T/technology

  1. Elon Musk Taunts Europe and Tests Willingness to Enforce Online Laws Technology, Today

    Backed by White House officials, the tech billionaire has lashed out at the European Union after his social media platform X was fined last week.

  2. Thomas L. Friedman Says We’re in a New Epoch. David Brooks Has Questions. Opinion, Today

    Two columnists debate this strange moment.

  3. Reddit Sues Australian Government to Block Social Media Ban World, Today

    The company said the new law, which makes it illegal for children under 16 to have social media accounts, infringes on children’s rights.

  4. Trump Signs Executive Order to Neuter State A.I. Laws Technology, Yesterday

    The order would create one federal regulatory framework for artificial intelligence, President Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.

  5. Crypto Entrepreneur Who Caused 2022 Crash Is Sentenced to 15 Years in Prison Technology, Yesterday

    Do Kwon, who designed the virtual currencies Luna and TerraUSD, which plunged in 2022, had pleaded guilty to fraud.

  6. Can OpenAI Respond After Google Closes the A.I. Technology Gap? Technology, Yesterday

    A new technology release from OpenAI is supposed to top what Google recently produced. It also shows OpenAI is engaged in a new and more difficult competition.

  7. Why Some Countries May Copy Australia’s Ban on Children’s Use of Social Media World, Yesterday

    Governments are studying the decision to prohibit youths from using platforms like Facebook and TikTok as worries grow about the potential harm they cause.

  8. Calibri’s Run-In With Rubio Wasn’t Its First Controversy U.S., Yesterday

    The typeface, the target of the State Department’s typographical about-face, has been entangled in politics before.

  9. Warner Bros. Deal Piles Pressure on Trump’s Justice Department Technology, December 10

    President Trump’s unusual decision to involve himself in the government’s review of the deal puts his antitrust chief in an awkward position.

  10. Does the Job of C.E.O. or Private Investor Come First? Intel’s Chief Is Juggling That Question. Technology, December 10

    Lip-Bu Tan, who was appointed chief executive of Intel in March, is also a longtime venture capitalist. His dual roles have caused some consternation.

  11. Our Phones Are Making Us Lonely. There’s Drama in That. Arts, December 10

    Savvy theater makers are exploring the debasing effects of online culture on relationships.

  12. Meta’s New A.I. Superstars Are Chafing Against the Rest of the Company Technology, December 10

    An us-versus-them mentality has emerged between Meta’s top artificial intelligence team and longtime lieutenants to Mark Zuckerberg.

  13. When Silicon Valley Seeks the Sacred Special Series, December 9

    In an uncertain and often frightening world, more people are searching for meaning in communities of faith.

  14. Australia’s Social Media Ban for People Under 16 Takes Effect World, December 9

    The measure is one of the most sweeping efforts in the world to safeguard children from the harms of the platforms.

  15. Lo que hay que saber sobre la prohibición de las redes sociales en Australia En español, December 9

    El país está por prohibir a los menores de 16 años el acceso a las redes sociales, con una amplia ley federal que constituye uno de los primeros intentos de regulación a nivel nacional.

  16. Why the A.I. Boom Is Unlike the Dot-Com Boom Technology, December 9

    Silicon Valley is again betting everything on a new technology. But the mania is not a reboot of the late-1990s frenzy.

  17. Trump Clears Sale of More Powerful Nvidia A.I. Chips to China Business, December 8

    Approval for the H200 chip followed months of haggling between tech industry backers and defense hawks.

  18. A.I. Videos Have Flooded Social Media. No One Was Ready. Business, December 8

    Apps like OpenAI’s Sora are fooling millions of users into thinking A.I. videos are real, even when they include warning labels.

  19. The F.T.C. Chairman Who Tilted the Agency to Trump Technology, December 8

    Andrew Ferguson has used the Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection mandate to investigate issues important to President Trump and his base.

