“The idea is simple,” the Debug website declares: “raise sterile males and release them into wild insect populations. When a ...
You don't need to stock up on repellent, or worry about getting more mosquito bites, these male insects don't feed on humans.
Google is seeking approval to release millions of specially treated mosquitoes in California and Florida as part of an effort ...
Through its parent company, Alphabet, Google wants federal approval to release up to 32 million mosquitoes in California and Florida. That might sound apocalyptic, but the request is part of the tech ...
The plan is part of the company's Debug initiative, a decade-old program that intends to reduce diseases spread by mosquitoes ...
Google is seeking approval to release millions of specially treated male mosquitoes in Florida and California to reduce ...
Google is seeking permission from US regulators to release up to 32 million sterilized mosquitoes across California and ...
Alphabet is seeking federal approval to release up to 32 million treated mosquitoes across California and Florida to curb the ...
Adding to the existing mosquito population may sound counterintuitive, but there’s a method to the madness at Alphabet’s ...
A Google initiative called Debug wants to release 64 million mosquitoes. The organization filed a request for a permit to ...
The infostealer uses a first‑seen‑in‑the‑wild debugging method to extract Chrome’s decryption key without privilege escalation, raising concerns about the future of browser data security. A new ...