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WASHINGTON — Social media researcher Joan Donovan says she knows the exact moment her career began to go off the rails. "I got called into the principal's office and was questioned about why I'm talking about Facebook," Donovan said. In a statement to CNBC, Harvard Kennedy School Director of Public Affairs James Smith disputed Donovan's account of her departure. "The narrative is full of inaccuracies and baseless insinuations, particularly the suggestion that Harvard Kennedy School allowed Facebook to dictate its approach to research." Smith told CNBC that Harvard University and the Kennedy School continue to carry out misinformation and social media research to this day.
Persons: Harvard Kennedy, Joan Donovan, Donovan, John F, Frances Haugen, Haugen, Elliot Schrage, Schrage, Nick Clegg, Clegg, didn't, Douglas Elmendorf, Dean Elmendorf, Sheryl Sandberg, Sandberg, Elmendorf, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan –, , Zuckerberg's, Guillermo S, Hava, Eleanor V, Wikstrom, , Chan, Public Affairs James Smith, Smith, Kennedy, Chan Zuckerberg, Donovan's Organizations: Harvard, Media Politics, WASHINGTON — Social, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government, Dean's Council, CNBC, Meta, Facebook, Dean's, Kennedy School, Elmendorf, Harvard's Kennedy School, Twitter, Google, Washington Post, Initiative, Technology, Research, Whistleblower, Massachusetts, U.S . Department of Education's, Civil Rights, Harvard Kennedy School, Public Affairs, School, Kennedy, Media, Politics, Public, Tech, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Locations: Malden, Harvard, Central, Dean's, FBarchive.org
It was 20 minutes into my first Swedish sailing trip on a blazingly sunny morning in late June. When the puttering motor was cut, it was suddenly quiet, just the wind in my face and the sparkling archipelago all around. The sheer magnitude of Stockholm’s archipelago is astounding. “The innermost islands are quite big and populated,” said Jeppe Wikström, a photographer and book publisher who has lived and worked in the archipelago for decades. “The farther out you go, the smaller the islands get, the lower they get.
Persons: I’d, , Jeppe Wikström Organizations: New York Locations: Swedish, Kilholmen, Stockholm, Baltic, New
"Quiet thriving" is a workplace strategy that's helping people take more control of their work. She and another expert agreed that, by contrast, quiet quitting can disempower certain workers. She believes "quiet quitting is disempowering" and that workers instead need a resilient mindset to ride out a tough economy. Given the many economic challenges workers are facing, we may hear much more about "quiet thriving" in the future. And for those people, she added, "quiet thriving" is a method of asking, "How can I really own my job instead of feeling owned by it?"
Persons: Lesley Alderman, , Alderman, it's, They'd, Ashton Wikstrom, she'd, hasn't, Wikstrom, I'm, Brooks, Scott Organizations: Service, Elle Communications, Meta, Cisco, Instagram, Netflix Locations: Washington
BRUSSELS, Feb 8 (Reuters) - Norwegian media group Schibsted (SCHA.OL) and the European Publishers Council have urged EU antitrust regulators to ensure that tech rules coming into play this year will rein in Apple's (AAPL.O) powers, especially over its App Store. Apple is already in the EU antitrust crosshairs related to its App Store practices in music streaming, in e-books and competing apps as well as its mobile payment system Apple Pay. Apple's App Store practices affect Schibsted because of its market power in Scandinavia where up to 60% of consumers have an iPhone in Norway and Sweden, said Petra Wikstrom, director of Public Policy at Schibsted. Apple, which would be forced to loosen its App Store rules under the DMA, could not be reached for comment. In 2021, to allay Japanese antitrust concerns, it scraped the ban on providing separate links on App Store apps for reader apps which provide content such as e-books, video and music.
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