  20. App That Tracks ICE Raids Sues U.S., Saying Officials Pressured Apple to Remove It Business, December 8

    The developer of ICEBlock, which notifies users of ICE agent sightings, said Attorney General Pam Bondi censored his free speech.

  21. Instagram and Facebook Users in Europe Get Option of Sharing Less Data Business, December 8

    The European Commission said Meta, which owns both platforms, is giving users the option of sharing less data in exchange for less personalized ads.

  22. States Are Raking In Billions From Slot Machines on Your Phone The Upshot, December 8

    Online casinos have proved to be a much stronger source of tax revenue than sports betting apps. They may be coming to a state near you.

  23. Can We Stop Our Digital Selves From Becoming Who We Are? Opinion, December 7

    Pay attention to how you pay attention.

  24. El hombre que lucha por el derecho a que controles el mando del portón de tu cochera En español, December 7

    Si las empresas pueden modificar productos conectados a internet y cobrar suscripciones después de que la gente ya los compró, ¿qué significa realmente ser dueño de algo hoy en día?

  25. How a Cryptocurrency Helps Criminals Launder Money and Evade Sanctions Technology, December 7

    Through layers of intermediaries, stablecoins can be moved, swapped and mixed into pools of other funds in ways that are difficult to trace, experts say.

  26. Buy Better, Buy Less, Feel Smug About It Opinion, December 7

    Being a smart consumer has never been easier. Influencers and the fashion industry are all taking advantage of that.

  27. A Grand Social Media Experiment Begins in Australia World, December 7

    The country is trying to wean children under 16 off the likes of TikTok, Snapchat, YouTube and Instagram with a new law. The teenagers are skeptical.

  28. What to Know About Australia’s Social Media Ban World, December 7

    The country is barring children under 16 from social media, with a sweeping federal law that is one of the first attempts at a nationwide regulation.

  29. It’s Not Just You. Users Struggle With the Instagram Repost Button. Technology, December 6

    The new repost option, sandwiched between comment and share, has led to consternation and accidental reposts by some users.

  30. Elon Musk Loves What This Guy Has to Say Business, December 5

    Mario Nawfal has a knack for getting Mr. Musk’s attention online, and for turning that into big business.

  31. New York Times Sues A.I. Start-Up Perplexity Over Use of Copyrighted Work Technology, December 5

    Filed in federal court on Friday, the suit joins more than 40 other court disputes between copyright holders and A.I. companies.

  32. Elon Musk’s X Hit With $140 Million Fine in Europe Technology, December 5

    The case over online transparency has become a flashpoint between the European Union and the Trump administration.

  33. A Bursting Bubble Would Be Great for A.I. Opinion, December 5

    Generative A.I. needs a course correction for the sake of energy efficiency and for its own advancement.

  34. Meta Weighs Cuts to Its Metaverse Unit Technology, December 4

    Meta plans to direct its investments to focus on wearables like its augmented reality glasses but does not plan to abandon building the metaverse.

  35. Rebecca Heineman, Transgender Video Game Pioneer, Dies at 62 Technology, December 4

    Fleeing an abusive home life, she went on to win a national Space Invaders tournament, taught herself to program and left a trail of popular games in her wake.

  36. Faulty Glucose Monitor Sensors May Be Tied to 7 Deaths, F.D.A. Says Health, December 4

    Abbott Diabetes Care said it had received reports of more than 700 injuries that may be associated with malfunctioning sensors.

  37. A.I. Deal Making Is Getting Faster and Faster Technology, December 4

    Investors are deciding within 15 minutes whether to shovel millions into A.I. start-ups and taking entrepreneurs weight lifting and rock climbing to get deals done.

  38. Why One Man Is Fighting for Our Right to Control Our Garage Door Openers Technology, December 4

    If companies can modify internet-connected products and charge subscriptions after people have already purchased them, what does it mean to own anything anymore?

