T/technology

  1. The A.I. Boom Is Driving the Economy. What Happens if It Falters? Business, Today

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

  2. Los taxis sin conductor se están poniendo de moda. ¿Estás preparado? En español, Today

    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.

  3. The Fate of Google’s Ad Tech Monopoly Is Now in a Judge’s Hands Technology, Yesterday

    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.

  4. La batalla por la privacidad en nuestro cerebro En español, Yesterday

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

  5. Pop Culture Got Stale. Counterculture Went Right-Wing. Books, Yesterday

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

  6. Las empresas tecnológicas desean acceso directo a tu cerebro En español, Yesterday

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

  7. A Tap-to-Pay Society Is Leaving These New Yorkers Behind New York, Yesterday

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

  8. Australia Adds Twitch to Social Media Ban for Teens World, Yesterday

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

  9. 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.

  10. 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.

  11. 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.

  12. 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.

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

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

  14. 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.

  15. 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.

  16. 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.

  17. 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.

  18. 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.

  19. 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.

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

    The internet should enrich people, not advertisers.

  21. 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.

  22. 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.

  23. 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.

  24. 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.

  25. 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.

  26. 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.

  27. 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.

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

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

  29. 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.

  30. 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.

  31. 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.

  32. 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.

  33. 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.

  34. 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.

  35. 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.

  36. 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.

  37. 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.

  38. 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.

  39. ¡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.

  40. 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.

  41. 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.

  42. 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.

  43. 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.

  44. 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.

  45. 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.

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

    Paul Kingsnorth on technology’s war against human nature.

  47. 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?

  48. 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.

  49. 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.

  50. 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.

  51. 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.

  52. 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.

  53. 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.

  54. Let the Mind-Control Games Begin! Science, November 12

    Every four years at the Cybathlon, teams of researchers and technology “pilots” compete to see whose brain-computer interface holds the most promise.

  55. You’re a Computer Science Major. Don’t Panic. Opinion, November 12

    We taught a generation how to write code. Now we need to teach future generations how to edit code.

  56. Kindergartners With Chromebooks: 350 Teachers on How Screens Took Over School The Upshot, November 12

    Even as schools have banned phones, the pandemic-era practice of giving students their own laptops and tablets has remained.

  57. I Worked All Over Silicon Valley. This Is How It Lost Its Spine. Opinion, November 12

    The revolutionaries in Silicon Valley are no longer storming the gates. They’re inside the castle, polishing the silverware.

  58. The Mysterious ‘Louvre Detective’ Was a 15-Year-Old Passer-by World, November 11

    The photo of a dapper man in a fedora sparked many questions: Was the person real? A Sherlock Holmes-inspired detective on the case? Or just being very French?

  59. ¿Por qué tanta tecnología parece inspirada en películas distópicas de ciencia ficción? En español, November 11

    La industria imita ideas de sátiras sombrías y relatos ‘cyberpunk’ como si fueran posibilidades emocionantes y no advertencias perturbadoras.

  60. You Want to Throw Your Phone Into the Sea. Here’s a Better Way. Opinion, November 11

    We’ve lost the capacity to feel the grief technology brings.

  61. Una nueva generación de ludópatas busca ayuda En español, November 11

    El auge de las apuestas deportivas atrae a millones de hombres jóvenes. ¿Van los esfuerzos de recuperación un paso atrás?

  62. La IA se dirige hacia algo más sorprendente que la inteligencia En español, November 10

    Al igual que nuestro concepto de inteligencia ha cambiado, a medida que interactuemos con una IA cada vez más sofisticada desarrollaremos una idea más inclusiva de la consciencia.

  63. Gamma, a PowerPoint for the A.I. Era, Raises $68 Million Business, November 10

    The five-year-old start-up, which has just 52 employees and is profitable, is now valued at $2.1 billion by investors including Andreessen Horowitz.

  64. Doctors, Lawyers and Priests Keep Secrets. Why Not Your Chatbot? Opinion, November 10

    The case for “A.I. Interaction Privilege.”

  65. We’re In a New Everything-Is-Connected Epoch. But What to Call It? Opinion, November 10

    We have arrived at a “Polycene” moment where binary systems are giving way to multiple interconnected ones.

  66. Why Debt Funding Is Ratcheting Up the Risks of the A.I. Boom Technology, November 10

    While the tech giants have plenty of money to build data centers, smaller outfits are taking on debt and taking big chances to work with them.

  67. Cómo los memes de ‘The Office’ se convirtieron en el lenguaje de internet En español, November 9

    Desde las personas que publican en las redes sociales hasta el presidente de la FCC, todos vivimos en el mundo de Michael Scott.

