Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Ryan Brown"


25 mentions found


BERLIN, GERMANY - SEPTEMBER 04: The Delivery Hero office photographed on September 04, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images)European food delivery firm Delivery Hero says it plans to spin off its Middle East business Talabat and float it on the Dubai stock exchange later this year. In a brief statement Thursday, Delivery Hero said that it is "preparing a listing of its Talabat business on the Dubai Financial Market" in the fourth quarter. "A listing may be pursued through a secondary sale of shares by Delivery Hero which would retain the majority interest in the local listing entity after an IPO," Delivery Hero said in a statement. Shares of Delivery Hero jumped nearly 10% Thursday on the back of the Talabat IPO news as of 7:30 a.m.
Persons: Jeremy Moeller, Niklas Ostberg Organizations: Getty, Dubai, CNBC Locations: BERLIN, GERMANY, Berlin, Germany, Dubai
The HMD Barbie phone is a co-branded product with Mattel, the toymaking giant behind the franchise. HMD, the company behind Nokia -branded phones, launched a Barbie-branded phone Wednesday that comes with calls, texts and a classic "flip" design — but no internet or social media apps. The HMD Barbie Phone is a hot pink device that flips open and shut and sports a bold "Barbie" logo on the back, harking back to the iconic fashion doll collection. A U.S. launch is planned "soon," according to HMD, which added that it will reveal exact details of the U.S. launch on social media. Unlike the internet-connected smartphones of today, which are the most widely adopted form factor when it comes to mobile devices, HMD's Barbie phone won't be connected to the internet.
Persons: Barbie, Lars Silberbauer Organizations: Mattel, Nokia Locations: U.S
Founder and CEO of Telegram Pavel Durov delivers a keynote speech during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain February 23, 2016. REUTERS/Albert GeaFrench prosecutors on Wednesday charged Telegram CEO Pavel Durov with enabling criminal activity on the messaging platform and placed him under formal investigation following his arrest Saturday. In a statement, the Paris Prosecutors' Office said that Durov was indicted of all charges unveiled earlier this week in a statement from prosecutors. Durov has posted 5 million euros for bail, is under judicial supervision, cannot leave French territory, and has to report twice weekly to a police station, prosecutors said Tuesday. The 39-year-old Russian-born billionaire has been accused of failing to mitigate the misuse of his social media and messaging platform for criminal activities.
Persons: Pavel Durov, Albert Gea, Durov Organizations: Mobile, REUTERS, Paris Prosecutors, Office, CNBC Locations: Barcelona, Spain, Paris, Russian
Russia on Tuesday issued words of caution to France over its detainment of Pavel Durov, the founder and CEO of messaging app Telegram, suggesting the move may be politically motivated. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on a Tuesday call with journalists urged Paris to provide evidence to support its allegations against Durov, Reuters and Russian state news agency Tass reported. "The charges are very serious indeed," Peskov told reporters, according to Reuters-translated comments. Peskov suggested that Durov's arrest could be viewed as both restricting freedom of speech and an act of intimidation if France fails to provide serious evidence of his guilt, Reuters and Tass reported. Although born in Russia, Durov holds citizenship of France and the United Arab Emirates.
Persons: Pavel Durov, Dmitry Peskov, Durov, Peskov Organizations: Paris Public Prosecutor's, Reuters, Tass, United, United Arab Emirates Locations: Russia, France, Paris, United Arab, UAE
Klarna said it posted a profit in the first half of the year, swinging into the black from a loss last year as the buy now, pay later pioneer edges closer toward its hotly anticipated stock market debut. In results published Tuesday, Klarna said that it made an adjusted operating profit of 673 million Swedish krona ($66.1 million) in the six months through June 2024, up from a loss of 456 million krona in the same period a year ago. On a net income basis, Klarna reported a 333 million Swedish krona loss. However, Klarna cites adjusted operating income as its primary metric for profitability as it better reflects "underlying business activity." Klarna is one of the biggest players in the so-called buy now, pay later sector.