  39. As Hochul Considers an A.I. Bill, Its Sponsor Throws Her a Fund-Raiser New York, December 4

    Gov. Kathy Hochul received nearly $250,000 for her re-election campaign from donors eager to have her sign a bill that would regulate the A.I. field in New York.

  40. MrBeast Says YouTube’s Content Has Less ‘Brain Rot’ Than TikTok Video, December 3

    Jimmy Donaldson, who is known as MrBeast online, discussed the differences in content quality between YouTube and TikTok at The New York Times’s DealBook summit.

  41. Anthropic’s Chief Executive Acknowledges Risks of Huge Spending on A.I. Business, December 3

    As he and his company pour tens of billions into new data centers, Dario Amodei said they face a “cone of uncertainty.”

  42. Anthropic C.E.O. Says A.I. Tech Is Solid, But Massive Spending Poses Risk Video, December 3

    At this year’s DealBook Summit, the Anthropic chief executive Dario Amodei told Andrew Ross Sorkin, editor at large, that the A.I. industry was taking on considerable risk as it spends hundreds of billions of dollars on the data centers powering its technology.

  43. Dario Amodei, Scott Bessent, Erika Kirk Among Speakers at DealBook Summit Business, December 3

    Andrew Ross Sorkin will interview some of the most powerful people from Wall Street, Silicon Valley and Washington.

  44. Those Sky-High Bitcoin Prices That Everyone Said Were Here to Stay? They Left. Technology, December 3

    Bitcoin has plunged more than 30 percent and Ether is down around 40 percent in recent months, as gains from President Trump’s pro-crypto policies evaporated.

  45. Trabajo como desarrollador de IA. Así es como estoy criando a mi hijo En español, December 2

    Si fomentamos el pensamiento crítico y la flexibilidad creativa de nuestros hijos ahora, podemos ayudarles a prepararse para un futuro con IA.

  46. India Orders a Tracking App to Be Installed in All Smartphones Business, December 2

    The government said the rules were needed to prevent theft and other crime. Its opponents and privacy activists regard the app as a tool of mass surveillance.

  47. I’m Building an Algorithm That Doesn’t Rot Your Brain Video, December 1

    Jack Conte, the chief executive of Patreon, a platform for creators to monetize their art and content, outlines his vision for an internet that puts people, not ad revenues, first.

  48. Move Over, Computer Science. Students Are Flocking to New A.I. Majors. Technology, December 1

    At M.I.T., a new program called “artificial intelligence and decision-making” is now the second-most-popular undergraduate major.

  49. How to Prepare Your Kids for the A.I. Revolution Opinion, December 1

    I help to build A.I. systems, and even I know there are real reasons to be concerned about how A.I. affects our children.

  50. La IA podría ayudarte con tus compras navideñas En español, November 30

    Según los comercios y las empresas tecnológicas, los chatbots pueden ayudar a las personas a hacer frente a la “fatiga de decisión por las opciones interminables”.

  51. Silicon Valley’s Man in the White House Is Benefiting Himself and His Friends Technology, November 30

    David Sacks, the Trump administration’s A.I. and crypto czar, has helped formulate policies that aid his Silicon Valley friends and many of his own tech investments.

  52. I Was Once a Broken Reader. I Found My Way Back to Books. Opinion, November 29

    I needed to stop thinking that I knew more than the author and give in to whatever ride they had spent years planning.

  53. Airbus Orders Software Update for A320 Jets Business, November 28

    The European airplane maker said a recent incident had shown that “intense solar radiation may corrupt data critical to the functioning of flight controls.”

  54. Goodbye, Price Tags. Hello, Dynamic Pricing. Video, November 28

    Shopping has always been a game. And now it’s being rigged against you.

  55. La IA y la pregunta del billón de dólares En español, November 28

    Ni las mismas compañías creadoras de la tecnología parecen saber bien hacia dónde se dirige.

  56. Your Phone Isn’t a Drug. It’s a Portal to the Otherworld. Opinion, November 28

    The internet is a dangerous place. Folklore can teach us how to move through it.

