“Instead, it allowed its AI to spread false information about Mr. Starbuck for months after being put on notice of the falsity, at which time it ‘fixed’ the problem by wiping Mr. Starbuck’s name from its written responses altogether,” the suit said.
Employment and Training Administration, Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training, Martinsburg, W.Va. (525 square feet)National Appeals Division, Memphis, Tenn. (3,398 square feet)
Defense Contract Management Agency-National, Merrill, Wis. (393 square feet)Employment Standards Administration, Wage and Hour Division, Minneapolis, Minn. (3,499 square feet)United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Minot, N.D. (833 square feet)
Natural Resources Conservation Service, Missoula, Mont. (8,310 square feet)Geological Survey, Moab, Utah (4,750 square feet)
Forest Service, Montgomery, Ala. (15,792 square feet)
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, Montgomery, Ala. (2,662 square feet)“We need to reduce emissions urgently, drastically,” said Fennel, the researcher studying Planetary’s project. “Any removal of CO2 from the atmosphere is much more difficult and costly than avoiding CO2 emissions to begin with.”
The industry continues to push forward. Planetary said in February that it had sequestered a total of 1,000 metric tons of carbon in the ocean, and Carboniferous completed its first test of sinking sugarcane to the seafloor. Early this year, Gigablue signed a deal for 200,000 carbon credits for dispersing nutrient-filled particles in the ocean.A seagull sits on a seafood processing plant conveyer belt in the Port of Galilee, a fishing village in Narragansett, R.I., Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
A seagull sits on a seafood processing plant conveyer belt in the Port of Galilee, a fishing village in Narragansett, R.I., Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/David Goldman)A growing number of companies are also using electricity to alter seawater molecules, with the same goal of prompting the ocean to absorb more carbon dioxide. The startup Ebb Carbon recently struck a deal with Microsoft to provide up to 350,000 carbon credits, and Captura, which is funded in part by investors affiliated with oil and gas production, expanded its operations from California to Hawaii.