The order was contained in an email sent to the staff from Russell Vought, the new director of the Office of Management and Budget, on Saturday night, the New York Times reports. In addition, officials said Sunday that the agency's headquarters in Washington will be closed this week, per the AP, without specifying a reason.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s (CFPB) new boss has put a hold on consumer protections. Workers at the financial regulator will work from home this week while their headquarters are closed down, CNBC reported Sunday (Feb. 9). That shutdown lasts through Feb. 14, the report said, the same day a judge is scheduled to hold a hearing involving Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency’s (DOGE) access to Treasury Department data.
Adam Martinez, the CFPB's chief operating officer, told all staff that employees and contractors are to work remotely unless otherwise instructed by newly installed acting director Russell Vought.
1h ago — In a blog post published on February 4, Google updated its public “ethical guidelines” regarding AI, removing any references to the use of such advanced technologies solely for peaceful purposes. For years, the controversial company was adamant that it would “never pursue high-tech that could cause or are likely to cause overall harm”.
2h ago — The White House is launching a Rumble account similar to the White House's YouTube channel, Fox News Digital exclusively learned.
8h ago — Amid mounting pressure, British PM Starmer contemplates revising the controversial Online Safety Act to sidestep potential tariffs from the Trump administration, raising questions about the balance between regulation and free speech.
8h ago — Google has egg on its face as it rushes to edit an advertisement for the Gemini AI tool before its broadcast during the Super Bowl. The ad was found to contain false information about cheese consumption likely "hallucinated" by the bumbling tech giant's woke AI.
9h ago — Various studies have pushed for restrictions on cellphone use in schools, raising the alarm about students’ use of them.