
Imagine a field where groundbreaking contributions go consistently unrecognized, where talented individuals are systematically excluded from the narrative, and where the very technology they helped build threatens their livelihoods. Despite their undeniable presence and impact, this is the reality for women in AI.
This year, as the world marks International Women’s Day at South By Southwest (SXSW)—one of the leading technology events of the year—the glaring unde

Harvard Business School professor Amy Edmondson’s groundbreaking work about the importance of psychological safety in the workplace shed new light on building teams that are not afraid to innovate and take risks. But those risks don’t always end up the way we want them to—and it appears that many companies may not be fostering that sense of safety that is so important for workers to take risks and make mistakes.
According to recent research from business publish

The Planetary Science Caucus is back from the dead, and the revival of the group couldn’t come at a more critical time for scientific pursuits in the cosmos that often find themselves in the budgetary crosshairs.
A brief history
The Planetary Science Caucus existed in the 115th and 116th Congress (about 2017-2021 for those who follow the Gregorian calendar), but went away during the 117th Congress, between 2021 and 2023, according to Jack Kiraly,

At the heart of the healthcare sector’s transformation, the fusion of artificial intelligence (AI) with medical science illuminates a path filled with potential and promise. As I navigate the intricate world of healthcare management and innovation, I’ve been privileged to witness the dynamic interplay of challenges and opportunities that AI introduces. Integrating AI in healthcare is complex, yet it heralds a future of improved patient care, operational efficiency, and life-chan

A bipartisan coalition in Congress introduced a bill this week that would ban TikTok in the United States if its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, doesn’t divest itself from the app. The bill’s sponsors framed the legislation as critical to ensuring that America’s biggest adversary can’t control one of its most dominant tech platforms.
Now, TikTok is using that dominance to fight back, sending push notifications to its users asking them to call Congress

When some users scrolled through TikTok today, they were confronted with a rather alarming pop-up: “Stop a TikTok shutdown,” it says, urging users to “tell Congress what TikTok means to you” with a call button.
The pop-up, which users said they could bypass after closing out of the app and reopening it, comes as the House Energy and Commerce Committee is set to discuss a new bipartisan bill on Thursday. If passed, the “Protecting Americans from For

Predicting the future—or at least, trying to—is the backbone of economics and an augur of how our society evolves. Government policies, investment decisions, and global economic plans are all predicated on estimating what’s happening in the future. But guessing right is tricky.
However, a new study by researchers at the London School of Economics, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and the University of Pennsylvania suggests that forecasting the fu

The U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce on Thursday is expected to vote on legislation giving China’s ByteDance six months to divest from short video app TikTok or face a U.S. ban.
Committee approval would set up a vote by U.S. House of Representatives that represents the first significant momentum for a U.S. crackdown on TikTok, which about 170 million U.S. users.
Representative Mike Gallagher, the Republican chairman of the House select China committee, an

Apple is opening small cracks in the iPhone’s digital fortress as part of a regulatory clampdown in Europe that is striving to give consumers more choices—at the risk of creating new avenues for hackers to steal personal and financial information stored on the devices.The overhaul rolling out Thursday only in the European Union represents the biggest changes to the iPhone’s App Store since Apple introduced the concept in 2008. Among other things, people in Europe can down

Europeans scrolling their phones and computers this week will get new choices for default browsers and search engines, where to download iPhone apps and how their personal online data is used.They’re part of changes required under the Digital Markets Act, a set of European Union regulations that six tech companies classed as “gatekeepers”—Amazon, Apple, Google parent Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and TikTok owner ByteDance—will have to start following by midnig