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The most painful scene for Natasha Rothwell to write in her new Hulu series "How to Die Alone" was the most personal one. And now, finally, Rothwell is in a starring role — one she wrote herself, that weaves hard-won lessons from her personal life into her character's story. Natasha Rothwell with Jennifer Coolidge in season one of "The White Lotus." I'm supposed to help a white protagonist get theirs and you know very little about me," Rothwell tells BI. I think that is one option for sure, but I think life is less rich and there's less joy that you have access to if you don't allow yourself to risk being vulnerable.
Persons: Natasha Rothwell, Mel, she's, It's, Rothwell, Issa Rae's, , Kelli Prenny —, Jennifer Coolidge, Mario Perez, I'm, Marissa Evans, aloneness, it's, we're, Ian Watson, We've, Nancy Meyers, Nora Ephron, Kamala, unapologetically, you've, let's, I've, pleaser Organizations: Service, HBO, Peabody, Hulu Locations: Bronx, Japan, Thailand
As the incoming global head of technology engineering for Goldman Sachs' global banking and markets division, the ex-Googler will run the engineering team for Goldman's investment banking and sales and trading units. And lots of different challenges in the space given how much is being invested in this particular business," Goldman told Business Insider, referring to efforts to build systems that can handle the firm's anticipated growth in a compliant and resilient way. Goldman Sachs' core business of advising companies through mergers, acquisitions, and raising capital, has come under the spotlight recently as investment-banking activity continues to be slow. AdvertisementWith an anticipated decline in trading volumes across Wall Street, Goldman's sales and trading business will continue to lean on technology to win market share among institutional investors. During her first stint at Goldman, she managed various tech teams and was named managing director in 2008.
Persons: Melissa Goldman, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, she's, couldn't, You've, I'm, I've Organizations: Service, Goldman, Google, JPMorgan, Wall, Big, Bank of America Locations: Wall, Bermuda, Big Tech
Now, the retail giant is turning to generative AI to drive more same-day shipping. But not all the changes that generative AI may bring to the e-commerce giant are positive. Robots and new rolesThe number of Amazon warehouse robots grew from 350,000 in 2021 to more than 750,000 in 2023, according to the company. "They're using generative AI and computer vision to avoid obstacles and find the right place to stop," Armato said. Amazon's AI is three times better at identifying damaged products than humans are, the company said.
Persons: Steve Armato, Armato, Lisa Setyon, Tom Forte, Forte, it's, Katie Tarasov Organizations: Amazon, CNBC, Amazon's, Maxim, Senate Locations: California, Tracy, U.S, Tracy , California, Richmond , California
Companies can face data-security challenges with cloud storage and access management. Dan Benjamin, the senior director of product management at Prisma Cloud, a cloud-security platform made by Palo Alto Networks, said that incorporating data-security posture management into cybersecurity strategies could help solve many of these problems. This is crucial, as an IBM report published in 2023 estimated that 82% of data breaches involved data stored in the cloud. Organizations also often use several cloud systems and sometimes lack a solid security strategy for maintaining, updating, and securing data. Liat Hayun, the vice president of product management and research of cloud security at the cybersecurity company Tenable, said cloud environments' flexibility makes them attractive to companies.
Persons: , Dan Benjamin, Benjamin said, Liat Hayun, Tenable, they're, Hayun, haven't, Benjamin, DSPM, Julie Madhusoodanan, Madhusoodanan Organizations: Service, Palo Alto Networks, LinkedIn, Companies Locations: DSPM, Normalyze
This has renewed focus on China's homegrown efforts to rival Nvidia and create semiconductors that can underpin the world's second-largest economy's own AI industry. Huawei then sells these chips as a part of servers that go into data centers to train AI models. Alibaba and BaiduAlibaba and Baidu both buy Nvidia chips but they are also designing their own semiconductors for AI processes. Inference is the process that follows the training of AI models, as it refers to the actual application of AI in the real world, such as a chatbot responding to user queries. Moore ThreadsMoore Threads, founded in 2020, is developing GPUs designed to train large AI models.