  57. El auge de la IA continúa. ¿Por qué aún es inquietante? En español, November 28

    Vivimos una época de superlativos en la industria tecnológica, con ganancias, cotizaciones bursátiles y precios de transacción históricos. Suficiente para poner muy nerviosos a algunos.

  58. A.I. and the Trillion-Dollar Question World, November 27

    Even the companies building the technology don’t seem exactly sure where it’s headed.

  59. The Writer Who Dared Criticize Silicon Valley Technology, November 27

    Paulina Borsook’s “Cyberselfish,” which offered dire predictions about the tech world’s love for libertarianism, is finding fans. It only took 25 years.

  60. David Lerner, a Mr. Fix-it of Apple Computers, Dies at 72 Technology, November 26

    He and a partner founded Tekserve, a Manhattan emergency room for frozen hard drives, keyboards, screens and their confounded owners.

  61. How Will Starcloud Build Data Centers in Space? Video, November 26

    Starcloud is a new Nvidia-backed company that is joining Google and a few other companies in developing plans to eventually put data centers in space. The “Hard Fork” co-hosts Kevin Roose and Casey Newton discuss what those data centers will look like and how they will transmit information to Earth.

  62. Take Command of Your Powerful New Smartphone Camera Technology, November 26

    This year’s high-end models from Apple and Google raise the bar for mobile photography, but users should take the time to learn the settings and features.

  63. Jesus Bot Is Always on Demand (for a Small Monthly Fee) Opinion, November 26

    Faith is not meant to be transactional or tailored to you.

  64. A.I.’s Anti-A.I. Marketing Strategy Opinion, November 26

    Artificial intelligence is unpopular and uncool — so A.I. companies are making ads that don’t even bother to show their own products. Will it pay off?

  65. Need a Break from Your Phone? These Books Can Help. Well, November 26

    These five titles, recommended by therapists and researchers, can help you curb the urge to scroll.

  66. The Athlete Trolling His Way Through Jiu-Jitsu’s Culture Wars Magazine, November 26

    Brazilian jiu-jitsu has been increasingly embraced by right-wing influencers. Craig Jones is an unlikely counterforce.

  67. Trump’s Retribution Campaign Hits a Major Roadblock, and Health Care Costs Set to Surge The Headlines, November 25

    Plus, what a social media break can do for your brain.

  68. A.I. Can Do More of Your Shopping This Holiday Season Technology, November 25

    New tools and features from retailers and tech companies use artificial intelligence to help people find gifts and make decisions about their shopping lists.

  69. The Social-Media Platform That Makes You Tell the Truth Magazine, November 25

    Strava logs all your fitness achievements — and then some.

  70. Faux Jewels and Slimming Belts: Why Shopping on TikTok Is a Lot Like QVC Business, November 25

    The popular app’s online marketplace is growing rapidly in the United States, driven by TikTok’s popularity and influencer advertisements that look a lot like TV infomercials.

  71. RealPage Agrees to Settle Federal Rent-Collusion Case Technology, November 25

    The Justice Department had accused the real estate software company of enabling landlords to charge tenants more than free-market rates.

  72. Malaysia to Bar Children Under 16 From Social Media, Echoing Australian Ban World, November 24

    The announcement on Sunday, which was light on details, came weeks before a similar action takes effect in Australia.

  73. How Can Anyone Seriously Doubt Meta Is a Monopoly? Opinion, November 23

    All you need is common sense.

  74. How OpenAI’s Changes Sent Some Users Spiraling Video, November 23

    OpenAI adjusted ChatGPT’s settings, which left some users spiraling, according to our reporting. Kashmir Hill, who reports on technology and privacy, describes what the company has done about the users’ troubling reports.

  75. What OpenAI Did When ChatGPT Users Lost Touch With Reality Technology, November 23

    In tweaking its chatbot to appeal to more people, OpenAI made it riskier for some of them. Now the company has made its chatbot safer. Will that undermine its quest for growth?

