Behind The Smiles
Amazon's internal injury records expose the true toll of its relentless drive for speed.
Amazon's internal injury records expose the true toll of its relentless drive for speed.
These landowners got rich buying and building Silicon Valley. Now can they fix the housing crisis?
Constant work leaves little time for counseling or treatment, transforming rehab patients into a cheap, expendable labor pool for private companies.
Facebook orchestrated a multi-year effort that duped children and their parents out of money, in some cases hundreds or even thousands of dollars, and then often refused to give the money back, according to court documents unsealed tonight in response to a Reveal legal action.
When a worker gets smashed by a car part on Tesla's factory floor, medical staff are forbidden from calling 911 without permission.
While tech companies' racial and gender disparities are grave, Reveal found many firms haven't been held back by conventional excuses.
A pending lawsuit alleges immigrant children housed at one facility were held down and forcibly injected with drugs, rendering them unable to walk, afraid of people and wanting to sleep constantly.
Reveal's analysis of mortgage data found evidence of modern-day redlining in 61 metro areas across the country.
While the inmates' fates are uncertain, profits for the corporation detaining them are secure.
"It was a slave camp. I can't believe the court sent me there."
The three men in Virginia wanted to start a race war. The man in Kansas wanted to kill as many Jewish people as possible. Another in Spokane, Washington plotted to kill President Barack Obama.
The US Department of Defense is investigating hundreds of Marines who used social media to solicit and share hundreds — possibly thousands — of naked photographs of female service members and vets.
Uber said it protects you from spying. But security sources say otherwise.
Los Angeles officials have steadfastly refused to identify the Wet Prince of Bel Air, the homeowner who pumped an astonishing 11.8 million gallons of water during a single year of California's crippling drought.
During one harvest season, two growers began having sex with their teenage trimmer. When they feared she would run away, they locked her inside an oversized toolbox with breathing holes.
Believe it or not, listening to the Nixon tapes is fun. But if you don't have that kind of time on your hands, how about a quick jaunt through some of the best parts?
Facebook's new "Reactions" are intended to help users better express their responses to posts. Advertisers are salivating at the prospect of additional data about consumer preferences and trends. And law enforcement and intelligence agencies will be able to mine for sentiment analysis of criminal and terrorism suspects.
After heightened scrutiny of University Of Phoenix's shady practice of military recruitment, their stocks have tumbled.
In the midst of a searing drought, one home in this exclusive West Los Angeles neighborhood used an astonishing 11.8 million gallons of water in one year — enough for 90 households.
It was the isolation that made Erika Morales most wary of her job as a night shift janitor. The solitude had begun to feel like a trap.