  68. Un adolescente enamorado de un chatbot se suicidó. ¿Es posible responsabilizar a esta tecnología? En español, November 9

    Una mujer de Florida presentó una demanda contra una empresa de inteligencia artificial, alegando que su producto provocó la muerte de su hijo.

  69. A.I. Is Already Intelligent. This Is How It Becomes Conscious. Opinion, November 8

    Skeptics overlook how our concepts change.

  70. Is This Artist the Joe Rogan of the Art World? Arts, November 8

    Joshua Citarella, the artist behind the podcast “Doomscroll” and the digital project Do Not Research, explains how online subcultures influence today’s politics.

  71. A New Generation of Gamblers Searches for Help Well, November 8

    The sports betting boom has drawn in millions of young men. Are recovery efforts for problem gamblers lagging behind?

  72. A.I. Abuse Is Reinventing the Law Business, November 7

    More lawyers are using artificial intelligence to write legal briefs. Some vigilantes are publicizing the A.I.-generated errors.

  73. To Preserve Records, Homeland Security Now Relies on Officials to Take Screenshots U.S., November 7

    Experts say the new policy, which ditches software that automatically captured text messages, opens ample room for both willful and unwitting noncompliance with federal records laws.

  74. Lawsuits Blame ChatGPT for Suicides and Harmful Delusions Technology, November 7

    Seven complaints, filed on Thursday, claim the popular chatbot encouraged dangerous discussions and led to mental breakdowns.

  75. OpenAI Races to Quell Concerns Over Its Finances Technology, November 6

    The A.I. company faced pushback after a top executive raised the idea of government aid, amid concerns that the A.I. industry is headed toward a dangerous bubble.

  76. What We Can Learn From Brain Organoids Science, November 6

    Lab-grown “reductionist replicas” of the human brain are helping scientists understand fetal development and cognitive disorders, including autism. But ethical questions loom.

  77. It’s Clear Who Is Responsible for the Shutdown Online: The Other Side Technology, November 6

    A blame game has played out on the internet and on television. President Trump has pulled out the stops.

  78. Are A.I. Therapy Chatbots Safe to Use? Technology, November 6

    Psychologists and technologists see them as the future of therapy. The Food and Drug Administration is exploring whether to regulate them as medical devices.

  79. How A.I. and Social Media Contribute to ‘Brain Rot’ Technology, November 6

    A.I. search tools, chatbots and social media are associated with lower cognitive performance, studies say. What to do?

  80. Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan Restructure Their Philanthropy Technology, November 6

    The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative said its restructured organization, Biohub, would lead its focus on artificial intelligence and scientific research.

  81. How ‘The Office’ Memes Became the Language of the Internet Arts, November 6

    Oh my God, OK, it’s happening! From social-media posters to the F.C.C. chair, we are all living in Michael Scott’s world.

  82. Why Does So Much New Technology Feel Inspired by Dystopian Sci-Fi Movies? Magazine, November 5

    The industry keeps echoing ideas from bleak satires and cyberpunk stories as if they were exciting possibilities, not grim warnings.

  83. IBM to Cut Thousands of Workers Amid A.I. Boom Technology, November 4

    The technology supplier said it was shifting its focus to higher-growth businesses, including A.I. consulting and software.

  84. Vogue Absorbs Teen Vogue Style, November 4

    Teen Vogue’s website is folding into Vogue.com, further eroding the sister publication’s presence as an independent brand.

  85. Trump’s China Trade Policy Is a Hot Mess Opinion, November 3

    As he so often does, the president is pushing the wrong answer to the right question on trade policy with Beijing.

  86. You Don’t Need to Swipe Right. A.I. Is Transforming Dating Apps. Technology, November 3

    Meet your artificial intelligence matchmakers. These A.I. tools are changing dating apps, so users don’t have to swipe through an endless scroll of profiles.

  87. Facebook Dating Is a Surprise Hit for the Social Network Technology, November 3

    Facebook’s free dating service has 21 million users, more than the popular dating app Hinge, as the social network reinvents itself.

  88. OpenAI Signs $38 Billion Cloud Computing Deal With Amazon Technology, November 3

    After signing agreements to use computing power from Nvidia, AMD and Oracle, OpenAI is teaming up with the world’s largest cloud computing company.

  89. Moon Duchin on the ‘Mathematical Quagmire’ of Gerrymandering Science, November 3

    Why the challenge of truly representative democracy is so complex.

  90. A.I. Is Deciding Who You Are Opinion, November 2

    In the age of A.I., personal data is anything but personal.

  91. An In-the-Know Way to Find Secondhand Treasures Style, November 1

    Fashion writers, vintage collectors and costume designers all use this app to unearth wardrobe gems.

  92. What If You Spent Every Waking Moment Taking On Elon Musk? Business, October 31

    Aaron Greenspan was once a promising entrepreneur. He has spent the last two decades lobbing grenades at the country’s most powerful tech moguls.