Persons: Klarna, Sebastian Siemiatkowski Organizations: PayPal Locations: U.S, onboarding
Mike Lynch, 59, is the founder of enterprise software firm Autonomy. Dominic Lipinski | PA Images | Getty ImagesDuring the course of the trial, Lynch took the stand in his own defense. He became a key voice supporting the U.K. technology industry, backing key names like cybersecurity firm Darktrace and legal tech firm Luminance. Mike Lynch, founder of software firm Autonomy, at the company's headquarters in, Cambridge, U.K., Aug. 24, 2000. Bryn Colton | Hulton Archive | Getty Images"I keep rare breeds," Lynch told LeadersIn in a 2016 interview.
Persons: Mike Lynch, Hewlett Packard, Chris Ratcliffe, Lynch, , Angela Bacares —, Bacares, Hannah, Bill Gates, Graham Barclay, David Tabizel, Richard Gaunt, Thomas Bayes, Dominic Lipinski, Autonomy's, Stephen Chamberlain, Sushovan Hussain, Hussain, Thoma, Bryn, LeadersIn Organizations: Autonomy, Hewlett, Bloomberg, Getty, LONDON, CNBC, Sky News, Bancroft's, British Industry, University of Cambridge, Lynett Systems, Cambridge, South Yorkshire Police, Cambridge Neurodynamics, HP, U.S, Packard, Prosecutors, Capital Management, Thoma Bravo, BBC, Council for Science, Technology, Forbes, East Anglian Times, The Times Locations: Sicily, U.S, Porticello, Palermo, Italy, Ilford, East London, Chelmsford, English, Essex, Woodford Green, London, Cambridge, Britain, Suffolk, Bryn Colton, England
Generative AI models require huge amounts of training data to enable their systems to produce advanced outputs. But the data that goes into them is often from sources where copyright restrictions are in place. The round values the two-year-old company at $2.25 billion, sources familiar with the matter told CNBC. Fighting AI copyright theftStory is now trying to tackle a timely problem with its tech — theft of copyrighted media on the internet by powerful generative AI models like OpenAI's ChatGPT. But the data that goes into fueling these AI models is often from sources where there's copyright restrictions in place.
Persons: Story, Andreessen Horowitz, Polychain, Smart, Story's, Lee, it's, Dolce Organizations: Getty, San, CNBC, Balmain, Gabbana, Brands, New York Times, Microsoft, Times, Big Locations: Francisco
Mike Lynch, 59, is the founder of enterprise software firm Autonomy. Lynch, 59, is the founder of enterprise software firm Autonomy. During the trial, Lynch took the stand in his own defense, denying wrongdoing and telling jurors that HP botched Autonomy's integration. "I keep rare breeds," Lynch told LeadersIn during an interview. Weeks before he was reported missing, Lynch told The Times newspaper of how he feared dying in prison if found guilty over the HP allegations.
Persons: Mike Lynch, Hewlett Packard, Chris Ratcliffe, Lynch —, Bill Gates, , Lynch's, Angela Bacares, Hannah —, Morgan, Jonathan Bloomer, Judy, Clifford Chance, Chris Morvillo, Neda, Stephen Chamberlain, Chamberlain's, Lynch, Autonomy's, Chamberlain, Sushovan Hussain, Hussain, David Tabizel, Richard Gaunt, Thoma, LeadersIn, Weeks Organizations: Autonomy, Hewlett, Bloomberg, Getty, LONDON, U.K, Morgan Stanley, Reuters, HP, U.S, Prosecutors, University of Cambridge, Lynett Systems, Cambridge, South Yorkshire Police, Cambridge Neurodynamics, BBC, Council for Science, Technology, Capital Management, Thoma Bravo, Forbes, East Anglian Times, The Times Locations: Sicily, Porticello, Palermo, Italy, Cambridgeshire, England, Britain, U.S, Ilford, East London, Chelmsford, English, Essex, U.K, British, Suffolk
Airwallex, which was most recently valued at $5.6 billion and is backed by Tencent, has been tipped as one of many prominent fintech IPO candidates. Tencent -backed payments startup Airwallex has reached an annual revenue run rate of $500 million and will look to get ready for an initial public offering by 2026, CEO and co-founder Jack Zhang told CNBC in an exclusive interview. In the Americas region, Airwallex grew its revenue by more than 300% year-over-year, according to figures shared with CNBC. The U.K., Europe, and North America now account for more than 35% of Airwallex's overall transaction volumes, Zhang said. "In 2025, we will prepare everything, and we can decide what to do after 2026," he added.
