAI Sues Apple Over Claims It Favors OpenAI Technology, August 25

    Mr. Musk’s artificial intelligence company, xAI, claimed that its Grok chatbot app was being artificially suppressed in Apple’s App Store.

  75. How China Is Influencing N.Y. Elections, and What Ghislaine Maxwell Told D.O.J. Officials The Headlines, August 25

    Plus, Spotify playlists can spill your secrets.

  76. How ChatGPT Surprised Me Opinion, August 24

    What if we come to love and depend on the A.I.s — if we prefer them in many cases to our fellow humans?

  77. What Is Gen Z So Nostalgic for? Opinion, August 24

    Longing for the past can be good news for the future.

  78. We Are Tech Privacy Reporters. Our Music Habits Got Doxxed. Technology, August 24

    The “Panama Playlists” exposed the Spotify listening habits of some famous people — and two journalists who didn’t know as much about protecting their privacy as they had thought.

  79. How Online Chats Are Leading to Imprisonment for Blasphemy World, August 24

    In Pakistan, hundreds are in jail on charges of blaspheming Islam. Rights groups say some of these cases are due to bad actors entrapping victims online.

  80. Las personas mayores pueden obtener beneficios cerebrales de las nuevas tecnologías En español, August 24

    El uso excesivo de dispositivos digitales perjudica a los adolescentes, según sugieren las investigaciones. Pero la tecnología omnipresente podría ayudar a los estadounidenses mayores a mantenerse alertas.

  81. The Long, Painful Downfall of Intel Technology, August 23

    The Silicon Valley chipmaker’s journey from icon to a government project, with the sale of a 10 percent stake to the Trump administration, underlines how even the mightiest in tech can fall.

  82. You’re Probably Thinking About the Future All Wrong Business, August 23

    Nick Foster helped Apple and Google envision the future. He has some notes.

  83. El futuro será mundano En español, August 23

    Cuando llegue, el futuro no será extremo, sino ordinario. Solo que nuestra idea de lo ordinario cambiará un poco.

  84. Ex-Employee Sentenced to 4 Years for Sabotaging Company’s Computer Network Business, August 22

    The man, a former software developer for Eaton Corporation, wrote malicious code that crashed servers on the company’s network in 2019, prosecutors said.

  85. Elon Musk’s X Agrees to Settlements With Thousands of Former Employees Technology, August 22

    The settlements are an about-face for the billionaire, whose company fought with former workers over whether it owed them severance pay.

  86. Trump Says Intel Has Agreed to Give U.S. a 10% Stake in Its Business Technology, August 22

    A deal would be among the largest government interventions in a U.S. company since the rescue of the auto industry after the 2008 financial crisis.

  87. Trump Signals Fourth Delay of TikTok Ban Business, August 22

    The short-form video app has until mid-September to change its ownership structure or face a ban in the United States, after a number of deadline extensions from President Trump.

  88. El director ejecutivo de Duolingo quiere tener una conversación sobre la IA En español, August 22

    El CEO de la aplicación de aprendizaje dice que utilizar la inteligencia artificial podría permitir hacer muchas más tareas, pero no significa que dejará de lado a las personas.

  89. El jefe de Apple Fitness es acusado de acoso y ambiente laboral tóxico En español, August 22

    Empleados de la empresa dicen que el ejecutivo era volátil y que tomó represalias cuando cooperaron con una investigación. Apple niega las acusaciones.

  90. Francia investiga la muerte de un ‘streamer’ tras meses de abusos En español, August 21

    Raphaël Graven, conocido en internet como Jean Pormanove, era sometido a humillaciones y vejaciones en Kick, una plataforma de transmisión en directo.

  91. Apple Fitness Chief Accused of Toxic Workplace Culture and Harassment Technology, August 21

    Workers say the executive was volatile and retaliated when they cooperated with an investigation. Apple denies the claims.

  92. French Authorities Investigate Streamer’s Death After Months of Abuse World, August 21

    Raphaël Graven, known online as Jean Pormanove, was regularly subjected to humiliation and abuse on Kick, a streaming platform.

