The program helped 23 million people get online, and has always had bipartisan support. So why is Congress allowing funding to run out?
Milton Perez spent more than five years living in New York City’s shelter system before he found an affordable apartment in Brooklyn through a housing lottery. Having a place of his own was a relief for Perez, who is a leader with the Vocal NY Homelessness Union. But it was also a cellular dead zone, and like millions of other New Yorkers—and millions...
The amusement park giant is overhauling its app and website, adding a generative AI ‘concierge,’ automated parking, and mobile ordering, among other conveniences.
Six Flags is aiming to change the way guests interact with its parks—including using artificial intelligence to support those changes.
Indie publications are finding success with an old-school recipe: high-quality print, a tight-knit community, and less advertising.
Earlier this year, Mike Rogge, editor and owner of indie outdoor magazine Mountain Gazette, turned down an ad package that would have boosted ad revenue in 2024 by 20% to 25% per issue. It would have been the magazine’s biggest ad package ever.
If you had to sum up our news coverage: Awards. Emmys, Pulitzers, Peabodys – you name it, we won it. VICE News and VICE World News transported audiences to the frontlines of stories all over the world and trained a critical eye on what was happening in our own back yards, too.
Our journalists went deep behind enemy lines to report on white nationalism, extremism, crime, drugs and so many others. They reported from Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, Europe, Africa and the US, often...
The Affordable Connectivity Program—a federal benefit that provides discounts on high-speed internet access to low-income Americans—ends on April 30. Here's what happens next.
The annual event brings art collectors to the city, but the spirit of freedom that draws artists there has been damaged by the fallout from the Oct. 7 attacks.
Opponents of the measure, which resembles a Russian law that Moscow has used to crack down on dissidents, say it could undermine efforts for Georgia to join the European Union.
The White House wants federal agencies to keep climate change in mind as they decide whether to approve major projects.
A subsidiary of ThyssenKrupp, Germany’s venerable steel producer, is landing major deals for a device that makes the clean-burning gas from water.
U.S. lawmakers have long worried that the Chinese government could use the app to spread propaganda.
What explains the almost total absence of working-class people from elected positions in state government?
The Cybertruck looks edgy, that’s for sure, but it has serious problems.
Though the notion would have been laughable a decade ago, Michigan is one promising national model for how state-level activists can retake power.
Rachel Khong’s new novel follows three generations of Chinese Americans as they all fight for self-determination in their own way.
She wrote her much-anticipated second novel, “Real Americans,” while also creating the Ruby, a co-working collective for writers and other artists.
Since pleading guilty to violating money-laundering rules, Changpeng Zhao, who ran the giant crypto exchange Binance, has networked across the United States to set up his next act.
A Times photojournalist embarked on a nuclear-powered attack sub to see how the Pentagon is training for a potential war below the frozen sea.
Florida is set to ban abortions after six weeks. Experts explain how that can often be before a woman knows she is pregnant.
On one of the last days it would be legal to get an abortion until 15 weeks of pregnancy in Florida, a clinic in Fort Pierce was completely booked.