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The Supreme Court ruled in favor of a group of Maryland parents who sued a school board over its refusal to allow elementary school children to be taken out of classes with LGBTQ-themed storybooks.
The case had set up a clash between parents’ ability to direct their children’s education and schools’ authority over classroom material.
The court granted an injunction that allows the parents to opt their children out of the books as the case moves forward, ruling the parents are likely to ultimately prevail in the case.
Parents sued Montgomery County, Maryland, schools after it said they couldn't opt their children out of exposure to LGBTQ books in the classroom.
A group of religious parents want to withdraw their elementary school children from class when storybooks with LGBTQ+ characters are being read.
The last six cases of the Supreme Court’s term include birthright citizenship injunctions and a parental bid to keep kids from LGBTQ-themed instruction in public school.
Buried in the details of a recent split ruling against Anthropic is a surprising revelation: the generative AI company destroyed millions of physical books by cutting off ...
Editors’ Choice 5 New Books We Recommend This Week Suggested reading from critics and editors at The New York Times. Share full article June 26, 2025 ...
A federal judge sided with Meta in a lawsuit that alleged the company had illegally trained its AI models on copyrighted works.
A deep dive on gossip. Revolutionary history. A meditation on muscle. A closer look at the color blue. And memoirs galore. There's something for everyone on this nonfiction summer reading list.
Anthropic didn’t break the law when it trained its chatbot with copyrighted books, a judge said, but it must go to trial for allegedly using pirated books.
The Southern California Independent Bookstore Bestsellers list for Sunday, June 29, 2025, including hardcover and paperback fiction and nonfiction.
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