This Is Only A Test: Why Your Cellphone Will Buzz Wednesday Afternoon Texts stating "Presidential Alert" will be sent to some 225 million U.S. cellphones at 2:18 p.m. ET. Brian Naylor
Amazon Becomes Largest Company To Commit To Minimum $15 Hourly Wage Amazon announced on Tuesday that it will raise wages to $15 an hour starting Nov. 1 for some 250,000 regular workers and 100,000 seasonal workers. Alina Selyukh
Justice Department Sues California To Block State's Net Neutrality Law The Trump administration is suing California over the state's new net neutrality law, saying it clashed with federal policy. Alina Selyukh
What Can Citizens Do To Fight Foreign Disinformation Campaigns? An expert told the Senate Intelligence Committee that there is dramatically more fake information than genuine conversation from automated accounts on the extreme ends of the political spectrum. Tim Mak
Facebook Says Hackers Accessed Information Of 50 Million Users In Latest Data Breach Facebook announced a new data breach on Friday. Hackers accessed the information of 50 million Facebook users, as Facebook remains under pressure for misuse of users' personal data. Alina Selyukh
Vishaan Chakrabarti: How Can We Design More Welcoming Cities? Architect Vishaan Chakrabarti says many modern cities feel cold, austere, and anonymous. He advocates for designing more vibrant and inclusive cities that are reminiscent of the scale of older cities. NPR Staff
SEC Sues Tesla CEO Elon Musk "Musk's false and misleading public statements and omissions caused significant confusion and disruption in the market for Tesla's stock and resulting harm to investors," the lawsuit says. Vanessa Romo
Trump Administration Rolls Back Obama-Era Safety Rules For Oil Trains The Trump administration has finalized a roll back of Obama-era regulations for oil trains. NPR Staff
News Brief: Brett Kavanaugh, Trump At U.N., Attorney General Sessions The Supreme Court nominee talks publicly for the first time since misconduct allegations were made against him. Trump addresses the U.N. General Assembly. Sessions talks to state attorneys general. Steve Inskeep
Sessions To Meet With State Attorneys General About Social Media U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions meets Tuesday with a group of state attorneys general to talk about the power of the tech industry, and allegations of anti-conservative bias on social media. Alina Selyukh