Google’s Chief Says Breakup Proposal Would Hobble Business
Sundar Pichai told a federal judge that the government’s solution to fix its monopoly in search would harm innovation.
Sundar Pichai told a federal judge that the government’s solution to fix its monopoly in search would harm innovation.
As we near the 10-year anniversary of Obergefell v. Hodges, the Supreme Court case that legalized same-sex marriage nationwide, we’d like to hear how this decision affected you or those you love.
The State Bar of California’s new exam has been rife with problems, an A.I. controversy and now the likelihood of delayed results.
Sheila, a local man’s pet, escaped her enclosure and decided to hit the road.
A sunken calf’s disappearance created a mystery in murky waters near San Diego.
As Puffy, Diddy or Love, the mogul found success and trouble. After years of accusations with few consequences, he’ll stand trial next month.
The New York Republican is contemplating a run for governor and nursing a feud with the House speaker after seeing her cabinet dream evaporate.
During the first 100 days of the Trump administration, shock waves from the chaotic tariff rollout continue to send tremors through the global financial system.
Internal documents and interviews with people familiar with the operation reveal how the White House seized on a wartime law to accelerate immigrant deportations.
New details deepen questions about the deportations, showing that El Salvador’s president pressed for assurances that the migrants were really members of the Tren de Aragua gang.
The justice will not participate in oral argument, deliberations or vote. She gave no explanation.
Canada’s Liberals came back from a huge disadvantage in the polls, securing a rare fourth term in power, for one big reason. Matina Stevis-Gridneff, the Canada bureau chief for The New York Times, explains why the Liberals and Mark Carney won, and the challenge they face right now.
Underlying economic growth remained solid in early 2025, but tariffs and uncertainty are expected to cause a further slowdown.
Companies are weighing whether they should be transparent about tariffs’ effect on prices, or — as Amazon learned on Tuesday — risk drawing the president’s ire.
The Israeli military said it had carried out a warning strike against “extremists” preparing to attack members of the Druse religious minority.
On the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War, U.S. companies that have come to rely on Vietnam’s factories, like Apple and Nike, are in a bind because of Trump’s tariffs.
We take a look at the first 100 days of the president’s term.
Surging Vietnamese nationalism appeared on the streets, as thousands gathered to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the end of the war.
Plus, L.A. county’s budget crisis.
There was no immediate comment from the American military about the joint operation, the first since President Trump took office.
New data collected from more than 200,000 people across the world shows that young people aren’t as happy as they used to be.
Republicans have raced to approve the president’s picks to serve as top diplomats around the globe, in some cases with solid backing from Democrats.
Here are some best practices for safeguarding sensitive personal data.
The justices have allowed vouchers for religious schools and required equal treatment in tuition programs. But direct government payments to religious public schools pose a new test.
Having escaped prison and death, President Trump has returned to power seeking vindication and vengeance — and done more in his first 100 days to change the trajectory of the country than any president since Franklin D. Roosevelt.
In the opening chapter of this new term, President Trump has moved with almost messianic fervor to transform America from top to bottom and exact retribution against enemies at the same time. Peter Baker, the chief White House correspondent of The New York Times, surveys Mr. Trump’s first 100 days.
Autocratic intent does not translate automatically into autocratic success.
The French president, often seen as remote, wants to get closer to the French people.
“Nothing like this has ever happened in Washington.”
Nowhere in the world is the Roman Catholic Church growing faster than in Africa, a continent Francis showered with attention.