>
Japan Airlines is trialing Unitree Robotics G1 humanoid robots at Haneda Airport...
U.S. Senate Gives King Charles Standing Ovations After Subtle Digs At Trump On 'Balance',..
$300M DATA DEAL | Palantir Now Has a File on Every American Farmer
Researcher wins 1 bitcoin bounty for 'largest quantum attack' on underlying tech
Interceptor-Drone Arms-Race Emerges
A startup called Inversion has introduced Arc, a space-based vehicle...
Mining companies are using cosmic rays to find critical minerals
They regrew a severed nerve - by shortening a bone.
New Robot Ants Work Like Real Insects To Build And Dismantle On Their Own
Russian scientists 'are developing the world's first drug to delay ageing' months after
Sam Altman's World ID Expands Biometric Identity Checks
China Tests Directed Energy Beam That Recharges Drones Mid-Flight
Jurassic Park might arrive sooner than expected, just with Dinobots.

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
A U.S. senator and his team say they have uncovered additional evidence that federal officials worked to evade requests made under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
Several emails obtained by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) showed personnel with the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were aware of FOIA requests and sought to evade them. FOIA enables people to request records from the government. It requires officials to retain and produce requested records, subject to certain exemptions.
In a Nov. 26, 2022, missive, Allison Lale, a medical officer with the CDC, asked a colleague about receiving safety analyses of COVID-19 vaccination from the FDA.
Pedro Moro, a CDC epidemiologist, responded. "I think that because of the FOIAs we may have asked FDA to stop sending these weekly data mining outputs," Moro wrote.
"Oh interesting," Lale said. She added that during calls for a CDC-managed program, "we used to just verbally mention" that certain terms had not triggered safety signals, or signs vaccines were causing problems.