
Pharmacies across the United States are still grappling with substantial disruptions following a cyberattack on UnitedHealth’s technology unit, Change Healthcare, as reported by multiple pharmacy chains through official statements and on various social media platforms. The attack led to a nationwide outage of a network designed to communicate data between healthcare providers and insurance companies.
According to a filing last Thursday with the Securities and Exchange Commiss

If you soon find yourself on the job hunt, there’s a growing chance you’ll be sitting down with a bot for an interview.
AI is increasingly involved in the application process at companies ranging from fast food restaurants to software startups, helping to screen résumés, manage scheduling, and conduct interviews. Employers say the technology is a near necessity in a competitive landscape where job postings can see hundreds or even thousands of applicants who

If Kara Swisher’s new memoir, Burn Book, doubles as a history of the internet and its often jarring impact on our lives over the past three decades, it’s only natural. As she was establishing herself as an uncommonly well-sourced journalist, the online world was about to take off: The rise of AOL, followed by its disastrous merger with Time Warner, was among the dramatic arcs she chronicled early on.
Since then, Swisher has been the most entrepreneurial of reporters, both

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Camo makes it the best way to customize your appearance in video meetings. It improves the quality of your existing webcam video or lets you use a better external camera.
How it works: Camo lets you fine-tune your online appearance. You can zoom in or out, crop, blur or hide your background, fix lighting

In July 2015, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed an audience of more than 15,000 in Delhi. Clad in a crisp all-white kurta, Modi declared, “I dream of a digital India where 1.2 billion connected Indians drive innovation.” That speech signaled the commencement of the government’s Digital India campaign, an ambitious effort aimed at establishing India as a future digital superpower.
The ensuing near decade has seen the Indian government establish an ext

For the first time since 1972, NASA landed a craft on the surface of the moon in February 2024. But the agency didn’t do it alone—instead, it partnered with commercial companies. Thanks to new technologies and public-private partnerships, the scientific projects brought to the moon on this craft and on future missions like it will open up new realms of scientific possibility.
As parts of several projects launching this year, teams of scientists, including myself, will con

In July 2015, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed an audience of more than 15,000 in Delhi. Clad in a crisp all-white kurta, Modi declared, “I dream of a digital India where 1.2 billion connected Indians drive innovation.” That speech signaled the commencement of the government’s Digital India campaign, an ambitious effort aimed at establishing India as a future digital superpower.
The ensuing near decade has seen the Indian government establish an ext

I’ve been stealing people’s identities for over 20 years. No, I’m not a criminal—I’m a hacker hired by companies to stress-test the digital identities of their workforce and verify that cybercriminals aren’t able to sneak onto company networks disguised as an employee.
But after cracking virtually every login combination you can think of throughout my career, I no longer need to “hack” my way in—instead I can just

A bill to create one of the nation’s most restrictive bans on minors’ use of social media is heading to Republican Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has expressed concerns about the legislation that would keep children under the age of 16 off popular platforms regardless of parental approval.
The state House of Representatives passed the bill on a 108 to 7 vote Thursday just hours after the state Senate approved it 23 to 14. The Senate made changes to the original Hou

When her cellphone service went down this week because of an AT&T network outage, Bernice Hudson didn’t panic. She just called the people she wanted to talk to the old-fashioned way—on her landline telephone, the kind she grew up with and refuses to get rid of even though she has a mobile phone.
“Don’t get me wrong, I like cellphones,” the 69-year-old Alexandria, Virginia, resident said Thursday, the day of the outage. “But I’m still