You don't need to stock up on repellent, or worry about getting more mosquito bites, these male insects don't feed on humans.
Forget search engines, AI assistants, and smartphones—Google’s next release could be a swarm of millions of mosquitoes. Through its parent company Alphabet, Google is seeking federal approval to ...
Google is using artificial intelligence to curb mosquito-transmitted viruses with software engineers, biologists and special insect breeding robots.
You have reached your maximum number of saved items. Remove items from your saved list to add more. Google has launched a massive “debugging” project that has nothing to do with dodgy software. The ...
"Ask yourself who is to benefit most from this, and why is it being done?" The post People Are Not Happy About Google’s Plan ...
Dengue, chikungunya, and zika are diseases caused by one type of insect: mosquitoes. According to The Debug Project, backed by Google's parent company Alphabet, mosquitoes kill more people than every ...
Google's Debug project seeks EPA approval to release sterile male mosquitoes in New Jersey, California and Florida to reduce ...
The idea that you can stop bad bugs with good bugs is at the heart of a plan by Google to release up to 64 million mosquitoes.
The company is asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for permission to release millions of sterilized mosquitoes in ...
Most Android users think "Developer Options" are only meant for developers or tech experts. That's why most users completely ...
Google's Debug research program plans to release millions of sterile mosquitoes to fight species that spread diseases like dengue. How does the method work — and should humans interfere with nature ...