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Search resuls for: "Bloomberg Technology"


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Read previewDating app Bumble is in hot water over an ad campaign that appeared to make fun of celibacy as an alternative to dating. The campaign featured billboards that bore the message: "You know full well a vow of celibacy is not the answer." Some said the ads were misogynistic and were chastising women for not casually sleeping with men. "Our ads referencing celibacy were an attempt to lean into a community frustrated by modern dating, and instead of bringing joy and humor, we unintentionally did the opposite," it said. AdvertisementBumble's apology post recognized that celibacy was a lifestyle many women choose for various reasons, including asexuality, trauma, or harm.
Persons: , TikTok, Bumble, Lauren Salaun, Cecilia Regina, Regina, Julia Fox, Whitney Wolfe, concierges Organizations: Service, Business, National, Bloomberg Technology Summit, AP Locations: South Korea
Bumble's founder discussed how AI could influence dating at the Bloomberg Technology Summit. Whitney Wolfe Herd said "AI dating concierges" could court each other on humans' behalf. She said AI could also help modern daters become better flirts. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Bumble founder Whitney Wolfe Herd discussed how AI could influence modern dating at the Bloomberg Technology Summit this week.
Persons: Whitney Wolfe Herd, , Bumble, Emily Chang, Wolfe Herd Organizations: Bloomberg Technology Summit, Service, Business
Adam Selipsky, CEO of Amazon Web Services, speaks during the Bloomberg Technology Summit in San Francisco on June 22, 2023. Revenue from Amazon Web Services came out to $25.04 billion, according to the company's earnings statement. The growth marked a step up from the 13% increase Amazon reported for AWS in the fourth quarter. Analysts polled by StreetAccount had expected $7.52 billion in AWS operating income. The AWS operating margin widened to 37.6%, the widest at least since 2014.
Persons: Adam Selipsky, StreetAccount, Gartner, Axios, Anthropic, CFRA's Zino Organizations: Amazon Web Services, Bloomberg Technology Summit, Amazon, Revenue, AWS, Google, Microsoft Locations: San Francisco
Emad Mostaque, founder and CEO of Stability AI, speaks during the Bloomberg Technology Summit in San Francisco, California, US, on Thursday, June 22, 2023. Beleaguered artificial intelligence startup Stability is laying off employees after the exit of its controversial former CEO Emad Mostaque. The company's newly appointed co-CEOs Shan Shan Wong and Christian Laforte told employees in an email Wednesday night that the firm needed to "restructure parts of the business, which will sadly mean saying goodbye to some colleagues." "Those who are affected by this have been notified individually and we will be supporting them throughout this period," Wong and Laforte, who were previously chief operating officer and chief technology officer at the company, respectively, said in the internal memo. Stability AI's layoffs amount to about 10% of its global headcount, according to publicly available data online which shows the firm employs around 200 people in total.
Persons: Emad Mostaque, Emad, Shan Shan Wong, Christian Laforte, Wong, Laforte Organizations: Bloomberg Technology Summit, CNBC Locations: San Francisco , California
CrowdStrike shares surged as much as 21% in after-hours trading Tuesday, after the cybersecurity company reported a beat on the top and bottom lines, and issued stronger than expected guidance for the upcoming quarter and full year. CrowdStrike has now reported GAAP net income for the last four quarters, CFO Burt Podbere said in the earnings release. "CrowdStrike is cybersecurity's consolidator of choice, innovator of choice, and platform of choice to stop breaches," co-founder and CEO George Kurtz said in a release. The company also guided to fiscal first-quarter revenues between $902 million and $906 million, better than a consensus estimate of $899 million. CrowdStrike also expects EPS for the period between 89 to 90 cents, better than the 82 cent consensus estimate.
Persons: George Kurtz, CrowdStrike, Burt Podbere, Podbere Organizations: Crowdstrike Holdings Inc, Bloomberg Technology, RSA Conference, Security Locations: San Francisco , California
Sonos shares rise 12% on earnings and revenue beat
  + stars: | 2024-02-06 | by ( Kif Leswing | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Patrick Spence, president and CEO of Sonos, speaks during a Bloomberg Technology Television interview in San Francisco on Feb. 11, 2019. Sonos shares rose over 12% in extended trading Tuesday after the speaker company reported fiscal 2024 first-quarter sales and earnings that exceeded Wall Street expectations. Here's how Sonos did versus consensus expectations from LSEG, formerly Refinitiv:Earnings per share: 64 cents vs. 40 cents expectedRevenue: $613 million vs. $587 million expectedSales fell 9% from the same period last year. Sonos reported $80.9 million in net income, or 64 cents per share, versus $75.2 million, or 57 cents per share, last year. "Despite the challenging environment, we are winning in the market and outperforming the competition," Sonos CEO Patrick Spence said in a statement.