  93. Stephanie Shirley, Who Created a Tech World for Women, Dies at 91 Business, August 20

    In 1962, she started a software company at her dining room table with a revolutionary idea: to create a place where women could find a work-life balance.

  94. We’re Already Living in the Post-A.I. Future Opinion, August 20

    Artificial intelligence may change the world, but it probably won’t remake it.

  95. Warren Brodey, 101, Dies; a Visionary at the Dawn of the Information Age Technology, August 20

    His work on complex systems and responsive technologies helped lay the groundwork for later work on artificial intelligence.

  96. Amy Klobuchar: I Knew Deepfakes Were a Problem. Then I Saw One of Myself. Opinion, August 20

    Deepfakes are getting more realistic, and more difficult to stop. Congress needs to take steps now.

  97. OpenAI in Deal Talks That Would Value the Company at $500 Billion Technology, August 19

    At $500 billion, OpenAI would become the world’s most valuable privately held company.

  98. Mark Zuckerberg Shakes Up Meta’s A.I. Efforts, Again Technology, August 19

    Meta internally announced a new restructuring of its artificial intelligence division amid internal tensions over the technology, people with knowledge of the matter said.

  99. The 1970s Gave Us Industrial Decline. A.I. Could Bring Something Worse. Opinion, August 19

    Just as manufacturing towns failed to recognize the looming threat of new technology, cities now risk underestimating the disruption of artificial intelligence.

  100. A.I. Travel Tools Are Everywhere. Are They Any Good? Travel, August 19

    A.I.-powered tools can help you plan trips, squeeze value out of loyalty programs and translate languages. But don’t give up Google Flights just yet.

  101. Silicon Valley Needs to Stop Obsessing Over Superhuman A.I. Opinion, August 19

    Silicon Valley’s obsession with creating artificial intelligence that surpasses human abilities is going too far.

  102. Britain Drops Request That Apple Create a Back Door Technology, August 19

    The Trump administration says that law enforcement organizations in Britain would back off asking the company for a tool to access customers’ data.

  103. Trump Administration Discusses Taking 10% Stake in Intel Technology, August 18

    Federal officials are considering the move because Intel, the last leading-edge chipmaker in the United States, has been struggling.

  104. The C.E.O. of Duolingo Wants to Have a Conversation About A.I. Business, August 17

    The language-learning app with more than 100 million users has embraced artificial intelligence but has also faced consumer backlash for it.

  105. The Future Will Be Mundane Opinion, August 16

    Once it gets here, the future won’t feel extreme; it will feel ordinary. It’s just that our idea of ordinary will shift a bit.

  106. C.E.O.s Want Their Companies to Adopt A.I. But Do They Get It Themselves? Business, August 16

    Some are being nudged to learn how to use the nascent technology. Coming to the C-suite retreat: mandatory website-building exercises using A.I. tools.

  107. Para algunos pacientes, su ‘voz interior’ pronto podría ser audible En español, August 16

    En un estudio reciente, unos científicos descifraron con éxito no solo las palabras que las personas intentaban decir, sino también las que simplemente imaginaban decir.

  108. Judge Blocks F.T.C. Investigation of Media Matters Technology, August 15

    The agency began looking into the liberal watchdog group’s research critical of Elon Musk and his social media platform, X, in May.

  109. SpaceX recibe miles de millones del gobierno de EE. UU. Pero devuelve poco o nada en impuestos En español, August 15

    La empresa de Elon Musk depende de los contratos federales, pero es muy probable que años de pérdidas le hayan permitido evitar el pago de impuestos federales sobre la renta.

  110. False Flags, Fake Flags: Propaganda Muddles the Trump-Putin Meeting World, August 15

    The summit in Alaska between President Trump and President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia has unleashed a wave of propaganda and disinformation from Russian state media and online conspiracy theorists.

  111. Senator Begins Child Safety Investigation Into Meta’s A.I. Bot Technology, August 15

    Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, said he would look into whether the social media company’s artificial intelligence technology endangers children.

