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The company behind ChatGPT is converting to a for-profit company and settling an investigation by California’s attorney general. Experts and advocates say the company could still exploit its charitable roots.
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Summertime is peach, tomato, and archaeology season! While investigations happen throughout the year, field schools, public outreach, and big excavations peak during the warmer months. By fall, our boots are dusty, feet are sore, and labs are overflowing with the summer’s haul.
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Residents in far Northern California may see a low-flying, fixed-wing plane in the coming weeks. The information it gathers could help communities better prepare for earthquakes.
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The California Legislature passed more than a dozen bills to regulate artificial intelligence in recent days, though some ambitions fell short.
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Archaeologists produce public event
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Adam Schultz talks about the work of mapping the Earth and its electrical properties
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The sprawling California legislation offers protection to whistleblowers and citizens. The coming weeks could decide its fate.
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Crater Rock Museum in Central Point boasts one of the finest displays of gems, minerals, rocks, and fossils on the West Coast.
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Hundreds of miles west of Oregon, the Axial Seamount appears to be heading to another eruption.
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Every year, hundreds of Oregonians die from brain injuries and thousands are injured, sometimes for life.
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State regulators propose rules on evaluating workers and job applicants with AI.
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Science Illustrator Serena Richelle at Hyatt Lake. Richelle is camping as part of a two-week Artist Residency program organized annually by the BLM.
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Five of the top illuminating, inspiring and just plain cool Pacific Northwest science stories from “All Science. No Fiction.”