News

Michael Andretti’s denied attempt to join the Formula 1 grid has been granted a DOJ investigation. American firm Liberty Media, which owns Formula 1 Group, denied Andretti Global’s entry to F1 ...
Trump Administration Impact: Senators Call on DOJ to Investigate Potential DOGE Conflicts of Interest After ProPublica Report Citing ProPublica’s reporting on the Consumer Financial Protection ...
You’re not the only one sick of scrolling past AI summarizations at the top of every internet search—a group of eight Democratic senators has asked the Federal Trade Commission to investigate ...
Wyden is 1 of 2 Democratic senators who want DOJ to investigate Justice Thomas NPR'S Sacha Pfeiffer speaks with ... about Democrats' call for an investigation of Supreme Court Justice ...
Wyden's office found that Hyundai shared data from 1.7 million vehicles and was paid just over $1 million, while Honda got just under $26,000 for data from 97,000 vehicles, the senators said.
Liberty Media, owner of Formula One Group, confirmed that it is under investigation by the Justice Department for denying Andretti Global entry into the Formula 1 World Championship. “We intend ...
DETROIT — Two U.S. senators are calling on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate automakers selling customers' driving data to brokers who package it and then sell it to insurance companies.
In a letter to the Department of Homeland Security’s Inspector General, 12 senators warned that the deployment of facial biometrics at every U.S. airport could create “one of the largest ...
Elon Musk's $1 million giveaway to registered voters has raised legal questions. The Department of Justice reportedly warned Musk about it already. Now, two Democratic senators are urging the DOJ ...
Michael Andretti’s denied attempt to join the Formula 1 grid has been granted a DOJ investigation. American firm Liberty Media, which owns Formula 1 Group, denied Andretti Global’s entry to F1 ...
Wyden's office found that Hyundai shared data from 1.7 million vehicles and was paid just over $1 million, while Honda got just under $26,000 for data from 97,000 vehicles, the senators said.
Wyden’s office found that Hyundai shared data from 1.7 million vehicles and was paid just over $1 million, while Honda got just under $26,000 for data from 97,000 vehicles, the senators said.