  93. How OpenAI Uses Complex and Circular Deals to Fuel Its Multibillion-Dollar Rise Interactive, October 31

    Here are seven unusual financial agreements helping to drive the ambitions of the poster child of the A.I. revolution.

  94. Big Tech’s A.I. Spending Is Accelerating (Again) Technology, October 31

    Despite the risk of a bubble, Google, Meta, Microsoft and Amazon plan to spend billions more on artificial intelligence than they already do.

  95. Nvidia, Samsung, Hyundai Leaders Share Fried Chicken and Beer Video, October 31

    The leaders of Nvidia, Samsung and Hyundai hung out over Korean fried chicken and beer on Thursday in Seoul. Their casual outing signaled the deepening ties between Nvidia, the American chip maker, and South Korea’s auto and tech conglomerates.

  96. Amazon’s Profit Is Up 38% on Strong Performance Business, October 30

    After unexpectedly strong sales and profits across its consumer and cloud businesses, the tech giant said another strong quarter might be ahead.

  97. Apple’s iPhones Fuel Record Sales and Profit Business, October 30

    The company’s revenue rose to above $100 billion in the quarter for the first time and profit soared 86 percent.

  98. Little Word of a TikTok Deal Out of Trump-Xi Meeting U.S., October 30

    Neither President Trump nor Chinese officials indicated any new developments for the popular video app. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent previously suggested they could “consummate” transfer of control from its Chinese owner.

  99. Nvidia alcanza los 5 billones de dólares y consolida su poder en el auge de la IA En español, October 30

    El fabricante de chips para inteligencia artificial se ha convertido en una pieza clave en las negociaciones comerciales del gobierno de Trump en Asia.

  100. Their Professors Caught Them Cheating. They Used A.I. to Apologize. U.S., October 30

    Two professors at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign said they grew suspicious after receiving identical apologies from dozens of students they had accused of academic dishonesty.

  101. Yo dirigí la seguridad de productos en OpenAI. Cuidado con lo que dice del uso erótico de ChatGPT En español, October 29

    Es posible que la empresa quiera hacer sus productos más seguros. Pero ha prestado muy poca atención a los riesgos establecidos.

  102. Meta Raises Its Spending Forecast on A.I. to Above $70 Billion Technology, October 29

    The Silicon Valley company projected more spending this year and said it would continue in 2026 as it hires A.I. researchers and builds data centers to power the technology.

  103. Alphabet Revenue Up 16% With Strong Cloud Sales Technology, October 29

    The internet company said profit for the quarter was up 33 percent, to just under $35 billion.

  104. Microsoft Increases Investments Amid A.I. Race Business, October 29

    The company reported that it spent a higher-than-expected $34.9 billion in capital expenditures during its quarter.

  105. Nvidia Is Now Worth $5 Trillion as It Consolidates Power in A.I. Boom Technology, October 29

    The A.I. chip maker has become a linchpin in the Trump administration’s trade negotiations in Asia.

  106. Can the James Baldwin Typebot Tell Us the Meaning of Life? Arts, October 29

    In the financial district of Manhattan, an A.I.-equipped typewriter, fueled by James Baldwin’s works, types back at you with answers to your questions.

  107. 48 Hours Without A.I. Video, October 29

    A.J. Jacobs went 48 hours without interacting with artificial intelligence. The experiment revealed just how embedded artificial intelligence already is in our daily lives.

  108. Character.AI to Bar Children Under 18 From Using Its Chatbots Technology, October 29

    The start-up, which creates A.I. companions, faces lawsuits from families who have accused Character.AI’s chatbots of leading teenagers to kill themselves.

  109. OpenAI Restructures to Become a More Traditional For-Profit Company Technology, October 28

    The artificial intelligence company said that the nonprofit that controlled the organization would receive a $130 billion stake in the new company.

  110. Can a Start-Up Make Computer Chips Cheaper Than the Industry’s Giants? Business, October 28

    Substrate, a San Francisco company, is trying to take on powerhouses like the Dutch company ASML.

  111. I Worked at OpenAI. It’s Not Doing Enough to Protect People. Opinion, October 28

    A.I. companies need to do more to show the proof behind their claims.

  112. Sports Bet on Gambling. Everyone Lost. Opinion, October 28

    The leagues decided to embrace wagering a decade ago. Now they are hostage to the forces they unleashed.

  113. Arabia Saudita busca reinventarse de potencia petrolera a exportadora de IA En español, October 28

    El reino está invirtiendo dinero en centros de datos y colaborando con gigantes tecnológicos estadounidenses y chinos, situando sus ambiciones en medio de una lucha geopolítica por el poder tecnológico.