Persons: Tencent, Jack Zhang, Zhang, Airwallex, it's Organizations: CNBC Locations: Singapore, Europe, North America, Americas, Airwallex
Buy now, pay later firms like Klarna and Block's Afterpay could be about to face tougher rules in the U.K.Financial technology firm Klarna is pushing deeper into banking with its own checking account-like product and a cashback offering that rewards users for shopping via its app. "These new products make it easier for customers to manage multiple scheduled payments, helping our customers use Klarna for more frequent purchases and driving loyalty," Sebastian Siemiatkowski, Klarna's CEO and founder, told CNBC. Siemiatkowski said that Klarna wants to "support all consumers with their everyday spending," adding that the products will allow people to "earn money while they shop and manage it in a Klarna account." The two new products, which are being rolled out in 12 markets including the U.S. and across Europe, will show up in the Klarna app as "balance" and "cashback." Klarna balance lets users store money in a bank-like personal account, which they can then use to make instant purchases and pay off their buy now, pay later loans.
Persons: Block's, , Sebastian Siemiatkowski, Siemiatkowski, Klarna Organizations: Financial, CNBC, U.S Locations: Europe
Analysts are expecting Nintendo to release a successor to its hit Switch console in its fiscal year 2025. The global video game market is set for sluggish annual growth this year amid weak sales of gaming consoles, according to a new report from market research firm Newzoo. In a blog post published Tuesday, Newzoo said the games industry is set to grow 2.1% year over year to an estimated $187.7 billion. That is slightly down from an earlier January forecast in which the firm said it expects the video game industry to grow 2.8% to $189.3 billion in 2024. Though it's a step up from last year's growth rate of 0.6%, the games industry isn't experiencing the same growth rates it saw in the heady days of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Persons: Newzoo, it's Organizations: Nintendo, U.S Locations: U.S, China
Source: HelloFreshShares of German meal kit firm HelloFresh jumped on Tuesday after the company reported a better-than-expected profit in the second quarter and said its ready-to-eat meals segment saw rapid growth. HelloFresh shares climbed as much as 20% during morning trade, but had pared gains to rise 11% to 5.90 euros ($6.44) as of 6:19 a.m. The figure was down 23.7% from the same period last year, but exceeded the 123 million euros forecast of analysts surveyed by LSEG. Revenues at the firm increased by 1.7% in the quarter, to 1.95 billion euros, HelloFresh said. In March, HelloFresh shares plunged as much 42% suffering their worst-ever session to date after the company disappointed investors with its 2024 annual earnings outlook.