Persons: Paul Triolo, Albright Stonebridge, Baidu Alibaba, Wei Sun, Moore, KUAE, ByteDance Organizations: Istock, Getty, Nvidia, CNBC, Huawei Huawei, Huawei, Wall, Alibaba, Baidu, Counterpoint Research, Biren, Technologies, China Morning, Cambricon Technologies, U.S, Sequoia, GGV Locations: China, U.S, Beijing, Washington, Shenzhen, Biren's
Amazon is starting a "bureaucracy mailbox" for workers to report inefficiencies. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementSometimes, it takes a bit of bureaucracy to trim the bureaucracy. That's the hope, at least, of Amazon's new "bureaucracy mailbox" where workers can flag what CEO Andy Jassy described as "unnecessary and excessive process or rules."
Persons: Andy Jassy, Organizations: Amazon, Service, Business
During his tenure as CEO, Grove transformed the chip company into a giant of Silicon Valley that, during the 1990s, was as important to the PC market as Microsoft. Pat Gelsinger, who has led Intel as CEO since 2021, has enacted a sweeping set of new initiatives to turn the chip company around. Its Gaudi 3 AI chip, unveiled as a rival to offerings from Nvidia and AMD, is expected to generate just $500 million in sales this year. Meanwhile, Alvin Nguyen, senior analyst at Forrester, told Business Insider that this is a big public win for Intel. Gelsinger's second headline announcement was that the company is establishing Intel Foundry as a separate subsidiary within Intel, with its own new operating board and independent directors.
Persons: , Andrew Grove, he'd, Grove, Grove —, Pat Gelsinger, Gordon Moore, Gelsinger, HWA CHENG, Patrick Moorhead, Moorhead, Alvin Nguyen, Forrester, Gelsinger's, It's, Forrester's Nguyen, Bernstein Organizations: Service, Microsoft, Intel, Business, Nvidia, Gaudi, AMD, Revenue, HWA, Getty, Amazon Web Services, Intel Foundry, Reuters Locations: Silicon, Japan, Moore's, AFP, Poland, Germany, Arizona , Oregon, New Mexico, Ohio
Elon Musk said SpaceX will sue the Federal Aviation Administration for "regulatory overreach" after the agency planned to fine his defense contractor for issues with two launches last year. The FAA said SpaceX used an "unapproved rocket propellant farm" for its EchoStar XXIV Jupiter mission in July 2023. In a recent blog post, SpaceX complained about "difficulties launch companies face in the current regulatory environment," specifically pertaining to "launch and reentry licensing." In addition to taking on the FAA and environmental regulators, Musk has clashed with the National Labor Relations Board. WATCH: SpaceX will sue FAA
Persons: NASA's, Elon Musk, SpaceX didn't, Musk Organizations: Polaris, NASA's Kennedy Space Center, SpaceX, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Cape Canaveral Space Force, NASA, CNBC, Environmental Protection Agency, Texas Commission, National Labor Relations Board Locations: Cape Canaveral , Florida, Cape, Florida, Texas, Boca Chica , Texas
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Tuesday pinpointed why he thinks artificial intelligence is useful across the business world, saying its value stems from customer service potential across industries. Cramer gave examples of how AI customer service capabilities could change workflows in several fields, including retail, food service, law and health care. He suggested AI agents could answer patients' questions and free up doctors' time to engage in other pursuits. "AI makes things go faster — everything. It makes things more rational — everything," he said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, hasn't
The latest research looked at a part of the brain called the olfactory bulb, which processes information about smell. Connecting the olfactory bulb and the nasal cavity is the olfactory nerve. Some researchers worry the olfactory pathway may also be an entry point for microplastics getting into the brain, beyond the olfactory bulb. Mauad and her team took samples of olfactory bulb tissue from 15 cadavers of people who died between the ages of 33 and 100. The presence of microplastics in the olfactory bulb doesn’t automatically mean there are microplastics elsewhere in the brain, such as regions related to cognition.
Persons: , Thais Mauad, Mauad, ” Mauad, , Matthew Campen, ” Campen, wasn’t, Campen, it’s, Mary Johnson, Harvard T.H, Johnson Organizations: JAMA, microplastics, University of São Paulo Medical School, University of New, Harvard, of Public Health Locations: Brazil, University of New Mexico, Chan
CNN —Tiny plastic shards and fibers were found in the nose tissue of human cadavers, according to a small new study. The threads and microplastic pieces were discovered in the olfactory bulb, the part of the nose responsible for detecting odors that sits at the base of the brain. Microplastics are polymer fragments that can range from less than 0.2 inch (5 millimeters) down to 1/25,000th of an inch (1 micrometer). However, an April 2023 study found that microplastics made of polypropylene appeared to exacerbate the advance of breast cancer. The nose is one of many ways through which microplastics can enter the body, experts say.
