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26 votes
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US jury finds discrimination in H-1B visa tech worker case
16 votes -
Chatbots urged teen to self-harm, suggested murdering parents, Texas lawsuit says
24 votes -
Prosecutors in Sweden have closed an inquiry into a case of alleged rape, which Swedish media had linked to French football captain Kylian Mbappé
4 votes -
F1 owner’s $3.8 Billion MotoGP deal faces full-scale EU probe
5 votes -
She sued over transgender ‘conversion therapy,’ a first for China
14 votes -
US federal judge blocks Kroger’s $25 billion mega-merger with Albertsons
42 votes -
Daniel Penny jury deadlocked on manslaughter charge in subway chokehold case
21 votes -
Utah labor safety agency and Northrop Grumman reach cheap deal over worker deaths on job site
8 votes -
Oatly loses right to call its drinks ‘milk’ in landmark UK ruling – lexical dispute with trade body Dairy UK argued slogan ‘Post Milk Generation’ was misleading to consumers
37 votes -
RollerCoaster Tycoon was the last of its kind
21 votes -
Mozilla begs courts to allow Google search deal for Firefox to continue
59 votes -
Elon Musk asks court to block OpenAI from converting to a for-profit corporation
13 votes -
What are the cons of Google being forced to give up its control of Chrome?
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default...
Seeing the courts go after Google's monopoly and the unintended consequences to Mozilla (and therefore Firefox) that can happen if the courts make it illegal for Google to pay to be the default search engine, it goes me thinking about Chrome/Chromium.
I know that the courts are trying to force Google to give up its control of Chrome (I don't even know how that is possible for the government to tell a tech company that it is not allowed to develop a tech product it created itself) but it seems to me that Google maintaining Chrome is not really a problem in and of itself. there are many browsers available to folks and if you as a user want to be completely plugged into the google ecosystem at the detriment of your online privacy, that is your choice to make.
the real issue seems to me that a user should have the exact same experience browsing a google website on chrome vs an alternative.
But that made me wonder if (like stopping Google being able to pay to be the default search engine) Google was forced to give up its control of Chrome, what are the possible negative consequences of that to users? and would forcing Google to instead relinquish its control of chromium alleviate those issues?
28 votes -
Jakob Ingebrigtsen's father will stand trial next year on charges that include abusing the double Olympic champion and threatening to “beat him to death”
6 votes -
Norway wants to open its Arctic seabed to mining for critical metals – the WWF is suing the state in a bid to halt exploration
9 votes -
Deno v. Oracle: Canceling the JavaScript trademark
45 votes -
Supreme Court wants US input on whether ISPs should be liable for users’ piracy, in $1 billion Sony v. Cox case
38 votes -
Club Q victims file lawsuit seeking "accountability and justice"
10 votes -
The US has a cloned sheep contraband problem
27 votes -
Once Linux’s biggest enemy: Darl McBride dies and nobody notices
21 votes -
Wikipedia article blocked worldwide by Delhi high court
78 votes -
US Copyright Office exemption makes McDonald’s ice cream machines repairable
50 votes -
Lawsuit: City cameras make it impossible to drive anywhere without being tracked | "Every passing car is captured," says 4th Amendment lawsuit against Norfolk, VA
52 votes -
Industry groups are suing the US Federal Trade Commission to stop its click to cancel rule
46 votes -
Character.AI faces US lawsuit after teen's suicide
31 votes -
Arm is cancelling Qualcomm's chip design license
21 votes -
Minecraft "Skyblock" creator in trademark battle with Microsoft
7 votes -
US Department of Justice indicates it’s considering Google breakup following monopoly ruling
64 votes -
Elon Musk's X gets OK to resume service in Brazil after bending to top court's demands
9 votes -
US judge rules Google must give rival third-party app stores access to the full catalog of Google Play apps — and distribute third-party stores
56 votes -
Cloudflare beats patent troll Sable, forcing them to dedicate all its patents to the public
48 votes -
Inside the US Department of Justice Live Nation antitrust lawsuit
9 votes -
The Steam subscriber agreement has dropped its forced arbitration clause, allowing gamers to take legal action against the platform
64 votes -
Kentucky sues Express Scripts, alleging it had a role in the deadly opioid addiction crisis
15 votes -
Los Angeles Police Department raid goes bad after gun allegedly sucked onto MRI machine
57 votes -
US DOJ sues Visa, alleges the card issuer monopolizes debit card markets
39 votes -
Lawsuits allege deadly 2021 Texas blackouts were an inside job, that energy companies reduced energy supply before storm
18 votes -
Cards Against Humanity sues SpaceX, alleges “invasion” of land on US/Mexico border
114 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission sues insulin middlemen, saying they pocket billions while patients face high costs
37 votes -
Elon Musk says SpaceX will sue US Federal Aviation Administration for ‘regulatory overreach’
35 votes -
Wisconsin towns are trying to limit Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations. The Dairy industry is fighting back.
20 votes -
Icelandic fishing giant Samherji sues art student for spoofing corporate website – potentially chilling effect on artists engaging critically with large corporations
20 votes -
Navient reaches $120 million settlement with Consumer Financial Protection Bureau for misleading US student loan borrowers
21 votes -
Google loses €2.4bn EU antitrust case for favouring its own shopping service
33 votes -
"Sound of Freedom" inspiration accused in lawsuits and interviews of sexual predation
15 votes -
US Department of Justice attorneys claim Google has “trifecta of monopolies” on day one of ad tech trial
30 votes -
The Internet Archive lost their latest appeal. Here’s what that means for you.
27 votes -
Judge in Brazil orders slaughterhouses to pay for Amazon reforestation
46 votes -
Eleven on trial in Sweden's largest environmental crime case – Bella Nilsson's company Think Pink accused of dumping at least 200,000 tonnes of waste
23 votes