You don't need to stock up on repellent, or worry about getting more mosquito bites, these male insects don't feed on humans.
Technology behemoth Google is set to release millions of mosquitoes in two large U.S. states, but contrary to how it appears, ...
The technology company's proposal for mosquito population control isn't quite as dramatic as it sounds.
Google plans to release millions of mosquitoes into the United States in a new project aimed at curbing mosquito-borne ...
The company is asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for permission to release millions of sterilized mosquitoes in order to fight their disease-spreading counterparts ...
When you think of Google “debugging” something, you probably think of software – not actual bugs.
Deep inside Medellin, Colombia, scientists are breeding millions of mosquitoes every week and then releasing them into the environment on purpose. At first, that may sound strange, especially because ...
Google's Debug research program plans to release millions of sterile mosquitoes to fight species that spread diseases like ...
Company asks US government to release army of sterile male mosquitoes to lower number of illness-spreading bugs ...
Inside a small building in eastern Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Cátia Cabral holds up a jar filled with what looks like fine black pepper. But this ain't pepper. Each granule is actually a tiny mosquito ...
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