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Explore more posts
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Ravi Mattu
In today's DealBook: Are investors getting tired of the high cost of A.I.? Meta reported its best-ever first quarter results but its shares tumbled, wiping $200 billion of its market capitalization — and serving as a warning to other Big Tech groups that are spending big on A.I. Elsewhere: I look at a mining megadeal that's all about the green transition; and Lauren Hirsch on how companies are thinking about getting round a ban on noncompete agreements. https://lnkd.in/gUCJxsyV
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Padmini Dhruvaraj
While there is fear of job displacement due to advancements in artificial intelligence (AI), the 2024 Work Trend Index Annual Report from Microsoft and LinkedIn highlights that AI is not replacing jobs but transforming them. The catch, however, is that many people’s next job might be a role that doesn’t yet exist.
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Tom Harper
I wrote a piece for Politico on major trends buffeting the media including artificial intelligence, deepfakes, and fighting disinformation in an age of dwindling resources. The conclusion is that founders, CEOs, politicians and others in the public eye now face an exponentially increasing threat of reputational damage. In today’s media landscape, a single negative review can quickly go viral, a poorly phrased statement can trigger a global backlash and an ill-judged joke can wreck careers. While the media world’s pace of change is dizzying, the words written by businessman Warren Buffett almost a decade ago have never been more relevant: “It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it.” Article here: https://lnkd.in/dtTNY4PU
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Mike Dorning
Americans give Donald Trump the edge over Joe Biden on the economy in poll after poll. So we decided to compile a simple, easy-to-understand data portrait of how the US economy performed under each president and the kitchen-table realities behind Americans' judgment. It starts with Americans' spending power. Read on: A joint effort between reporter Mark Niquette, graphic artist Phil Kuntz and Bloomberg economist Stuart Paul. Edited by me. #economy #election2024 #business #markets
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Troy Wolverton
If you ask Jeff Hawkins, the AI technology that's dominating the news these days, like ChatGPT, shouldn't really be thought of as "intelligent." In fact, he's betting that in 20 to 30 years, we'll think of such technology as more akin to a calculator than something that can do what humans do. For nearly the last 20 years, Hawkins, who invented the PalmPilot as the founder of Palm, has been working with his team at Numenta, on a different path to AI. They've been studying how brains work and trying to figure out how to duplicate that in software. After making a breakthrough a few years ago, Numenta is getting ready to release to the world its new kind of AI, one that's designed to learn and think like people and animals do. I spoke with Hawkins earlier this month about his new AI, how it differs from ChatGPT and similar technology, and why he's focused on studying brains after his pioneering work in mobile computing.
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Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy
My first front page story as a White House correspondent for USA TODAY — and it is an #exclusive! Our analysis found that in some swing states, which are critical to President Joe Biden’s reelection bid, rental costs have more than doubled in the past four years. In fact, 6 out of the top 10 markets and 34 of the top 100 markets with the largest increases are in swing states. (Also, the print edition came with a QR code that can be scanned to view data on the top 100 markets with the largest increases). Inflation and the economy have long worried American voters, polling shows. But as housing costs continue to be the biggest driver of core inflation, renters are feeling increasingly disillusioned with politicians. #rent #rental Rent.com #NationalLowIncomeHousingCoaltion Link to story: https://lnkd.in/eyaPpTE5
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Michael Thrasher
My latest exclusive: For the first time in years, sentiment toward the top 100 asset management brands is getting worse. I spoke to Peregrine Communications co-CEO Josh Cole about why and what firms are doing about it. More in Institutional Investor: https://lnkd.in/edUBvH_Q #assetmanagement #marketing #alternativeinvestments
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Len Vermillion
SPECIAL SERIES PODCAST ALERT: Today we kicked off our series of #podcasts conversations with the newest members of the #ProcessAutomation Hall of Fame. First up: the winding river traversed by Joe Weiss PE CISM CRISC ISA Fellow on his was from working in nuclear energy to #processcontrol #cybersecurity. What he learned along the way. It's quite an interesting journey. Listen to our conversation ⬇ #controlglobal #controlamplified https://lnkd.in/eSGv5HwV
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Matt Day
Amazon's Ring, years into a shift from a self-styled crime-fighting shop to a hub for peace of mind (and pet videos), is getting a new mission statement: "Keeping people close to what’s important" has come a long way from the original pitch, "Reduce crime in neighborhoods." More bits: -Ring boss Liz Hamren tells me the unit recently became profitable, thanks to a subscription push (and a few rounds of price hikes). It's a bet that users would pay to save videos and do more with their doorbells and cameras -It's tough to overstate how single-minded Ring was in its early years. Veterans say projects without a clear home security mandate didn't tend to last long. Employee docs outlined Ring product set like one might describe a fortress. -Ring's Always Home Cam, three years after it was supposed to hit the market, is still in development. Teams are working to enable the drone to navigate unusual home setups -- curved walls, low ceilings, and the like. read the rest here: https://lnkd.in/gAsY_Bcx
