The accelerating digitalization of global finance has spawned new frontiers for illicit financial behavior, notably in the realm of white-collar crime. White-collar crime, ...
The 2026 White Collar Crime Institute, will feature in-depth exploration of cybersecurity, cryptocurrencies, money laundering, international law and other pressing legal, and ethical issues impacting ...
Critics are concerned that this reassignment means other types of investigations, like white-collar crime, will proceed at a ...
A 21-defendant indictment in 2021 produced 18 guilty pleas, a conviction at trial and 2 acquittals in landmark prosecution of ...
A group of white teens were cleared of hate crime allegations after a black Virginia Tech professor whined to cops he was a victim of a racist attack when they blasted rap music and dumped snow near ...
Andrew Yang — millionaire entrepreneur, noted Ivy leaguer, and one-time presidential hopeful — has a grim warning for his fellow salaried professionals: AI is about to wipe “millions” of office jobs ...
White-collar workers are getting nervous, with good reason. Sure, 98 percent of college graduates who want a job still have one, and wages are ticking up. Sure, some companies that cite the ...
Andrew Yang says AI will wipe out millions of white-collar jobs in the next 12 to 18 months. Anyone whose job revolves around sitting at a desk is at risk, Yang says. He says the impact of AI on the ...
TL;DR: Mustafa Suleyman, Microsoft's AI CEO, predicts AI will fully automate most white-collar jobs, including lawyers and accountants, within 12 to 18 months by achieving human-level performance.
A hot potato: Another big name in the AI industry has given an ominous warning about the technology replacing white-collar jobs. This time, the timeline for the automation apocalypse is a lot closer: ...
TOPSHOT - A person is detained as residents of Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood confront US Border Patrol and other law enforcement agents at a gas station after Immigration and Customs ...
“Learn a Trade” isn’t just a rallying cry for younger generations to skip college and pursue in-demand blue-collar work. For burned-out white-collar workers, it has become a popular midcareer fantasy.