Brian Jorgenson, in his capacity as a Microsoft corporate-finance manager, provided confidential information to a day trader.
American planes have dropped supplies for an Iraqi religious minority that's trapped in the mountains by the terrorist group ISIS.
Russia has proposed creating humanitarian corridors to deliver aid to pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine.
Criticized for trying to juke the job stats, the White House delays its proposal to inflate the government's manufacturing job figures.
As the ban rolls out, nations not affected by the prohibition have an opportunity to step in and fill the gap left behind by economic giants.
FICO has announced changes that could improve your credit score. Here's how.
Rare and valuable cars with notable histories go on display in Monterey next week.
David Writebol is in quarantine in Liberia until doctors publicly determine whether he's infected.
If you’re looking for a cheap Windows 8 tablet, this should be at the top of your short list.
An Oklahoma woman is suing two dozen energy companies over the 2011 Prague earthquake.
On the same day U.S. Navy jets bombed northern Iraq, the Federal Aviation Administration barred all U.S. airlines from flying over the entire country.
U.S. warplanes struck Iraq on Friday for the first time since American troops pulled out in 2011, attacking Islamist fighters advancing towards the Kurdish region after President Barack Obamasaid Washington must act to prevent "genocide."
Some of that investment will go toward building new warehouses and increasing product options online.
Climate Prediction Center El Niño data finds the event now has a 2-in-3 chance of occurring, instead of the 4-in-5 chance initially projected.
GM tried to fix twice a door-switch problem that poses a fire risk, and it says owners should park these cars outdoors.
The 1,000 cases filed so far represent nearly 4,000 women, and the plaintiffs' lead lawyer estimates the number of cases can rise ten-fold.
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi is under growing pressure to take more decisive steps to overhaul the euro zone's third-biggest economy.
A British-American couple was hired by pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline to investigate the source of a sex tape.
Khazanah, which owns 69.4 percent of the airline, said the company would be de-listed after it buys out the remaining stake at 8 cents a share.
Tango’s transaction would involve early investors and shareholders selling shares to Ukrainian-born billionaire Len Blavatnik.
A new study showed 40 percent of U.S. households struggled to get by five years after the Great Recession.
The U.S. government will not renew funding for a major research project into Lassa fever, a decision that will, in turn, cut resources for a facility in Sierra Leone that is at the forefront of the current battle against the Ebola virus, Reuters wrote in an exclusive report.
T-Mobile CEO says carrier will be larger than Sprint by the end of the year.
Etihad Airways said that it was suspending all flights to Erbil until further notice, given the escalating warfare in northern Iraq.
Even using low paid prisoners as firefighters, the U.S. government is running out of money budgeted to fight northwest wildfires.
Some Takata-made airbags could hurt you. They're in tons of models. Quickly see if yours is one of them.
Residents and officials are shutting down illegal marijuana farms that they say are draining the state's stressed water supplies.
For a mere $25,000, you can soon make a convertible out of the world’s first luxury electric sedan, the Tesla Model S.
Retail credit card offers may include rewards and discounts, but they also charge higher interest than the average credit card.
The world’s richest 1 percent owns more wealth than economists previously thought, depriving countries of billions in tax revenue.