Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers recently tried to clarify and defend a line from a pregame speech that was widely ...
Adobe Acrobat Student Spaces is a free tool for students to use AI and create different kinds of study material from ...
Janice Randle was found dead in her home in November 1992, and authorities initially treated the case as a possible overdose ...
Los Angeles Unified claims screen time using district devices outside the school day is relatively low, averaging between ...
Last week marked a watershed moment in the fight to hold Big Tech accountable for harming a generation of American children.
A 14-year-old got his entire family locked out of decades of email and documents with one poor choice, throwing their lives ...
Deb Schmill, founding member of ParentsSOS, helped craft legislation for phone-free schools in Massachusetts. Her daughter, ...
YouTube employees admitted that their goal was “viewer addiction” and killed proposed safety tools for kids because they wouldn’t provide a high “ROI,” according to bombshell court documents ...
Emily Jeffcott, one of the lawyers for the plaintiff, on why this trial was so significant — and what happens next.
The jury ordered the companies to pay $6 million in damages over defective design. The landmark verdict may influence the outcome of 2,000 other pending lawsuits.
A Los Angeles jury found Wednesday that Meta’s Instagram and Google’s YouTube harmed a young user with features designed to hook kids — in a bombshell verdict that “shakes Big Tech’s predatory ...
A jury has found Instagram and YouTube liable in a first-of-its-kind lawsuit that questioned whether they should be held responsible for harm to children using their respective platforms.