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Online influencers may have to alter content showing their children under a new bill in the legislature. The measure gives kids the “right to be forgotten" by requesting their parents delete or edit videos they're featured in once they turn 18.
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The jury awarded a family $3 million in the closely-watched case over Facebook and YouTube addiction.
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A California bill would hold social media companies legally responsible for addicting kids to their platforms. Tech lobbyists, digital rights advocates, and others say the proposal would run afoul of federal law and the U.S. Constitution.
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The Southern Oregon and Northern California TV station KTVL plans to lay off its entire news staff in mid-May, according to a current staff member.
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Recent release of the California condors in Yurok country forces some regional attention to the issue of bird flu.
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Exactly what caused Twitter to reclassify NPR as "state-affiliated media" earlier this month remains a mystery.
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The Debrief, our reporters' roundtable. JPR News Director Erik Neumann sits down with reporters Roman Battaglia and Jane Vaughan to discuss the big news and its coverage.
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JPR's Vanessa Finney exchanges some words with the writer Adam Gopnik about his latest book, "The Real Work: On the Mystery of Mastery," and learning new skills.
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Accelerated by the COVID pandemic, a shift by state officials toward emails and written statements is making it more difficult for journalists to be watchdogs for Californians.
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Dozens of classified U.S. documents detailing the war in Ukraine have appeared on multiple social media sites. There's no word on who might be responsible for leaking or stealing the material.
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News Director Erik Neumann chats with reporters Jane Vaughan and Roman Battaglia about the week's happenings.
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News Director Erik Neumann huddles with reporters Jane Vaughan and Roman Battaglia to air some perspectives on the stories making news in JPR country this week.