Pentagon partners with major AI companies after Anthropic ban
The Department of Defense struck a deal with other Big Tech firms for use of their AI tools. How they will be used is unclear.
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The Department of Defense struck a deal with other Big Tech firms for use of their AI tools. How they will be used is unclear.
This week’s Deadline: Legal Newsletter analyzes one of the Supreme Court’s biggest rulings as the justices enter the term’s final stretch.
President Trump’s letters come at a key moment on Capitol Hill, where Republican criticism of the conflict has been relatively muted as lawmakers have warily eyed the two-month marker that could force a wa...
Over the course of hours of congressional testimony, the defense secretary clearly wanted to focus on the president — but not the current president.
Megan Thee Stallion says she dumped Klay Thompson because he was unfaithful, but the manosphere insists she’s to blame.
In his first term, the president said he’d “easily” reduce the debt, but he delivered the opposite results. In his second term, it’s happening again.
The report cites the Biden administration’s investigation of a Catholic extremist and its acknowledgment of Transgender Day of Visibility.
“Morning Joe” economic analyst Steve Rattner breaks out his charts to show how Trump’s net worth has skyrocketed largely thanks to one industry: crypto.
How, exactly, are negotiations with Iran supposed to produce an agreement that all parties can trust if Trump’s envoy makes offers that Trump opposes?
The wars in Iraq and Vietnam became as unpopular as the war in Iran is now, but it took years, not months.
Those who had concerns about Casey Means might very well have related concerns about former Fox News contributor Nicole Saphier.
As the war in Iran enters its third month, and prices at the pump reach a four-year high, the GOP’s line on the issue has taken a farcical turn.
After a whistleblower expressed concerns about the strength of the case against the civil rights organization, members of Congress have questions for prosecutors.
The statement furthers an argument Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth laid out during testimony before the Senate earlier Thursday.
MS NOW’s Lawrence O’Donnell describes how “in the history of American war quagmires, from Vietnam onwards, no president before Donald Trump has ever been so lost that they did not even know who the ene...
After the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, the Trump administration is quietly rethinking security protocols — even as President Trump publicly shrugs off the threat.
House Republicans were able to muscle through their priorities this week. At no point did they make it look easy.
The executive order creates a website to help workers without employer retirement plans compare options ahead of a new federal matching program.
Lindsey Graham recently suggested 90% of Americans were prepared to support the ballroom idea. He wasn’t even close to being correct.
The Minnesota Republican is facing calls to end his campaign after a judge cited domestic abuse. White denies the allegations.
That the court’s conservatives showed up to the dinner — despite insisting on their independence — has some court watchers concerned.
Ohio congressional candidate Josh Williams’ attempt to defend the conservative justices’ gutting of the Voting Rights Act didn’t go well.
The unanimous vote to prohibit themselves from trading on prediction market platforms coincides with mounting concerns over insider trading amid the Iran war.
Jerome Powell is staying at the Federal Reserve precisely because Trump used a criminal investigation to try to influence interest rates.