Scandals in Seattle and Tacoma prompt a bill on implications of a controversial device.
Rescue workers are having a hard time getting food and supplies to those affected by the temblor due, in part, to massive traffic jams.
An AT&T-DirecTV merger wouldn't face the same regulatory resistance as the recent Comcast-Time Warner Cable proposal, analysts say.
A Twitter debate starts anew after an eight-month-old trend appeared on the site Sunday.
Although scientists generally agree that genetically modified organisms are safe for human consumption, the public tends to believe otherwise.
Apple may have sold around 55 million iPhones in the quarter ending March 30.
President Omar al-Bashir won 94 percent of the vote, after over a dozen civilians were killed and wounded in an airstrike by Sudan's air force.
Jay Z sent a series of tweets Sunday defending his streaming music company, Tidal.
Nazarbayev won an overwhelming majority of the votes in a record turnout election, but critics said voters had no real alternatives.
Germany's largest bank is under pressure from investors to follow rivals such as UBS and Credit Suisse by culling unprofitable operations.
Chinese stocks led Asian equities to seven-year highs on expectations of more stimulus from Beijing.
The message follows Royal Dutch Shell's $70 billion offer to acquire rival producer BG.
Officials and aid groups also worry about the challenge of accessing remote areas of the Himalayan nation.
Thousands are trying to escape Nepal via local airports as relief workers and medical supplies flood the country.
The U.S. sent a military aid plane to Nepal that is set to arrive with personnel, an assistance response team and 45 tons of cargo.
Rolling aftershocks and rain continue to pummel Nepal after Saturday's 7.8-magnitude quake. More than 2,500 people are dead.
A freak storm capsized dozens of sailboats in an annual race near Mobile, Alabama.
The company plans to help its 16,000 students transfer to other schools.
Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president, stepped down from her family's foundation earlier this month.
Two U.S. senators are calling on the president to declassify details of the pending Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement.
The Stellar Wind program was first made public by Edward Snowden, a former contract employee of the U.S. National Security Agency.
Recent easing -- and the halving of crude-oil prices, supposedly a windfall for consumers -- have not changed the global outlook all that much.