Search Results
-
(FILES) The sign posting on the STMicroelectronics headquarters in Paris on October 9, 2017. The Franco-Italian group STMicroelectronics, a specialist in semiconductors, has secured 1 billion in financing from the European Investment Bank (EIB), it announced in a press release on Thursday. (Photo by ERIC PIERMONT / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)
-
Angel Villaverde, a technology engineering student, develops war-themed games for the Roblox gaming platform in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon State, Mexico, on November 19, 2025. A soldier quietly puts on his uniform, grabs his rifle and fires at drug traffickers in Mexico: it is not a real scene, but one from a popular video game developed by young people who recreate the armed conflicts in their communities. These video games, with thousands of daily users, are part of what is known as "narco-culture," a phenomenon that is growing in Mexico and is also reflected in music, movies and fashion that glorify criminal life. (Photo by Julio Cesar AGUILAR / AFP via Getty Images)


