A DOGE-backed site purporting to track government waste displays an empty template advertising a fake architecture firm.
The U.S. government recently registered DEI.gov and Waste.gov as new federal websites, with Reuters reporting that neither page was responsive as of last Wednesday. Now Waste.gov has been hidden ...
BOOM found that the viral image is fake; and US did not declare February 19 as 'World Chhatrapati Shivaji Day.' ...
Republished on February 8 with news of further attacks ahead of this weekend and more detailed analysis into the Chinese ...
San Francisco, California, Feb. 10, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- ...
The FBI advises U.S. smartphone users to remove suspicious scam texts, especially those about unpaid tolls. The FTC ...
Before the boom in online scammers, there was wellness influencer Belle Gibson. This new Netflix fictionalisation of the ...
There are several unexplored stories left to tell in classic Spider-Man comics like the Clone Saga and events like ...
Staying on the right side of the European Union's online rulebook when it comes to the slippery topic of disinformation is ...
Condé Nast, which owns Ars Technica and other publications such as Wired and The New Yorker, was joined in the lawsuit by The ...
Phony reviews have long plagued many popular consumer websites, such as Amazon and Yelp. They are typically traded on private ...
An Indiana man has pleaded guilty in what prosecutors describe as a lucrative scheme where he manufactured tens of thousands of fake IDs, as advertised on a website boasting it was "Your #1 ...