The trial will seek to decide whether the billionaire must complete his $44 billion acquisition of the social media company, a Delaware judge ruled on Tuesday
At least 34 locations in Britain beat the previous record of 38.7 degrees Celsius set in Cambridge, eastern England, in 2019
The streaming giant is battling fierce competition and viewer belt tightening, as it reports a loss of 970,000 paying customers, a number that was, however, not as big as expected
Borodianka, a town of 14,000 before the February 24 invasion, is the most battered of the towns encircling Kyiv, bearing the profound scars of Moscow's failed attempt to take the Ukrainian capital
The fine—imposed over Didi's cybersecurity practices—would amount to more than four percent of its $27.3 billion total revenue last year and pave the way for its new share listing in Hong Kong
The school dropout was just a teenager when he conducted his first experiment in grafting, or joining plant parts to create new mango varieties. Now, his 120-year-old mango tree produces 300 varieties of the king of all Indian fruits
Late last week, Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., effectively scuttled the Biden administration's tax agenda—at least for now—by saying he could not immediately support a climate, energy and tax package he had spent months negotiating with the Democratic leadership
Andy Jassy followed Jeff Bezos' footsteps for years and was viewed as one of his closest lieutenants. Since The succession last year, Jassy has quietly put his own imprint on Amazon, making more changes than many insiders and company watchers expected
Australia's 2019-2020 "Black Summer" bushfires burned more than eight million hectares of native vegetation and killed or displaced 1-3 billion animals, a government report said Tuesday, warning that more species are headed for extinction
High inflation and rising interest rates in the United States coupled with fears of an impending recession in the world's biggest economy have fuelled a broad dollar rally in recent weeks as investors turn increasingly risk-averse
The pandemic was, and remains a global human tragedy. But for ecologists, it has also been an unparalleled opportunity to learn more about how people affect the natural world by documenting what happened when we abruptly stepped back from it