Persons: HelloFresh Organizations: LSEG, UBS Locations: North America
Thierry Breton, France's European Union commissioner for internal market and consumer protection, industry, research and energy. Billed as an unscripted conversation by Musk, the Spaces session will be one of the few campaign events Trump does this week. Breton warned Musk that the EU was prepared to "make full use of our toolbox" to protect EU citizens from "serious harm." Getty Images | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesSince then, Musk has made a series of incendiary comments about the situation in the U.K. on X. Riot police officers push back anti-migration protesters outside on Aug. 4, 2024 in Rotherham, U.K. Christopher Furlong | Getty Images
Persons: Elon Musk, Tesla, Apu Gomes, Linda Yaccarino, Thierry Breton, Yaccarino, Donald Trump, Musk, Kamala Harris, Keir Starmer, Ashlea Simon, Peter Kyle, Christopher Furlong Organizations: SpaceX, X Holdings Corp, Milken Institute's Global, Beverly Hilton Hotel, Getty, European, X Corp, Union, Trump, Republican, Democratic, EU's Digital Services, Digital Services, Riot, British, Britain, Times Locations: Beverly Hills , California, Europe, United Kingdom, EU, Breton, Southport , England, Southport, England, Northern Ireland, Falkland Islands, Rotherham, U.K
Contested Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro ordered a 10-day ban on social networking site X, cutting off locals' access to the platform after a feud with Elon Musk. And he has violated [the rules], by inciting hatred, fascism, civil war, death and confrontations among Venezuelans, [he] has violated all of the laws of Venezuela. And in Venezuela there are laws ... and we will enforce the laws. Venezuela's National Commission of Telecommunications, or Conatel, will "remove the X social network, previously known as Twitter, out of circulation in Venezuela for 10 days," allowing X to respond, Maduro added. Internet monitoring firm NetBlocks confirmed that X is now restricted in Venezuela following Maduro's order.
Persons: Nicolas Maduro, Elon Musk, Maduro, NetBlocks Organizations: National Electoral Council, CNBC, Twitter, National Commission of Telecommunications Locations: Caracas, Venezuela, Venezuelan, NetBlocks
LONDON — E-commerce giant Amazon’s multibillion-dollar investment in the U.S. artificial intelligence firm Anthropic is formally being investigated by a U.K. competition regulator. Amazon completed in March a $4 billion investment in Anthropic. As part of the deal Amazon will make Anthropic’s powerful large language models available on its Bedrock platform for building generative AI applications. An Anthropic spokesperson told CNBC: “We are an independent company. The CMA is separately scrutinizing U.S. software giant Microsoft’s multibillion-dollar partnership and investment in AI giant OpenAI.
Persons: Anthropic, Anthropic “, , Matt Calkins, Appian, ” Calkins, you’ve, Organizations: Markets, CMA, Amazon, CNBC, Microsoft, U.S . Federal Trade Commission, Google, Big Tech Locations: U.S, Anthropic
But even as online disinformation related to stabbings in the U.K. has led to real-world violence, Ofcom, Britain's online safety regulator finds itself unable to take effective enforcement actions. Shortly after the attack, social media users were quick to falsely identify the perpetrator as an asylum seeker who arrived in the U.K. by boat in 2023. U.K. officials subsequently issued warnings to social media firms urging them to get tough on false information online. Peter Kyle, the U.K.'s technology minister, held conversations with social media firms such as TikTok, Facebook parent company Meta , Google and X over their handling of misinformation being spread during the riots. watch nowUnder the Online Safety Act, the sending of false information intended to cause non-trivial harm is considered a punishable criminal offense.
Persons: Christopher Furlong, knifeman, Taylor Swift, Axel Rudakubana, Peter Kyle, Gill Whitehead, Whitehead Organizations: Riot, Ofcom, Police, Facebook, Meta, Google, CNBC Locations: Rotherham, U.K, Southport, Merseyside
DORA requires banks, insurance companies and investment to strengthen their IT security. The EU regulation also seeks to ensure the financial services industry is resilient in the event of a severe disruption to operations. These IT providers often deliver "critical digital services to customers," said Joe Vaccaro, general manager of Cisco-owned internet quality monitoring firm ThousandEyes. This has made banks and other financial services providers more vulnerable to cyberattacks and other incidents. DORA will focus more on banks' digital supply chain — which represents a new, potentially less comfortable legal dynamic for financial firms.