  112. SpaceX Gets Billions From the Government. It Gives Little to Nothing Back in Taxes. Technology, August 15

    Elon Musk’s rocket company relies on federal contracts, but years of losses have most likely let it avoid paying federal income taxes, according to internal company documents.

  113. La IA aumenta los riesgos de publicar las fotos de tus hijos en internet En español, August 15

    Las aplicaciones de inteligencia artificial que generan desnudos falsos, entre otros problemas de privacidad, hacen que compartir imágenes de tus hijos sea mucho más arriesgado que hace unos años.

  114. Jackie Bezos, Jeff Bezos’ Mother and an Early Amazon Investor, Dies at 78 Obituaries, August 15

    Ms. Bezos and her husband invested about $245,000 in Amazon when the online bookstore was in its first year.

  115. Supreme Court Allows Mississippi Law on Children’s Use of Social Media, for Now U.S., August 14

    A trade group representing sites like Facebook and X said the law ran afoul of the First Amendment.

  116. Blood Oxygen Measurements to Return to Some Apple Watches Technology, August 14

    The company said it will issue a software update to restart the technology, which was caught up in a patent dispute.

  117. For Some Patients, the ‘Inner Voice’ May Soon Be Audible Science, August 14

    In a recent study, scientists successfully decoded not only the words people tried to say but the words they merely imagined saying.

  118. The Battle to Define Luigi Mangione Takes Center Stage Arts, August 14

    In “Luigi: The Musical” and across the internet, artists, journalists and supporters vie to shape the murder suspect’s symbolic reputation: villain, hero, terrorist, martyr, fantasy, enigma.

  119. Big Tech’s A.I. Boom Is Reordering the U.S. Power Grid Business, August 14

    Electricity rates for individuals and small businesses could rise sharply as Amazon, Google, Microsoft and other technology companies build data centers and expand into the energy business.

  120. Las empresas invierten cada vez más en IA, pero aún no ha dado frutos En español, August 13

    La tecnología de IA ha avanzado a toda velocidad con herramientas como ChatGPT, pero podrían pasar años antes de que la tecnología ofrezca beneficios a toda la economía.

  121. Why This Used Car Company Thinks Tariffs Could Be Good for Business Business, May 13

    The chief executive of Carvana, which sells used cars online, said President Trump’s tariffs could help his company by increasing demand for its vehicles.

  122. Amazon Tells Corporate Workers to Be Back in the Office 5 Days a Week Business, September 16

    The internet giant told employees on Monday that it expected them to return to the office full-time in January.

  123. Health Officials Tried to Evade Public Records Laws, Lawmakers Say Science, May 28

    N.I.H. officials suggested federal record keepers helped them hide emails. If so, “that’s really damaging to trust in all of government,” one expert said.

  124. La desinformación en temas de salud está evolucionando. Aprende a detectarla En español, March 19

    Los expertos ofrecen consejos para reconocer las afirmaciones médicas falsas en internet y combatirlas en tus círculos cercanos, sin pelear con nadie.

  125. Health Misinformation Is Evolving. Here’s How to Spot It. Well, March 16

    Experts offer tips for combating false medical claims in your own circles.

  126. Behind the Birth of an Anti-Vaccine Story Business, December 13

    A 24-year-old’s sudden death devastated his family — and caught the attention of the movement of vaccine opponents.

  127. TikTok Rankles Employees With Return-to-Office Tracking Tools Business, September 15

    The company is requiring many employees to use an app that tracks their in-person attendance.

  128. Instacart Was All About Grocery Delivery. No Longer. Technology, September 14

    As it prepares to go public next week, Instacart shows that one secret to making money as a gig economy company is to become an advertising company.

  129. Where Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Delivers His Fringe Views: Not on the Trail Business, September 12

    The Democratic presidential challenger continues to espouse extreme ideas, but has dialed that messaging back in large public forums.

  130. From ‘Data Dumping’ to ‘Webbing’: How Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Sells Misleading Ideas Business, September 12

    The candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination uses logical leaps and rhetorical devices to create false or misleading messages.