Persons: , Luís Fernando Amato, Lourenço, Amato, Lourenço, Phoebe Stapleton, “ I’m, ” Stapleton, , Betsy Bowers, ” Bowers, ” Sherri “ Sam ” Mason, ” Amato, microplastics, Julian Ward, Leonardo Trasande, don’t, Trasande Organizations: CNN, Free University of Berlin, Rutgers University, Industry Alliance, Penn State, JAMA, US Environmental Protection Agency, Getty, American Academy of Pediatrics, NYU Langone Health, Natural Resources Defense Council, Invest Locations: Piscataway , New Jersey, Erie , Pennsylvania
Amazon is instructing corporate staffers to spend five days a week in the office, CEO Andy Jassy wrote in a memo on Monday. The decision marks a significant shift from Amazon's earlier return-to-work stance, which required corporate workers to be in the office at least three days a week. Amazon's headcount totaled 1.53 million employees in the second quarter, representing growth of just 5% from a year earlier. If anything, the last 15 months we've been back in the office at least three days a week has strengthened our conviction about the benefits. Before the pandemic, not everybody was in the office five days a week, every week.
Persons: Andy Jassy, they've, Jassy, didn't, Amazon's headcount, it's, we're, I've, we've, It's, Andy Organizations: Amazon, Healthcare, U.S, Puget Sound Locations: NYC, Arlington, Europe
OpenAI on Monday said its Safety and Security Committee, which the company introduced in May as it dealt with controversy over security processes, will become an independent board oversight committee. Other members include Adam D'Angelo, an OpenAI board member and co-founder of Quora, former NSA chief and board member Paul Nakasone, and Nicole Seligman, former executive vice president at Sony. The committee will oversee "the safety and security processes guiding OpenAI's model deployment and development," the company said. The company said the committee "reviewed the safety and security criteria that OpenAI used to assess OpenAI o1's fitness for launch," as well as safety evaluation results. Leike wrote in a post on X that OpenAI's "safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products."
Persons: Sam Altman, OpenAI, Zico Kolter, Adam D'Angelo, Quora, Paul Nakasone, Nicole Seligman, it's, Ilya Sutskever, Jan Leike, Leike Organizations: Microsoft, Security Committee, Carnegie Mellon University's, NSA, Sony, Tiger Global, Nvidia, Apple, OpenAI o1, Democratic Locations: Redmond , Washington, OpenAI
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewAn internal Amazon document explains how the company plans to meet its new goal to have fewer managers. AdvertisementAs we have grown our teams quickly and substantially, we have understandably added a lot of managers. AdvertisementOver the coming months, senior leaders across Amazon will be examining their organizations for opportunities to advance an even more customer-centric team structure that fosters agility and empowers frontline decision making. Related storiesWe expect it will be the opposite — any changes resulting from this should increase managers' and leaders' visibility to their teams' work.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, We've, we've, It's, orgs Organizations: Service, Amazon, Monday, Business
In July, regulators fined the bank $136 million for failing to fix its data quality issues quickly enough. "Data and technology are intrinsically linked and the maturity and sustainability of our Data Transformation plan require that we leverage technology more," the memo reads. AdvertisementCiti is also appointing a new leader to run its Chief Data Office: Ashutosh Nawani, who previously led enterprise risk management. Nawani will report to Ryan and serve as head of enterprise data office and data transformation. Mehta became chief data officer the following month.
Persons: , Tim Ryan, Anand Selva, Ryan, we've, Selva, We've, Ashutosh Nawani, Nawani, Japan Mehta, Jane Fraser, Kathleen Martin, Martin, Mehta Organizations: Service, Citigroup, Citi, Business, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Revlon, Data, PwC, OCC Locations: London, Japan, India, Asia, Singapore, New York, Selva
The rule further tightens the requirement from last year that workers be on-site at least three days a week. "If anything, the last 15 months we've been back in the office at least three days a week has strengthened our conviction about the benefits," Jassy said. And Meta's Mark Zuckerberg helped kick off the org-chart flattening trend when he criticized "managers managing managers" at the start of his "year of efficiency" in 2023. If anything, the last 15 months we've been back in the office at least three days a week has strengthened our conviction about the benefits. Before the pandemic, not everybody was in the office five days a week, every week.
