/
Navigation
C
Chronicles
Browse all articles
C
E
Explore
Semantic exploration
E
R
Research
Entity momentum
R
N
Nexus
Correlations & relationships
N
~
Story Arc
Topic evolution
S
Drift Map
Semantic trajectory animation
D
P
Posts
Analysis & commentary
P
Browse
@
Entities
Companies, people, products, technologies
Domains
Browse by publication source
Handles
Browse by social media handle
Detection
?
Concept Search
Semantic similarity search
!
High Impact Stories
Top coverage by position
+
Sentiment Analysis
Positive/negative coverage
*
Anomaly Detection
Unusual coverage patterns
Analysis
vs
Rivalry Report
Compare two entities head-to-head
/\
Semantic Pivots
Narrative discontinuities
!!
Crisis Response
Event recovery patterns
Connected
Nav: C E R N
Search: /
Command: ⌘K
Embeddings: large
Company

the Department of Labor

4 articles decelerating
Articles
4
mentions
Velocity
-50.0%
growth rate
Acceleration
-1.500
velocity change
Sources
3
publications

Coverage Timeline

2024-05-01
The Verge 3 related

In a letter to the US Labor Department, Google says the US could lose out on valuable AI and tech talent if some of its immigration policies are not modernized

The US could lose out on valuable AI and tech talent if some of its immigration policies are not modernized, Google says in a letter sent to the Department of Labor.

2024-01-07
Wall Street Journal 2 related

Data from the Department of Labor shows the US IT sector grew by only 700 jobs over 2023, down from 267,000 jobs added in 2022, despite the AI boom

Belle Lin / Wall Street Journal :

2024-01-06
Wall Street Journal 2 related

Data from the Department of Labor shows the US IT sector grew by only 700 jobs over 2023, down from 267,000 jobs added in 2022, despite the AI boom

Despite business and investor hype around generative AI last year, information-technology hiring slumped as companies laid off workers and sought to cut costs

2022-10-11
New York Times 10 related

The Department of Labor releases a nonbinding proposal to classify US gig workers as employees and not independent contractors; Uber and Lyft stocks drop 10%+

A proposed rule, long awaited by labor activists, would make it harder for companies to classify workers as independent contractors.

Loading articles...

Quarterly Coverage

Top Sources

Narrative

Loading narrative...

Relationships

Loading graph...