New York Times suit may test copyright law’s constraints on AI
by Meghan McCarty Carino
Sebastien Bozon/AFP via Getty Images
Where’s the line between fair use and commercial exploitation when it comes to scraping the web to train artificial intelligence models?
Federal student loan payments have restarted. More than a third of borrowers missed the first one.
by Stephanie Hughes
Jemal Countess/Getty Images for We The 45 Million
Many borrowers need to reorganize their budgets. Disruptions in the loan servicing industry haven’t helped.
Franchising is the next hurdle for this Native-owned design business in Alaska
by Sarah Leeson
Konrad Frank/Courtesy Trickster Company
Rico and Crystal Worl, the siblings behind Trickster Company, used to have a brick-and-mortar shop. They’re looking to recapture that physical presence with partnerships.
Midwest’s pollution is spurring a reverse Great Migration
by Kimberly Adams and Sarah Leeson
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Thousands of Black families have left industrial cities like Detroit and Chicago due to environmental conditions. Many head to the South.
Overdraft fees, long associated with big banks, are big business for credit unions too
by Scott Rodd
Scott Rodd
A first-of-its-kind California law shows how much credit unions receive in overdraft charges, which often burden low-income families.