Persons: Jassy, we've, Jassy's, Mark Zuckerberg, Dominick, we're, I've, it's, It's, Andy Organizations: Walmart, Bloomberg, Business, Healthcare, U.S, Puget Sound Locations: NYC, Arlington, Europe
Bank of America doesn't see gold's rally ending soon and thinks producer Gold Fields could benefit. A key asset for the metal producer is Chilean mine Salares Norte, which could increase growth through near-term gold production. "Salares Norte should be a highly cash generative asset and we think it could account for [about]. BofA also thinks lower Federal Reserve rates can drive gold to $3,000 by 2025. A longer-term catalyst includes Gold Fields' acquisition of Osisko Mining in August.
Persons: Gold, Jason Fairclough, Fairclough, BofA Organizations: America, Osisko Mining Locations: Chilean, Norte, Quebec
Routh tagged Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, in separate posts, encouraging them to visit those injured at the rally. Trump will never do anything for them,” he wrote in a post directed at Harris. In an April post on X tagging President Biden’s presidential account, he wrote that Biden’s campaign should be: “called something like KADAF. “Work has never been about money rather building frameworks for people to thrive and succeed,” Routh wrote on his LinkedIn page. Levi said when he asked Routh to improve the work via email, Routh ranted at him.
Persons: Donald Trump, Ryan Wesley Routh, Routh, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Biden, Trump, , Biden’s, MASA …, ” Routh, Saili Levi, Levi, Routh ranted, , you’re, ” Levi, barricading Organizations: CNN, Trump, Democratic, North Carolina State Board, Ukraine –, Box, Honolulu Star, Facebook, Russia, ” Records, Greensboro News, Sunday Locations: Florida, Hawaii, Pennsylvania, Harris, North Carolina, KRAKOW, UKRAINE, Ukraine, State, Oran
But two political scientists told Business Insider that Musk's desire to run the US government like a private business — an approach many private sector professionals have supported for decades — isn't as foolproof as the CEO might think. AdvertisementTrump, a businessman turned politician, based much of his first presidential campaign on the notion that his experience in the private sector would guide his approach to politics. "In the private sector, the motive is profit. "But inefficiency in the private sector isn't the same." Advertisement"A business isn't really self-correcting, at least not as easily as government is," Crouse said.
Persons: , Elon, Trump, Musk, Hillary Clinton, he's, it's, Patricia Crouse, Grose, Al Gore, Cynthia Johnson, Ronald Reagan, George W, Bush, isn't, Elon Musk, Crouse Organizations: Service, Summit, Business, Trump, University of New, University of Southern, Reinventing, Community Initiative, Washington, Twitter Locations: Los Angeles, University of New Haven, University of Southern California, Reaganomics, Texas, Pennsylvania, America
In Japan, for example, most people are actually quite satisfied with housing costs. In recent years, rising rents and home prices driven by a severe housing shortage — coupled with elevated mortgage rates — have caused Americans' housing costs to soar to near-record levels of unaffordability. Some experts have pointed to Japan, where housing costs are lower than peer countries, as a potential model for solutions the US could adopt. While Japan's abundance of housing isn't entirely a positive story, when it comes to Tokyo, housing experts say there are many lessons the US could learn from its ally. AdvertisementWhile a population slowdown could help moderate housing costs, some experts believe a substantial population decline would have big economic consequences in the long run.
Persons: , aren't Organizations: Service, Business, Housing, Gallup Locations: Japan, Israel, Turkey, Slovenia, Portugal, United States, Tokyo
As one VC partner told Business Insider at the time: "Sam is bigger than Taylor Swift." But the bigger you are, the faster the fall, and a few months later, things began to unravel. Others simply said Altman was overhyped, that he didn't have all the answers that the public and investors seemed to expect of him. Thanks to good old-fashioned capitalism, Altman and OpenAI have enjoyed business win after win and held their positions as the leaders in the aggressive AI race. "I thought Sam Altman did a really good job in the special," she told The Washington Post in a discussion about her TV program on artificial intelligence.