Persons: DORA, DORA —, Charles Schwab —, Mike Sleightholme, Joe Vaccaro, Banks, Vaccaro, Sleightholme, it's, Carl Leonard, Leonard, Stephen McDermid, Okta, Fredrik Forslund, Blancco, there's, Forslund Organizations: Getty, Financial, European Union, CNBC, JPMorgan Chase, Santander, Visa, Broadridge, Cisco, EU, Data Locations: European, EU, DORA, noncompliance
Chesnot | Getty ImagesLONDON — E-commerce giant Amazon's multibillion-dollar investment in the U.S. artificial intelligence firm Anthropic is formally being investigated by a U.K. competition regulator. As part of the deal Amazon will make Anthropic's powerful large language models available on its Bedrock platform for building generative AI applications. "By investing in Anthropic, Amazon, along with other companies, is helping Anthropic expand choice and competition in this important technology. Amazon's spokesperson added that the company will continue to make Anthropic's models available to customers via Bedrock. "We welcome the opportunity to cooperate with the CMA and provide them with a comprehensive understanding of Amazon's investment and our commercial collaboration."
Persons: Dario Amodei, Anthropic Organizations: Getty, Markets, CMA, Amazon, CNBC, Microsoft, U.S . Federal Trade Commission, Google Locations: Chesnot, U.S, Anthropic
Here's how Sony did in the June quarter, versus LSEG consensus estimates:Revenue: 3.01 trillion Japanese yen ($20.5 billion), versus 2.8 trillion yen expected. Operating profit: 279.11 billion yen ($1.9 billion), versus 275.35 billion yen expected. Gaming, for which Sony is well-known thanks to its popular PlayStation consoles, banked revenues of 864.9 billion yen in the quarter, up 12% from 771.9 billion yen a year ago. For full-year 2024, Sony revised its forecast upward saying it now expects to hit 12.6 billion yen of sales. Sony also upped its operating profit forecast by 3%, noting it expects to reach 1.3 trillion yen in consolidated operating profit for the full year.
Persons: Carter Organizations: Sony, PlayStation
The Paramount Studios in Los Angeles, California, US on Monday, April 29, 2024. Sony's finance chief on Wednesday said the Japanese technology and media giant will not reconsider a fresh bid for film and TV production group Paramount Global . Sony currently has no plans to submit a revised offer for Paramount, said Hiroki Totoki, the company's chief financial officer. In a response to a question during Sony's fiscal first-quarter earnings presentation, Totoki said that an acquisition of Paramount "does not fit well with our strategy." Totoki's comments confirm reports on Tuesday from Japanese financial newspaper Nikkei, that Sony had decided not to make a new bid for Paramount Global after independent film studio Skydance Media struck a deal to acquire the media giant.
Persons: Hiroki Totoki, Totoki Organizations: Paramount Studios, Paramount Global, Sony, Paramount, Nikkei, Skydance Media Locations: Los Angeles , California
Elon Musk is "the one person who is accountable to no one" and his impact on public discourse should not be underestimated, the U.K.'s technology minister said in an interview with the Times newspaper, adding to recent criticisms of the technology billionaire from senior government officials. Peter Kyle, secretary of science, innovation and technology, said in the interview, which was published Wednesday, that Musk has the power to influence major world affairs — even the war between Russia and Ukraine. Kyle added that the relationship Britain has with companies such as X and other major social media firms, "is much more akin to the negotiations with fellow secretaries of state in other countries, simply because of the scale and scope that they have." His comments, which were made before the recent riots in the U.K., follow Sunday's controversial remarks from Musk about British affairs. On Monday, the British prime minister's official spokesperson said there was "no justification" for comments like those made by X's owner and chairman.
