A train derailment Tuesday highlights how New York's aging subway system is becoming more problematic than delayed trains and service disruptions.
The rapidly-growing ETF market is being unfairly blamed for low volatility, says Goldman Sachs.
A bombshell investigation by ProPublica sheds new light on how Facebook trains its thousands of content moderators to police hate speech.
Samsung just won't quit the Galaxy Note 7
Over the lifetime of the jet, which includes buying, developing, and maintaining it for decades, it could cost the US upwards of $1.2 trillion.
Streaming TV packages are getting going in earnest, and they will cannibalize traditional TV subscribers, according to analysts at UBS.
Gospel musicians in Ghana must work on their social media presence, and here is why.
Thanks to a sponsor exemption into the Ellie Mae Classic, the two-time NBA MVP will get a chance to put his golf game to the test this August.
Between 12% and 38% of voters approve of the Republican healthcare bill, according to recent national polls.
The Houston Rockets are trading for Chris Paul to form the NBA's next super-team alongside James Harden.
The Guardian's original story on Whatsapp has not been taken down, but it has been revised and there is now a prominent editor's note at the top.
Kevin Plank is no longer president of Under Armour, and one analyst is thrilled.
NBC's new Premier League streaming service caters to cord-cutters, but the company still wants to have it both ways.
Michelle Rodriguez has appeared in five of eight films in the franchise since it started in 2001.
Science of People's Vanessa Van Edwards says it's important to be as specific as possible about why you're asking the expert for their insight.
The suspects, 19-year-old Evelyn Adade Kokor and Felix Gyimah, 18 were said to have concealed the package in two sacks of cassava
This strange fear may have given early humans a survival advantage. Or not.
Everything that you need to know in advertising today.
ABC News and Beef Products Inc. reached a settlement in the $5.7 billion lawsuit that claimed a story ABC ran in 2012 misled viewers.
An incredible game that pits 100 people against each other on a deserted island is an explosive hit, having racked up over $100 million in revenue.
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