Behind the Deadly Mistakes of Israel's Military in Gaza
A missile strike on a convoy of aid workers reveals the shortcomings of safety measures Israeli forces have in place to protect civilians.
A missile strike on a convoy of aid workers reveals the shortcomings of safety measures Israeli forces have in place to protect civilians.
Findings from Microsoft and others are shedding light on Beijing’s expanding covert influence operations.
Biden warned Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu that future U.S. support hinges on protecting civilians and aid workers in Gaza, signaling for the first time that the White House would reassess backing Israel’s war in the enclave.
Israel’s military scrambled GPS signals as the country braced for possible retaliation by Iran or one of its allied militias for a suspected Israeli airstrike on an Iranian diplomatic building in Syria.
Stanford University named its business school dean as its next president after the prior leader resigned amid questions about research misconduct.
No Labels, the centrist group that has sought to field a third-party presidential bid, abandoned efforts to create a “unity ticket” aiming to win the White House.
The FDA is drafting a proposal to drop a broad ban on anonymous sperm donations by gay and bisexual men in favor of more pointed screening questions to assess HIV risk.
Return theft, where buyers send back bogus, used or substituted items for refunds, represents a sore point in what has become an often contentious relationship between Amazon and its independent sellers.
Forbes for years ran an alternate version of its website where it packed ads intended to run on Forbes.com, a practice ad-buyers said shortchanged them because the ads reached a different audience and appeared on overcrowded pages.
Samsung Electronics said it expects a 10-fold increase in first-quarter operating profit, fueling hopes of a turnaround in its flagship semiconductor business.
U.S. stocks fell sharply after Fed officials cooled talk of interest-rate cuts this year. The S&P 500 dropped 1.2% while the Dow and Nasdaq both slid 1.4%.
A judge in South Korea dismissed a lawsuit filed by the LG founding family, who sought to recoup roughly 1% of the $735 million paid to the government in inheritance taxes.
USD/SGD edged higher in the Asian session ahead of the U.S. nonfarm payrolls report due later today.
The South Korean consumer-electronics giant expects its first-quarter operating profit to drop 11%.
Young investors say the old-school store of value is a hedge against inflation and catastrophe.
Analysts expect Samsung’s memory-chip business to swing to profit thanks to higher chip prices on brisk demand amid the artificial-intelligence boom.
Jonathan Haidt’s new book clarifies what we already know. He also has some ideas for reform.
Irish Repertory Theatre’s Friel Project continues with this graceful production of Brian Friel’s 1964 play, in which a man on the eve of departing Ireland for America is separately embodied as his public and private selves.
He forgets the mistaken U.S. missile strike that killed 10 innocents in Kabul in 2021.
Commodity prices introduce a note of caution about rate cuts.
Windy City progressives want to cancel the August Convention in their city.
The Governor’s business wants to pay less than the fast-food minimum wage.
Brent crude futures, the benchmark, have climbed 16% in 2024 to just under $90 a barrel, a level last breached in late October.
A federal judge refuses to toss his tax charges. Donald Trump likely won’t be the only one in court in the next couple of months.
I made a few bucks off Trump but couldn’t take the volatility.