Persons: Elon Musk, Peter Kyle, Musk, , Kyle Organizations: Times Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Britain
Elon Musk slammed by government after comments on UK riots
  + stars: | 2024-08-06 | by ( Ryan Browne | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Elon Musk attends 'Exploring the New Frontiers of Innovation: Mark Read in Conversation with Elon Musk' session during the Cannes Lions International Festival Of Creativity 2024 - Day Three on June 19, 2024 in Cannes, France. LONDON — The U.K. government hit back at Elon Musk after the billionaire made controversial comments about riots — fueled by the far-right and anti-immigration sentiment — taking place across the country. On Sunday, Musk replied to a post about the riots on X, the social media platform he owns, stating: "Civil war is inevitable." Responding to a reporter's question on Monday on whether Starmer agreed with Musk's tweet, the PM's spokesperson said: "There is no justification for comments like that." "What we've seen in this country is organized illegal thuggery which has no place on our streets or online," Starmer's official spokesperson said.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Read, Manchester —, Musk, Keir Starmer, Heidi Alexander Organizations: Cannes Lions, LONDON, Elon, Manchester Locations: Cannes, France, , Liverpool, Britain
(Photo by Rasid Necati Aslim/Anadolu via Getty Images)The U.K. government has canceled £1.3 billion ($1.7 billion) worth of computing infrastructure projects, in a big setback to the country's ambitions to become a world leader in artificial intelligence. A government spokesperson confirmed to CNBC that two major taxpayer-funded spending commitments, worth £500 million and £800 million, respectively, were being dropped in order to prioritize other fiscal plans. Earlier this week, British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves announced a raft of spending cuts after revealing Labour had inherited a projected £22 billion ($28 billion) of unfunded pledges from the center-right Conservatives. The Labour government was widely expected to announce the introduction of the first-ever U.K. AI Bill in a speech delivered by King Charles III last month. A DSIT spokesperson instead told CNBC the government would consult on plans to regulate AI in due course.
Persons: Rasid Necati, Rishi Sunak's, Rachel Reeves, unfunded, codebreakers, Keir Starmer's, King Charles III Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, Getty, CNBC, Research, University of Edinburgh, Labour, Department for Science, Innovation, Technology, British Locations: London, United Kingdom, Anadolu, Bletchley, Nazi Germany
"It is likely to impact many businesses, especially those developing AI systems but also those deploying or merely using them in certain circumstances." For AI applications deemed to be "high-risk," for example, strict obligations will be introduced under the AI Act. watch nowExamples of high-risk AI systems include autonomous vehicles, medical devices, loan decisioning systems, educational scoring, and remote biometric identification systems. Generative AI is labelled in the EU AI Act as an example of "general-purpose" artificial intelligence. General-purpose AI models include, but aren't limited to, OpenAI's GPT, Google's Gemini, and Anthropic's Claude.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Tanguy Van Overstraeten, Charlie Thompson, Appian, Thompson, Meta, OpenAI's, Google's, Anthropic's Claude, Jamil Jiva, Linedata, GDPR, Jiva Organizations: Reuters, European Commission, EU, CNBC, Microsoft, Google, Apple, Web Services, Big Tech, EMEA, Data, Facebook, Companies, AI Office, Commission Locations: Brussels, EU, Europe
Illustrative image of two commemorative bitcoins seen in front of the national flag of Russia displayed on a computer screen. Russia is considering legalizing the use of cryptocurrency for international payments as the country faces ongoing financial pressure from Western sanctions. The State Duma, which is the lower house of the Russian Parliament, will on Tuesday consider a law that permits making international payments via cryptocurrencies, Elvira Nabiullina, the governor of Russia's central bank, said Tuesday. Russia's central bank is also itself looking to move money across borders using crypto, with its chief saying crypto-based payments will take place before the end of 2024. In January 2022, the Russian central bank proposed banning the use of crypto for transactions, as well as the mining of digital currencies, citing threats to financial stability, citizens' wellbeing and monetary policy sovereignty.
Persons: Elvira Nabiullina, Nabiullina Organizations: Duma, State Duma, Russian Federation Council, RIA Novosti, Reuters, Russian Embassy, CNBC Tuesday Locations: Russia, Russian, Russia's, State, cryptocurrencies, London
Total: 25