  76. The A.I. Boom Is Driving the Economy. What Happens if It Falters? Business, November 22

    A windfall for companies that build data centers and their suppliers is overshadowing weakness in other industries.

  77. Los taxis sin conductor se están poniendo de moda. ¿Estás preparado? En español, November 22

    Con la llegada del taxi robot Zoox de Amazon a San Francisco para competir con Waymo, los servicios autónomos están ganando impulso. Pero hay pros y contras.

  78. The Fate of Google’s Ad Tech Monopoly Is Now in a Judge’s Hands Technology, November 21

    A judge queried lawyers about whether a breakup made sense during closing arguments on how to fix the tech giant’s dominance in online advertising.

  79. La batalla por la privacidad en nuestro cerebro En español, November 21

    Una tecnología que puede leer las mentes, y tal vez incluso cambiarlas.

  80. Pop Culture Got Stale. Counterculture Went Right-Wing. Books, November 21

    How the rise and fall of the nihilist hipster gave us the cruel reactionaries of today.

  81. Las empresas tecnológicas desean acceso directo a tu cerebro En español, November 21

    La tecnología de IA y los implantes neuronales avanzan a velocidades vertiginosas. ¿Necesitamos nuevas legislaciones para proteger nuestro ser más íntimo?

  82. A Tap-to-Pay Society Is Leaving These New Yorkers Behind New York, November 21

    As fewer people carry cash, vendors, street performers and people experiencing homelessness and unemployment are at a disadvantage.

  83. Australia Adds Twitch to Social Media Ban for Teens World, November 21

    Twitch, a livestreaming service popular with gamers, joins nine other platforms that will be required to remove Australian users under the age of 16.

  84. The Privacy Battle in Our Brains World, November 20

    My colleague talks about technology that can actually read our minds — and maybe even change them.

  85. The A.I. Boom Has Found Another Gear. Why Can’t People Shake Their Worries? Technology, November 20

    It is a time of superlatives in the tech industry, with historic profits, stock prices and deal prices. It’s enough to make some people very nervous.

  86. Trump Elevates Once-Fringe Meme Makers to the Mainstream Technology, November 20

    Right-wing users have tapped A.I. tools to promote President Trump’s agenda. He took notice.

  87. To Meld A.I. With Supercomputers, National Labs Are Picking Up the Pace Technology, November 20

    A.I. has added urgency to the U.S. national laboratories that have been sites of cutting-edge scientific research, leading to deals with tech giants like Nvidia to speed up.

  88. A.I. Is a Bubble. Maybe That’s OK. Opinion, November 20

    Investors’ excitement rightly reflects the potential transformation of the entire economy.

  89. El talento chino sigue impulsando el avance de la IA en Silicon Valley En español, November 20

    Aunque algunos ejecutivos de California pintan a China como el enemigo, los profesionales del país asiático siguen desempeñando un papel importante en la investigación estadounidense.

  90. Yann LeCun, a Pioneering A.I. Scientist, Leaves Meta Technology, November 19

    Dr. LeCun’s departure follows a shake-up in Meta’s artificial intelligence efforts, as Mark Zuckerberg pushes his company to keep up in the tech race.

  91. Nvidia’s Profit Jumps 65% to $31.9 Billion. Is It Enough for Wall Street? Technology, November 19

    The company, which makes the computer chips essential to the artificial intelligence boom, also said revenue in its recent quarter rose to $57 billion.

  92. Saudi Arabia Backs Elon Musk’s xAI With Data Center Deal Technology, November 19

    Mr. Musk’s xAI will work with the Saudi artificial intelligence company Humain on a new data center, part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s effort to diversify his country’s economy.

  93. Larry Summers Resigns From OpenAI’s Board Technology, November 19

    Mr. Summers’ departure from the artificial intelligence company’s board followed revelations of his communications with the disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.

