Dominion Voting Systems added a debunked fake logo to its list of misinformation.
Dominion Voting Systems, a voting software and hardware company that found itself bombarded by conspiracy theories following the 2020 election, has a fact check page already built to handle new false claims this year. It was recently updated with a new fact check: a fake company logo that claimed to show a red ballot turning blue isn’t the company’s actual logo.
Wiliot IoT Pixel tags are being placed throughout the U. K. mail service to ensure Christmas deliveries go off without a hitch.
We’re gearing up for the holiday season, a time when parcel shipments go crazy. Last year, in the three months leading up to December 2023, the U. K.’s Royal Mail—the country’s equivalent of the USPS—handled 387 million parcels, up 36% from a year before.
A popular argument for the Electoral College made on conservative websites and talk radio is that without it, candidates would spend all their time campaigning in big cities and would ignore low-population areas.
This article was originally published in November 2016.
The company used trauma-informed design to create a comfortable, welcoming space for formerly homeless seniors in San Antonio.
A few years ago, as a team at Ikea U. S. thought about how it could help tackle the challenges of unaffordable housing and homelessness, they decided to try something new.
Steven Graf and Zhach Pham were business partners from a young age.
The two best friends met in second grade in their hometown of Westport, Connecticut and ran a lemonade stand, built go-karts and dug for buried treasure — to their parents’ consternation — in the backyard.
“We were always making things,” said Pham.
Decades later, they had their breakthrough.
On an episode that aired Friday, the pair went into CNBC’s Shark Tank and left with a $300,000 investment in their company, Denver-based RigStrips.
Steven Graf, left, Zhach Pham at their startup RigStrips on the TV show “Shark Tank” in 2024.
Can buying coffee at a cafe help fight homelessness? Well, this nonprofit coffee shop uses 100% of its profits from selling a cup of Joe to help people find employment and a place to live.
Change Please Coffee celebrated the launch of its newest cafe and training academy in Aurora on Tuesday morning.