Persons: , Sam Altman, Taylor Swift, Altman, Oscar, Scarlett Johansson, Johansson, Ilya Sutskever, Jan Leike, Leike, Anthropic —, Greg Brockman, OpenAI, Siri, Goldman Sachs, OpenAI fanboys, Wharton, Ethan Mollick, Anderson Cooper, Josh Kushner —, Oprah Winfrey Organizations: Service, OpenAI, Business, , Leike, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, tech's, o1, Washington Locations: OpenAI —, Valley
An investigator has backed the World Anti-Doping Agency’s handling of a case involving 23 Chinese swimmers who failed drug tests weeks before the Tokyo Games and said WADA had not been complacent nor shown bias toward China. Swiss prosecutor Eric Cottier, who was handpicked by the global anti-doping agency, said in a preliminary report in July that WADA did not mishandle the case involving the swimmers, who tested positive for trimetazidine (TMZ) but were cleared by a Chinese investigation. Cottier reiterated those findings in his final report on Thursday but also criticized WADA for failing to challenge Chinese anti-doping authorities (CHINADA) for not following all of the procedures laid down in its anti-doping standard. The case prompted a backlash from athletes and national anti-doping authorities, who questioned WADA’s processes and complained about a lack of transparency in the case. “The ongoing failure to investigate and to answer the critical question of whether the 23 positive tests were due to contamination or intentional use will haunt athletes around the world for years to come.”
Persons: WADA, Eric Cottier, Cottier, ” Cottier, ” CHINADA, Olivier Niggli, ” Travis Tygart, Organizations: Tokyo Games, TMZ, U.S, Doping Authority Locations: China, Swiss
North Korea is believed to have several sites for enriching uranium. The new type of centrifuge shows North Korea is advancing its fuel cycle capabilities, said Ankit Panda of the U.S.-based Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Kim also appears to suggest that North Korean tactical nuclear weapons designs may primarily rely on uranium for their cores,” he said. This is notable because North Korea is more able to scale up its highly enriched uranium stockpiles, Panda said, compared with the more complicated process for plutonium. North Korea has previously shown photos of what it says were nuclear warheads.
Persons: Kim Jong Un, Kim, , , Rafael Grossi, Ankit, “ Kim, Panda, Jenny Town Organizations: Nuclear Weapons Institute, United Nations, North, Analysts, Scientific Research, International Atomic Energy Agency, Carnegie Endowment, International, Stimson Center, Federation of American Scientists, United Nations Command Locations: SEOUL, South Korea, North Korea, United States, U.S, Korea, Yongbyon, Korean, North, Seoul, ” Germany
CNN —The Biden administration is expected on Friday to announce a major effort to blunt the global influence of RT and expose what it says is the Russian state media network’s key role in the Kremlin’s global intelligence and influence operations, according to a senior administration official and three other sources familiar with the matter. A key finding from the new US intelligence is that, for more than a year, the Russian government has quietly embedded an intelligence-gathering unit within RT that is focused on influence operations globally, one of the sources familiar said. That activity has been part of US officials described as a big expansion of RT’s role as an arm and mouthpiece of the Kremlin abroad. The activity goes beyond propaganda and covert influence operations to even include military procurement, the source said. The US believes RT propaganda and disinformation has been key to generating pro-Russia reactions to the Ukraine war globally, the senior administration official said.
Persons: CNN —, Biden, , , RT, Trump, Joe Biden Organizations: CNN, State Department, Kremlin, of Justice, UN, Assembly, US Department of Justice, US, European Union, Saharan Africa RT, Huawei Locations: Russian, Russia, America, Ukraine
CNN —It started with a melting glacier that set off a huge landslide, which triggered a 650-foot high mega-tsunami in Greenland last September. And no place was immune; the signal traveled from Greenland to Antarctica in about an hour, he added. Eastern Greenland had never experienced a landslide and tsunami like this before, Svennevig said. The threat goes beyond Greenland, Svennevig said; similar-shaped fjordsexist in other regions, including Alaska, parts of Canada and Norway. Recent rock avalanches in the Arctic as well as in Alpine regions, are “an alarming signal,” she told CNN.
Persons: Stephen Hicks, , Seismologists, Søren Rysgaard, Svennevig, Dickson, sloshing, , Hicks, Paula Snook, ” There’s, Lena Rubensdotter Organizations: CNN, University College London, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Geological Survey Locations: Greenland, Denmark, Dickson, Dickson Fjord, Antarctica, Eastern Greenland, Alaska, Canada, Norway
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