  94. How Trump and Nvidia’s C.E.O. Became Partners on the International Stage Technology, November 19

    Over the last 10 months, President Trump has become close with Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s chief executive, as the company’s chips have become a tool in trade and peace talks.

  95. I’m Building an Algorithm That Doesn’t Rot Your Brain Opinion, November 19

    The internet should enrich people, not advertisers.

  96. Google quiere revolucionar la IA con el lanzamiento de Gemini 3 En español, November 19

    Gemini 3 mejora la capacidad de su predecesor para crear programas de software, organizar el correo electrónico y ayudar a las empresas a analizar documentos.

  97. Europe’s Chip Dreams Confront Business Realities Technology, November 19

    European chipmakers need TSMC’s help to grow their own semiconductor supply chain, but the chip giant’s Taiwanese suppliers find Europe a tough place to do business.

  98. In the A.I. Race, Chinese Talent Still Drives American Research Technology, November 19

    Although some Silicon Valley executives paint China as the enemy, Chinese brains continue to play a major role in U.S. research.

  99. Technology Is Fast and the Courts Are Slow Technology, November 19

    Silicon Valley has increasingly pointed at rapid digital changes to blunt government efforts to rein in its power.

  100. Meta’s Victory Opens the Way for Silicon Valley to Go Deal Shopping Technology, November 18

    To avoid regulatory scrutiny, big tech companies had steered clear of buying start-ups outright. Meta’s antitrust win may change that thinking.

  101. Meta Did Not Violate Antitrust Law, Judge Rules Technology, November 18

    Meta’s acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp did not illegally stifle competition in social networking, a judge found, a major win for the tech giant.

  102. Google Unveils Gemini 3, With Improved Coding and Search Abilities Business, November 18

    The new artificial intelligence model is the second the company has released this year. OpenAI and Anthropic made similar updates a few months ago.

  103. Una avería en Cloudflare afecta parte de internet En español, November 18

    Los servicios de la empresa de software sustentan miles de sitios web.

  104. Self-Driving Taxis Are Catching On. Are You Ready? Technology, November 18

    With the arrival of Amazon’s Zoox robot taxi in San Francisco to compete with Waymo, autonomous services are gaining momentum. But there are pros and cons.

  105. Cloudflare Outage Disrupts X, ChatGPT and Other Parts of the Internet Business, November 18

    Services from Cloudflare, a software company, underpin thousands of websites. The company said it was working on a fix.

  106. La industria cripto y el ‘dinero sucio’ En español, November 18

    Según un estudio, al menos 28.000 millones de dólares vinculados a actividades ilícitas han entrado en las bolsas de criptomonedas en los dos últimos años.

  107. Ahora es posible rastrear las mariposas monarca una por una En español, November 17

    Por primera vez, los científicos están monitoreando la migración de las mariposas monarca por gran parte de Norteamérica mediante nuevos transmisores diminutos.

  108. Europe Begins Rethinking Its Crackdown on Big Tech Technology, November 17

    European policymakers are crafting changes to scale back and simplify landmark rules for A.I. and data privacy, in a shift from an aggressive regulatory period.

  109. We Can Now Track Individual Monarch Butterflies. It’s a Revelation. Science, November 17

    Scientists used tiny new sensors to follow the insects on journeys that take thousands of miles to their winter colonies in Mexico.

  110. The Sad and Dangerous Reality Behind ‘Her’ Opinion, November 17

    At least a quarter of the more than 100 billion messages sent to our chatbots are attempts to initiate romantic or sexual exchanges.

  111. Jeff Bezos Creates A.I. Start-Up Where He Will Be Co-Chief Executive Technology, November 17

    Called Project Prometheus, the company is focusing on artificial intelligence for the engineering and manufacturing of computers, automobiles and spacecraft.

  112. How Fraudsters Use Cryptocurrency A.T.M.s to Target Victims Technology, November 17

    The kiosks, which resemble conventional A.T.M.s and convert cash into virtual currencies, are increasingly under scrutiny as a tool for scammers.