Persons: Patrick Spence, Sonos, Bose, Spence Organizations: Sonos, Bloomberg Technology Television, Apple, Google Locations: San Francisco
Dario Amodei, Daniela Amodei, Tom Brown, Jack Clark, Jared Kaplan, and Sam McCandlish, cofounders of AnthropicAnthropic's Dario Amodei, Jack Clark, and Daniela Amodei. Since then, the company has received billions in funding from both Google and Amazon in what some have termed an "AI arms race." CEO Dario Amodei, a former Google Brain researcher with a Ph.D. in computational neuroscience, has been writing about the cataclysmic potential of AI since 2016. Constitutional AI is partly the brainchild of two other OpenAI alums and Anthropic cofounders, Tom Brown and Jared Kaplan. Both Kaplan and Brown have worked on Anthropic's efforts to "red team" the company's flagship language model, Claude, probing for misuse possibilities.
Persons: Dario Amodei, Daniela Amodei, Tom Brown, Jack Clark, Jared Kaplan, Sam McCandlish, Anthropic Anthropic's Dario Amodei, Menlo Ventures Anthropic, Amodei's, Anthropic, , Anthropic cofounders, Brown, Kaplan, Johns Hopkins, Claude, AGI, I'm Organizations: Google, Menlo Ventures, Bloomberg, Johns, OpenAI Locations: OpenAI, GPT
CrowdStrike CEO George Kurtz has had a banner year. The new regulations will likely offer upside for CrowdStrike, Kurtz said. For every dollar companies paid CrowdStrike to respond to hacks, CrowdStrike collected roughly $6 on average in new subscription revenue, Kurtz said. "It's not something we can answer" for companies, Kurtz said. While incident response is good business for CrowdStrike, Kurtz emphasized that CrowdStrike's main focus is "to help customers prevent these sorts of attacks upfront and provide visibility."
Persons: George Kurtz, It's, Kurtz, CrowdStrike, it's, Jen Organizations: Crowdstrike Holdings Inc, Bloomberg Technology, RSA Conference, CNBC, Securities and Exchange, SEC, Caesars Entertainment, MGM Resorts, Caesars, MGM, CrowdStrike, Infrastructure Security Agency Locations: San Francisco , California
Databricks has agreed to acquire Arcion, an enterprise data company, for about $100 million, including incentives, CEO Ali Ghodsi told CNBC ahead of an official Monday announcement. The acquisition comes after Databricks announced a $500 million funding round in September at a valuation of $43 billion. Arcion is Databricks' first acquisition since acquiring MosaicML, an AI infrastructure startup specializing in training large language models, for $1.3 billion. It's part of Databricks' AI push, and partly inspired by the tech sector's growing interest in generative AI, which can require a lot of training data. "We think we can make a lot of revenue on this particular acquisition," Ghodsi said.
Persons: Ali Ghodsi, Databricks, Ghodsi, we're, Rajkumar Sen, Miryana Organizations: Databricks Inc, Bloomberg Technology, CNBC, Oracle, Arcion's Locations: San Francisco
Emad Mostaque, founder and CEO of Stability AI, speaks during the Bloomberg Technology Summit in San Francisco, California, US, on Thursday, June 22, 2023. Artificial intelligence will be the biggest bubble of all time, according to the CEO of open-source AI company Stability AI. Speaking with UBS analysts on a call last week, Stability AI CEO Emad Mostaque said of artificial intelligence: "I think this will be the biggest bubble of all time." "I call it the 'dot AI' bubble, and it hasn't even started yet," he said. Stability AI is the company behind Stable Diffusion, one of the other more popular generative AI tools aside from OpenAI.
Persons: Emad Mostaque, hasn't, chatbot, Google Bard, Microsoft Bing, Mostaque, Reid Hoffman Organizations: Bloomberg Technology Summit, UBS, Coatue, Lightspeed Venture Partners, Mostaque, Google, Microsoft Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S
Sonos lays off 7%, or about 130 employees
  + stars: | 2023-06-14 | by ( Rohan Goswami | In Rohangoswamicnbc | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Patrick Spence, president and chief executive officer of Sonos Inc., speaks during a Bloomberg Technology Television interview in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Monday, Feb. 11, 2019. Wireless speaker company Sonos said in a Wednesday filing that it would lay off about 7% of its workforce, or roughly 130 employees. "In the face of continued headwinds we have had to make some hard choices, including eliminating some positions and reevaluating program spend," Sonos CEO Patrick Spence said. Sonos cut its guidance in its most recent earnings report for the period ended April 1, 2023. The company had previously cut head count by 12% in 2020, in response to the rapidly unfolding Covid pandemic.
Persons: Patrick Spence, Sonos Organizations: Sonos Inc, Bloomberg Technology Television, Wireless, Revenue Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S
Well, we took the guesswork out of it for you by analyzing some data to determine just how much different companies pay their employees. Positions we looked at included data scientists, data engineers, senior analysts, and more — see how their salaries stack up. Positions we looked at included data scientists, data engineers, senior analysts, and more — see how their salaries stack up. Finally, take a look at Insider's Big Tech salary database to see how much Apple, Microsoft, Intel, Facebook, and other companies pay their workers. By combing through data, Insider got a sense of how companies like Google, Hulu, and Disney pay their employees.
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