A rare 1956 Mercedes-Benz 300 SL 'Gullwing' - which has never been restored - is expected to fetch £4.4m at auction. The car was delivered new in Paris in 1956 to Claude Foussier, the first Coca-Cola ...
Despite relatively high prices ranging from VND15–25 million per sqm, burial land and cemetery plots in suburban areas and provinces surrounding Hanoi are continuing to attract buyers. A few years ago ...
4.3B LinkedIn-Style Records Found in One of the Largest Data Exposures Ever Your email has been sent A massive, unsecured database containing billions of professional profiles has been left exposed ...
Seven years in the making, a database of police records on misconduct, shootings and use of force causing serious injury or death is now public on the websites of LAist and KQED in San Francisco. The ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Close-up of vinyl record playing - © Eleonora Galli/Getty Images After a long day, nothing ...
Ever read a crime story in The Charlotte Observer and wanted to learn more about the charges someone faces? Need to double-check when you’re supposed to go to traffic court? Curious who’s suing the ...
For the first time, you can look up serious use of force and police misconduct incidents in California. LAist, KQED and other California newsrooms, together with police accountability advocates, have ...
In March, Houston resident Lydia Harris filed a $100 million lawsuit in the Houston courts against West Coast rapper Snoop Dogg and the iconic record label Death Row Records, alleging that they ...
The Los Angeles Times today published the Police Records Access Project, a new searchable database featuring once-secret police records. Built by UC Berkeley and Stanford University, 1.5 million pages ...
OLYMPIA, Wash — The state of Washington launched a first-of-its-kind public database Monday, aiming to provide unprecedented transparency into police use-of-force incidents across the state. Starting ...
The Trump administration has expanded Palantir’s work with the government, spreading the company’s technology — which could easily merge data on Americans — throughout agencies. Alex Karp, a ...