TechHere's How Chinese Scientists Use Social Media Douyin to Track Invasive Species Chinese ecologists employ Douyin, China's TikTok equivalent, to track invasive species. Analyzing user-generated content aids in mapping ecological threats, spotlighting release hotspots, and fostering public awareness.by John Lopez
TechApple Agrees to Pay $490 Million to Settle Lawsuit on Misleading Shareholders About Its Business in Chinaby Jace Dela Cruz
TechTikTok Uncertainty: Advertisers Eyeing Meta's Reels and YouTube's Shorts If US Senate Approves Banby Quincy Jon
TechSteven Mnuchin Leading Investor Group to Acquire TikTok Amid Legislative Threats, but What Did China Say?by Joseph Henry
TechPutin Warns: Russia Technically Ready for Nuclear War if U.S. Deploys Troops to Ukraineby Quincy Jon
HealthChina Revolutionizes Surgical Assistance with AI Chatbot Powered by Meta's Llama 2.0by Inno Flores
TechChinese Researchers on the Brink of Developing 'Real AI Scientists' Capable of Conducting Experiments, Solving Scientific Problemsby John Lopez