For most of the past 30 years, websites have had legal protection for content that was created by their users. In the coming years, those protections could look a lot different—or vanish entirely.
The changes are expected to include significant layoffs in areas like sports and international coverage. By Erik Wemple Katie Robertson and Benjamin Mullin Erik Wemple, Katie Robertson and Benjamin ...
Since everyone is online and it’s literally never been easier to make something to post, it’s pretty easy to understand just how quickly quality content gets lost in the ocean of new data that shows ...
Top sports journalists from ESPN to Fox Sports blasted the Washington Post and owner Jeff Bezos online over a report the newspaper is planning to decimate its sports desk. News of potential “massive ...
It’s been another terrible week for the Washington Post. The newsroom is bracing for a devastating round of layoffs with rumors flying that some desks may be shuttered entirely. Sportswriters were ...
A flurry of posts from the White House, Department of Labor and Department of Homeland Security have included images, slogans and even a song used by the white nationalist right. A flurry of posts ...
The Washington Post’s sports department “could be shuttered entirely” with “massive layoffs coming” to the newspaper, according to Dylan Byers of PUCK. The “expectation is that *hundreds* will be ...
The Washington Post could shut down its entire sports section after management informed staffers that it was abruptly scrapping its planned coverage of the 2026 Winter Olympics two weeks before the ...
Syracuse, N.Y. — Perennial Section III hockey powerhouse West Genesee is causing ripples across the state again. The Wildcats (11-4-1), defending sectional Division I champ, soared five spots to No.
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Michelle Yeoh as Georgiou sitting at a table in Star Trek: Section 31 - Jan Thijs/Paramount+ There are few propositions as dicey ...
Government officials may not examine electronic devices seized from a Washington Post reporter until litigation stemming from the search of her home is settled, a federal judge in Virginia ruled ...