Opinion: Representative Jay Obernolte and Lori Trahan explain why they're releasing a bipartisan discussion draft of the Great American Artificial Intelligence Act, a policy for a technology this transformative. https://t.co/wxk9WMHthM
Opinion: Kirkland & Ellis’ plan for a $500 million AI spend is a preview of where the legal market is headed: A world where only the largest firms can self-finance the technology that will define competitive advantage. https://t.co/1Z1uw3zsOX
Excited to be a part of this reporting data project.
Exclusive: Bloomberg Law’s Leading Law Firms list recognizes the top performers across the key pillars of finance, growth, talent, and tech & innovation. https://t.co/1uy0eg0Czp
Opinion: Taylor Swift’s application to trademark certain phrases underscores that sound marks can serve as part of a broader, layered enforcement strategy that complements state right-of-publicity claims. https://t.co/mT3ovabjtW
Campos: While I want to thank CBS news for funding this generous gift towards my education, I want to acknowledge how the recent direction of the outlet stains the legacy of Mike Wallace, the namesake of this scholarship.
If at any time you hesitate to utter the word genocide or remain silent in the face of blatant lies, remember to ask yourself: who is this for?
>> NEW with @MerylKornfield:
The Trump administration is proposing NDAs for all federal workers.
The rule, aimed at cracking down on leaks to media organizations, would expand nondisclosure agreements instituted at the Pentagon and other agencies.
https://t.co/4mJLoerWZT
WhatsApp is able to access user’s encrypted messages, Texas said in a lawsuit that accuses Meta Platforms Inc. founder Mark Zuckerberg of lying to the US Senate in 2018 about the company’s steps to make them inaccessible. https://t.co/jDQ6tQaLzs
Opinion: The SECURE Data Act raises timely and practical questions around preemption, enforcement authority, and how a national standard could reshape the current patchwork of state laws. https://t.co/vb6WinZq99
Opinion: Public sector labor unions are using increasingly negative public sentiment about AI to advance legislation to protect bargaining unit work and inhibit, if not prohibit, public agency adoption and implementation of AI technology and tools. https://t.co/aHt9GV9QYl
Opinion: The shutdown of Spirit Airlines exposed a flaw in the government’s process of evaluating mergers that blocked the Spirit–JetBlue tie-up to preserve competition that, two years later, no longer exists. https://t.co/tyGHGDhq2V
Opinion: Arbitration promised a cure for frustrations often associated with the jury system, but in practice, its so-called defining virtues—informality and finality—have become its greatest weaknesses. https://t.co/anu3AMVFaF
Opinion: Gibson Dunn's Trey Cox writes that the old litigation playbook prized options above all else: keep every argument alive, take every deposition. But most cases turn on a narrow cluster of decisive facts that AI distills early. https://t.co/4v1CSXEHIC
Opinion: Law students and early-career attorneys who want to become plaintiffs' lawyers must be proactive in learning about plaintiffs' firms, can skip the Big Law route, and should seek out opportunities to be on their feet in a courtroom. https://t.co/4IupVVfKNG
I’m so honored to have been part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for our coverage of DOGE and the transformation of the government. Delayed in posting this because I spent most of yesterday stunned by the news. Incredible, inspiring group of colleagues
Bloomberg News has won the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for Illustrated Reporting and Commentary for “trAPPed,” a graphic novel depicting the psychological ordeal of a woman in India held under “digital arrest” for eight days, subjected to 24/7 surveillance in a widespread and ruinous scam. https://t.co/4u5ZXmvW4f
🎨: Anand RK
The Washington Post won a Pulitzer Prize for public service for coverage of DOGE and the federal workforce. It’s the second time The Post has won the prestigious award in five years.
Read more about our winning coverage here: https://t.co/lzR2hOMt4Q
Breaking News: The Supreme Court on Monday restored broad access to the abortion pill mifepristone, blocking a ruling that had threatened to upend one of the main ways abortion is provided across the nation.
The order signed by Justice Samuel Alito temporarily allows women seeking abortions to obtain the pill at pharmacies or through the mail, without an in-person visit to a doctor.
Those rules had been in effect for several years until a federal appeals court imposed new restrictions last week. https://t.co/NrgsVH1swv
Three months later, this is my last @washingtonpost story — delayed because nearly everyone involved in it was laid off. I am very grateful to newsroom friends who made sure it published anyway, and to brave Roman Mongold and his family for their time.
https://t.co/PMxJxiaMcg