bipartisan effort by the federal government and multiple states. Image Credit: Reuters Apple is set to make its case today in a US court, seeking to dismiss a massive antitrust lawsuit brought by the ...
Lina Khan departs in January 2025, which begs the question as to whether or not anything will come of this latest FTC vs.
Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) offer to invest $100M in Indonesia does not meet the "fairness" principles, said a government official, indicating that the Asian country is seeking additional negotiations ...
The new rule will grant the CFPB powers to proactively examine ‌Apple Pay‌'s compliance with federal consumer financial laws, including privacy protection, fraud prevention, and account stability.
Apple is urging a federal judge to dismiss the Department of Justice's antitrust lawsuit, arguing that the government has not proven Apple holds a monopoly in the smartphone market. The DOJ ...
The federal government’s fiscal year ended September 30, 2024, and spending is once again in the spotlight. In this hotly contested political climate, candidates are using the power of the purse ...
A federal district court in Mississippi found the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL ... The judge issued a stay of the regulations effective date, precluding the DOL from enforcing the regulations ...
This site displays a prototype of a “Web 2.0” version of the daily Federal Register. It is not an official legal edition of the Federal Register, and does not replace the official print version or the ...
Roughly 2.3 million civilians work for the federal government, according to the OMB report, which looked at 24 agencies that employ about 98% of the federal civilian workforce. Just over half ...
The agency has finalized a new rule granting it unprecedented supervisory powers over major players like PayPal, Apple Pay ... during transactions. Under federal law, consumers have the right ...
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has started the process of placing Google under federal supervision, an action which ...
With that in mind, here's a look at how Trump could try to "break" the federal government: A president can't really delete entire agencies, but he could take a page from Nixon to try to starve ...