A technology enabling the transmission of fake locations to carry out murky or even illegal business operations could have profound implications for the enforcement of international law. Orignially published in NYT.
Find More
Trending News
- Microsoft Bing to gain more personalized answers, support for DALLE-E 3, and watermarked AI images
- These stocks win when interest rates rise, according to Goldman
- United Auto Workers Strike Expands At General Motors And Stellantis
- Pope to Meet Macron in Marseille and Defend Migrants’ Plight
- The Man Who Trapped Us in Databases
- Chris Lehane: The SEC isn’t handling crypto regulation ‘strategically’
- Web3 Adventure Game Big Time Poised to Kickoff Its ‘Player-Owned Economy’
- Bill Ackman lays out a series of reasons why he’s betting rates keep rising — How you can play along
- Niura’s EEG-implemented earbuds scan your brain health and recommend music to your mood
- CFTC Denies Kalshi’s Plan to Let Users Bet on Control of U.S. Congress