  113. The Crypto Industry’s $28 Billion in ‘Dirty Money’ Technology, November 17

    As President Trump has championed crypto and the industry has gone mainstream, funds from scammers and other criminal groups have flowed onto major crypto exchanges.

  114. ¡Que empiecen los juegos de control mental! En español, November 16

    Cada cuatro años, en el Cibatlón, equipos de investigadores y “pilotos” tecnológicos compiten para ver qué interfaz cerebro-computador es más prometedora.

  115. The Laptop That Ate Your Child’s Classroom Opinion, November 16

    Asking students to drill down on their schoolwork amid an array of digital distractions is inimical to learning.

  116. An Economist Asked, How Much Should We Spend to Avoid the A.I. Apocalypse? Business, November 15

    The question “at first struck me as too open-ended to be usefully addressed by standard economics,” said Charles Jones of Stanford. He took a shot anyway.

  117. America’s Formula for Greatness Is Under Threat Opinion, November 15

    Education, open markets, trade and immigration transformed the United States into the world’s dominant power, but each is now being weakened.

  118. Waymo Was on a Roll in San Francisco. Then One of Its Driverless Cars Killed a Cat. U.S., November 15

    The self-driving taxis have become ubiquitous in the city, but an uproar ensued when one ran over a beloved feline.

  119. How a Seattle Alt-Weekly Newspaper Became a Progressive Kingmaker Technology, November 14

    Endorsements from The Stranger have become a must-have for some politicians, who know to bring snacks to their meetings with the paper’s writers.

  120. What’s a Digital Passport and How Does It Work? Travel, November 14

    Apple joined Google this week in allowing travelers to add their passports to their cellphone “wallets.” As the holiday travel season nears, here’s what you need to know.

  121. The Machine Wants to Kill Us Opinion, November 14

    Paul Kingsnorth on technology’s war against human nature.

  122. The Next Privacy Battleground Is Inside Your Brain Magazine, November 14

    As neural implant technology and A.I. advance at breakneck speeds, do we need a new set of rights to protect our most intimate data — our minds?

  123. Netflix Tries Bringing Family Game Night to Your TV Business, November 13

    The company is shifting its video game strategy to focus more on popular games you already know, such as Pictionary and Boggle.

  124. 5 Apps That Will Make You Love Art Galleries Arts, November 13

    Craving an art fix but don’t know where to start? These new art influencers can help newbies and players navigate openings, events and listings.

  125. Will People Trust Voting by Phone? Alaska Is Going to Find Out. U.S., November 13

    Anchorage will experiment with internet voting in local elections, betting that its ease and security will win over voters even in an era of election conspiracy theories.

  126. Soy psicoanalista. Esto es lo que nos está haciendo la tecnología En español, November 13

    Nuestra adopción de la tecnología ha sido tan rápida que estamos perdiendo la capacidad de darnos cuenta qué se siente vivir de esta manera.

  127. Russian Humanoid Robot Falls on Its Face in Hyped Debut Technology, November 12

    The robot, known as AIDOL, staggered onstage during a technology showcase in Moscow. Organizers blamed the mishap on calibration and lighting issues.

  128. Reveal of Russian A.I. Humanoid Robot Goes Awry Video, November 12

    AIDOL, Russia’s first artificial intelligence-powered humanoid robot, collapsed onstage moments after it was revealed at a technology event in Moscow on Tuesday.

  129. YouTube to Reinstate Accounts Banned Over Content Related to the Pandemic and 2020 Election Technology, September 23

    The streaming platform unveiled its plan in a letter to the House Judiciary Committee.

  130. 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.

  131. 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.

  132. 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.

  133. 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.

  134. 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.

  135. 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.

  136. 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.

  137. 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.

  138. 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.

  139. 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.

  140. 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.

  141. 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.

  142. 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.

  143. 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.

  144. 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.

  145. 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.

  146. 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.

  147. 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.

  148. 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.

  149. 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.

  150. 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.