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Rachel Wolfe
Whatever happened to the price you see being the one you pay? In my latest for The Wall Street Journal, I wrote about how surprise fees are sneaking onto the bottom of bills for everything from concert tickets to dinners out, leaving consumers feeling duped. Instead of charging one flat price, retail analysts told me, more companies are unbundling the cost for their goods and services, tacking on 3% for swiping a credit card or adding a little extra for gas. Business owners who say they need to raise prices to account for inflation argue checkout fees do a better job breaking down where customers’ additional money is going. But some economists and advocates like the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau say secondary fees diminish people’s ability to shop around and, data shows, lead them to pay more overall than they do when businesses raise prices wholesale. “People don’t shop based on fees. They shop based on the price of the product,” the CFPB told me. Congress recently introduced a bill to “limit and eliminate excessive, hidden, and unnecessary fees imposed on consumers,” while similar measures have passed the New York and Illinois state senates. California, too, added restaurants to the list of industries covered under its existing hidden-fee ban. So far, these efforts haven’t stopped the fees’ spread. Noelle Weaver and Bradley Walker told me they now base their hotel and rental-car selections upon whichever companies will give them one flat, upfront price. “I just want to know what it’s going to cost instead of feeling the bitterness of getting upcharged at every turn,” Walker said. Read more (without a paywall): https://lnkd.in/gwfK9jUg
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Haru Coryne
I recommend this post by Alexandra Smith on "total journalism reach" -- The 19th's new readership metric. It's full of insights and data wisdom. One takeaway: prioritize consistency across platforms without being overly rigid. For example, #Instagram views get counted because their posts basically republish an abridged version of the story -- an increasingly common publishing strategy -- not just because the machine needs more #data. Above all, this model is attentive to the question of *why* we measure #readership. I've always felt that digital interactions are metaphorical -- as summed up in that now quaint adage: "tweets, not endorsements." What does readership *represent*? Answering that question will help you collect quality, consistent data on #news consumption. And that will bring us closer to the readers we serve. https://lnkd.in/gxn4wmYy
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Adam Hardy
Free money, no strings attached? The rise of generative #AI — and the growing potential for mass unemployment — is raising the question: What role, if any, does guaranteed income play in American society? While the tech development is new, the guaranteed-income question has been around for decades with proponents across the ideological spectrum, from the laissez-faire economist Milton Friedman to democratic-socialist and civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. In dozens of cities across the U.S., guaranteed income programs are already being tested. Baltimore, Chicago, Flint, Sacramento and many others are studying the outcome of giving low- and middle-income families direct cash payments with no strings attached. In almost all cases, funding comes from a mix of philanthropic efforts from organizations like United Way and/or leftover COVID-relief money from the American Rescue Plan. If your measures of success include reducing poverty and increasing the health and development of children without jeopardizing employment, initial data suggests these programs so far have been extremely successful. For Money, I recently dove into six major universal basic income programs that are currently in effect around the country. Read more on how and where these programs operate and what the cities' next steps are. #UBI #GuaranteedIncome #AI #MassUnemployment #stimulus #LITrendingTopics #money #MLK cc: Baltimore City Mayor's Office of Employment Development; Mona Hanna-Attisha; Michigan State University; Cook County Government; Pierce County; City of Tacoma; Sacramento County
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Broc Romanek
Recently, I talked to Michael Levin – of “The Activist Investor” fame – about his recent note entitled “Radical Board Transparency” that is an idea for a new type of shareholder engagement. If your role has been to serve as a gatekeeper for the board, you’ll have to be open-minded on this one for a minute to consider it. It’s food for thought – and I’m not sold on it myself. As laid out in greater detail in his note, Michael’s idea is to allow investors (both portfolio managers and proxy committee members) to interact directly with directors. Directors would be trained not to break the law (including Reg FD) – and to really know the company’s business and they would interact with investors without chaperones. #boards #directors #corpgov https://lnkd.in/ejknQ6cR
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Mae Anderson
We examined CEO pay with Equilar data for The Associated Press. The typical compensation package for chief executives who run companies in the S&P 500 jumped nearly 13% last year, easily surpassing the gains for workers at a time when inflation was putting considerable pressure on Americans’ budgets. The median pay package for CEOs rose to $16.3 million, up 12.6%, according to data analyzed for The Associated Press by Equilar. Meanwhile, wages and benefits netted by private-sector workers rose 4.1% through 2023. At half the companies in this year’s pay survey, it would take the worker at the middle of the company’s pay scale almost 200 years to make what their CEO did.
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