Articles

‘Companies always cozy up to whoever is in power’: Why Meta is numb to outrage over its fact-checking changes

One human-rights group called Meta’s fact-checking change “exceedingly dangerous.” That didn’t seem to stop the company.

Their Social Security benefits were slashed. Now they’re getting hundreds — maybe thousands — of dollars back under Biden’s new law.

Retired public workers will get check adjustments and retro pay under the recently signed Social Security Fairness Act.

My wife and I passed on a family wedding due to a ‘no-child’ rule. We’re now attending friend’s nuptials without our kids. Are we hypocrites?

“My in-laws are coming to watch our 7-year-old daughter and her 2-year-old sister.”

AI puts companies in danger of even worse cyberattacks. Here’s the best defense.

Cybersecurity threats are no longer occasional, isolated incidents but a relentless, daily battle.

L.A. wildfires have caused more than $50 billion of economic loss — and counting

Fires across Southern California are already one of the most damaging in the states history.

U.S. companies will need to increase their hedges against a stronger dollar in 2025, says Bank of America

A surging buck can crimp multinational’s profits

Researchers rated every S&P 500 company CEO since 2000. Here’s what they found.

CEOs might not be so idolized if we realized that many wash out of the job quickly.

The market hasn’t been this concentrated in at least 60 years. But is it a problem?

The current top five companies in the S&P 500 account for a greater chunk of the index than at any time over the last 60 years.

Oil prices tick higher after sinking on higher product inventories

Oil futures ticked higher early Thursday, steadying after setting back the previous session following data that showed a rise in product inventories that offset a fall in crude supplies.

Brits are getting healthier but not happier, top retailers say

Brits are getting healthier but not happier, according to updates from three of the company’s biggest food outlets.

My sister made frequent withdrawals from the ‘bank of Mom and Dad.’ Now our family is torn apart. What can I do?

“My sister did nothing because she was a girl, and my brother was too young to help.”

A plunging pound with surging U.K. yields suggest the bond vigilantes are lurking

A plunging pound and a surge in U.K. government borrowing costs to their highest since the great financial crisis serve as a warning to the U.S. and other countries that the bond vigilantes are still lurking.
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