
Ex-Celsius CEO Mashinsky Must Face Civil Fraud Suit in New York
Former Celsius Network Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Alex Mashinsky, whose once high-flying crypto lender went bankrupt last year,
1970-01-01 08:00

Karen Vergata: Gilgo Beach murders police identify body found in 1996
No-one reported the 34-year-old missing after she vanished on Valentine's Day 1996.
1970-01-01 08:00

Silbert’s Crypto Empire DCG Faces NY Attorney General Probe Over Genesis Ties
Barry Silbert’s crypto empire, Digital Currency Group, is facing another probe into its financial dealings with subsidiary Genesis
1970-01-01 08:00

Travel Earnings Show Consumers Still Splurge on Foreign Trips
Earnings reports from the big three online travel companies showed that consumers are willing to swallow higher prices
1970-01-01 08:00

Judge narrows Trump-era Google antitrust case brought by states and the Justice Department
Google will not have to face allegations by dozens of states that the tech giant's design of its search results page has harmed rivals, such as Yelp or Expedia, a federal judge ruled in an opinion unsealed Friday, just weeks before the closely watched antitrust case is set to go to trial.
1970-01-01 08:00

SVB Loan to Struggling Fintech Clearco Bought by Venture Backers
A $60 million Silicon Valley Bank loan to Clearco is being scooped up by the struggling Canadian e-commerce
1970-01-01 08:00

Judge allows key US antitrust Google search claims to go to trial
A U.S. judge hearing the Justice Department's lawsuit against Alphabet's Google alleging it broke antitrust law in search
1970-01-01 08:00

India Delays Shock Move to Curb Imports of Laptops, Tablets
India backtracked Friday on its sudden plan to curb laptop and tablet imports without a license, giving companies
1970-01-01 08:00

Google Wins Limits to Antitrust Claims at Trial Over Search Deals
Alphabet Inc.’s Google will face a scaled-down antitrust suit over its search business after a federal judge threw
1970-01-01 08:00

Bitcoin Loses Mojo After First-Half Rally Fails to Reignite Enthusiasm
Chalk it up to the heat, to late-summer doldrums, or to the phases of the moon, but the
1970-01-01 08:00

Argentina Regulator Says Investor Data Hacked, Posted Online
Confidential trading information being passed around on social networks has local market operators in Argentina unnerved ahead of
1970-01-01 08:00

Google to alert people when they appear in search results – and make it easier to remove personal information
Google will now alert people when their personal information appears online – and make it easier to get it removed. The new tools are aimed at giving people more control over the information and images of them that appear online, the company said. New rules on personal explicit images mean that users will be able to request that explicit images of themselves are taken down from search results. That extends to situations where someone has willingly uploaded explicit content themselves and then later wants it to be removed from search results. The same policy applies to personal information generally. That too will not only appear in Google’s tools but will also be easier to have removed. Google has long had policies that are intended to help people have non-consensual explicit imagery removed from search results. But the changes mean that people can have that content removed even when it was uploaded consensually at the time. In its update, Google stressed that it was only able to remove content from Google search, and that doing so would not affect its availability on other websites or search engines. But removing any unwanted images from search results should make them much more difficult to find. The new features are part of an expansion of Google’s “Results about you” tool, which it first made available last year. When it was launched, it was intended to make it easier for people to request the removal of search results that contain personal information, such as phone numbers or home addresses. Now it has been improved so that it is proactive in finding search results that include that information. Users will be able to access the dashboard and see any web results that include that contact information. Users will then be able to access an improved form to ask to have those taken down. The dashboard is available only in the US and in English for now. Google said it was “working to bring it to new languages and locations soon”. Read More Google Assistant will be ‘supercharged’ with AI like ChatGPT and Bard Google warns Gmail users they could be about to lose their account Apple gives update on its plans for AI – and says it is coming to every product
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