  114. Elon Musk Challenges Wikipedia With His Own A.I. Encyclopedia Technology, October 28

    The billionaire launched his A.I.-powered version, Grokipedia, on Monday.

  115. Amazon Braces for Major Cuts to Its White Collar Work Force Technology, October 27

    The company is looking to cut costs starting this week as it continues to spend aggressively on artificial intelligence. Another round of cuts is expected in January.

  116. Amazon Braces for Major Cuts to Its White-Collar Work Force Technology, October 27

    The company is looking to cut costs starting this week as it continues to spend aggressively on artificial intelligence. Another round of cuts is expected in January.

  117. Qualcomm Unveils New Line of Chips to Join the A.I. Boom Technology, October 27

    Qualcomm, which is known for its chips in smartphones, also announced a deal with Humain, a Saudi-backed A.I. company. The news sent Qualcomm’s share price soaring.

  118. Why OpenAI Stirred Chaos in Hollywood Video, October 27

    The “Hard Fork” hosts Kevin Roose and Casey Newton discuss recent news surrounding the “Breaking Bad” star Bryan Cranston and OpenAI’s new app, Sora 2.

  119. Saudi Arabia, Rich With Oil, Wants to Be Known as the A.I. Exporter Technology, October 27

    The kingdom is pouring money into data centers and working with U.S. and Chinese tech giants, landing its A.I. ambitions in the middle of a geopolitical tussle for tech power.

  120. The Website Reshaping Live Music, One Set List at a Time Arts, October 27

    On Setlist.fm, users track what songs artists play at concerts (and more). The availability of so much data has changed the ways musicians and fans experience shows.

  121. ¿La muerte de Daniel Naroditsky, gran maestro de ajedrez, está relacionada con el ‘bullying’? En español, October 26

    El jugador estadounidense, con millones de seguidores en internet, fue encontrado muerto en Charlotte, Carolina del Norte, después de hablar sobre haber sido acusado de hacer trampa por un antiguo campeón del mundo.

  122. Trump and Xi Could ‘Consummate’ TikTok Deal This Week, Bessent Says U.S., October 26

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on “Face the Nation” on Sunday that China and the United States had reached “a final deal on TikTok,” but offered few details.

  123. ‘I’m Shocked, Shocked to Find That Gambling Is Going On in Here’ Opinion, October 26

    The N.B.A. should have known this was coming.

  124. How Pinterest Is Courting Gen Z With ‘Safer’ Social Media Business, October 26

    Bill Ready, the company’s chief executive, is shifting the virtual pinboard platform toward shopping and things that “make you feel better.”

  125. Big Tech Makes Cal State Its A.I. Training Ground Technology, October 26

    Spurred by titans like Amazon and OpenAI, California State wants to become the nation’s “largest A.I.-empowered” university.

  126. Did Cheating Accusations Have Anything to Do With the Death of a Chess Grandmaster? Style, October 25

    Daniel Naroditsky, a top American player with an online following, was found dead in Charlotte, N.C., after talking about being accused of cheating by a former world champion.

  127. Starring in Videos Is No Longer a Job Just for the Social Media Team Business, October 25

    Companies from Delta Air Lines to Portillo’s are asking all sorts of employees, sometimes through formal programs, to help build the brand.

  128. We’re Counting on Big Tech to Invent the Future. That’s a Bad Bet. Opinion, October 25

    Innovation comes from a less centralized tech sector.

  129. Smart Beds Helped Them Sleep on a Cloud. Then the Cloud Crashed. Business, October 24

    The widespread outage involving the cloud-computing provider Amazon Web Services was particularly disruptive ensnared unexpected consumers earlier this week: People who just wanted to sleep well.

  130. A Teen in Love With a Chatbot Killed Himself. Can the Chatbot Be Held Responsible? Magazine, October 24

    A mother in Florida filed a lawsuit against an A.I. start-up, alleging its product led to her son’s death. The company’s defense raises a thorny legal question.

  131. With ‘Vibecoding,’ A.I. Can Help Anyone Build an App Business, October 24

    Bringing on artificial intelligence as a collaborator can make coding feel more accessible to those with little training in it, but there are trade-offs.

  132. How Crypto Corrupted America Opinion, October 24

    Trump has bared the corruption at the heart of crypto and the libertarian ideas behind it.

  133. Meta Layoffs Included Employees Who Monitored Risks to User Privacy Technology, October 23

    While the company announced job cuts in artificial intelligence, it also expanded plans to replace privacy and risk auditors with more automated systems.

  134. 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.

  135. 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.

  136. 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.

  137. 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.

  138. 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.

  139. 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.

  140. 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.

  141. 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.

  142. 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.

  143. 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.

  144. 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.

  145. 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.

  146. 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.

  147. 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.

  148. 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.

  149. 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.

  150. 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.