Tech Titans Face Legal Reckoning as Zuckerberg Ordered to Testify in Youth Safety Lawsuit
Social Media Giants Confront Landmark Legal Challenge In a significant legal development that could reshape social media accountability, Meta CEO…
Social Media Giants Confront Landmark Legal Challenge In a significant legal development that could reshape social media accountability, Meta CEO…
Packaging Giant’s Debt Overhaul Sparks Creditor Conflict Deutsche Bank and activist hedge fund Carronade Capital are mounting a significant challenge…
TITLE: SpaceX Settles Land Dispute with Cards Against Humanity in Unconventional Resolution Industrial Monitor Direct offers top-rated navigation pc solutions…
The former CFO of Builder.ai has been subpoenaed to appear before a Manhattan grand jury as US prosecutors investigate the startup’s collapse. The Microsoft-backed company, once valued over $1 billion, reportedly revised revenues down to just a quarter of prior estimates after discovering potentially bogus sales.
Former Builder.ai chief financial officer Andres Elizondo has been subpoenaed by US prosecutors, according to reports from the Financial Times, as authorities deepen their investigation into the collapse of the Microsoft-backed startup. The subpoena reportedly requests Elizondo’s appearance before a grand jury in a Manhattan court for questioning this September.
An anonymous teenager has filed a groundbreaking lawsuit seeking to dismantle the ClothOff app ecosystem, which she claims generates child sexual abuse materials in “three clicks.” The complaint alleges the platform works with Telegram bots to distribute nonconsensual intimate images of minors and adults, creating what victims describe as lifelong trauma.
An anonymous 17-year-old has launched a potentially precedent-setting lawsuit against the mobile app ClothOff, seeking to permanently dismantle what she describes as a predatory operation that generates child sexual abuse materials. According to reports, the teen alleges the app created fake nude images of her using an ordinary Instagram photo taken when she was 14, leaving her living in what court documents describe as “constant fear.”