  131. As Covid-19 Cases Tick Higher, Conspiracy Theorists Stoke New Fears Business, September 11

    A late-summer rise in Covid-19 infections is bringing with it a wave of conspiracy theories.

  132. Dependence on Tech Caused ‘Staggering’ Education Inequality, U.N. Agency Says Business, September 6

    Heavy reliance on online remote learning during the pandemic drew attention away from more equitable ways of teaching children at home, a UNESCO report says.

  133. Meta desmantela una campaña encubierta de China En español, August 31

    La operación de influencia comenzó al menos hace cuatro años y, según la empresa, abarcó miles de cuentas en Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, X, Substack y sitios web chinos.

  134. Meta’s ‘Biggest Single Takedown’ Removes Chinese Influence Campaign Business, August 29

    The campaign began at least four years ago and spanned thousands of accounts on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, Substack and Chinese websites, Meta said.

  135. Move or Quit: Grindr Dictates New Office Rules Amid Union Drive Business, August 12

    Two weeks after employees filed to organize, the company told some they had to change cities or would lose their jobs. It said the plan had long been in the works.

  136. Apple Revenue Drops 1%, but Profit Rises to $19.88 Billion Business, August 3

    The iPhone maker’s recent quarter benefited from strong sales in its App Store and other services businesses.

  137. Tech Firms Once Powered New York’s Economy. Now They’re Scaling Back. Business, July 25

    After years of steady growth, many technology companies are laying off workers and giving up millions of square feet of office space in the city.

  138. Apple’s Slowdown Eases, but Sluggish Demand Hurts Results Business, May 4

    Overall iPhone sales were up, and revenue for the company’s services business set a record.

  139. Lyft Employees Told to Return to Office as New C.E.O. Lays Out Vision Business, April 28

    A day after nearly 1,100 people were laid off, the struggling company told its remaining workers to prepare for a series of changes.

  140. Funeral Homes Don’t Have to List Prices Online. That May Change. Business, April 14

    The rule on price disclosure was written before widespread use of the internet. Regulators are considering an update.

  141. Where Did All Your Zoom Friends Go? Sunday Business, March 18

    They got lost in this weird moment, where the world is caught between crisis and normalcy, nostalgic for house parties — and Houseparty, too.

  142. How China Went From Economic Superstar to Faltering Giant Op Ed, March 14

    The analyst Dan Wang takes stock of how the country’s growth trajectory has changed.

  143. The Furniture Hustlers of Silicon Valley Sunday Business, February 25

    As tech companies cut costs and move to remote work, their left-behind office furniture has become part of a booming trade.

  144. A Fraught New Frontier in Telehealth: Ketamine Investigative, February 20

    With loosened rules around remote prescriptions, a psychedelic-like drug has become a popular treatment for mental health conditions. But a boom in at-home use has outpaced evidence of safety.

  145. Combating Disinformation Wanes at Social Media Giants Business, February 14

    As the companies have shed jobs recently, many teams assigned to combat false and misleading information have taken a hit.

  146. Happiness or Success? Salesforce’s Marc Benioff Doesn’t Want to Choose. Business, February 13

    The chief executive, under pressure from activist investors, seeks to do well and do good — but his options are narrowing.

  147. Free Speech vs. Disinformation Comes to a Head Business, February 9

    The outcome of a case in federal court could help decide whether the First Amendment is a barrier to virtually any government efforts to stifle disinformation.

  148. A Federal Court Blocks California’s New Medical Misinformation Law Business, January 26

    California’s law sought to punish doctors who give patients false information about Covid-19.

  149. Your Friday Briefing: China’s Campaign Against ‘Zero-Covid’ Protesters N Y T Now, January 26

    Also, Russian missile attacks in Ukraine and a major deal for Indian women’s cricket.

  150. Tech Downsizes N Y T Now, January 25

    The drumbeat of layoffs in Silicon Valley is partly a result of how the pandemic upended the economy.