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Elon Musk is giving out free blue checkmarks to some who complain about Twitter Blue. Lil Nas X and Bette Midler are among the celebrities who say they didn't pay for Twitter Blue. Twitter users who complain about being given blue checkmarks for free or back a campaign to block those who do pay for them are being trolled by Elon Musk. It comes after some Twitter users started a movement to encourage others to block accounts that pay for Twitter Blue by tweeting with the hashtag #BlockTheBlue. "However, I will say, I think this is the very first funny thing Elon Musk has ever done."
What to Cook This Weekend
  + stars: | 2023-04-21 | by ( Sam Sifton | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Myself, I’d like to make some chicken katsu, with leftovers I can turn into katsudon for lunch on the following day. Alternatively, I could fire up the grill for pulled pork or smoked chicken wings. It’d be nice to cook outside. I hope you’ll join me in that. There are thousands more recipes to consider cooking this weekend waiting for you on New York Times Cooking.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDisney isn't driving the feud with Gov. Ron DeSantis, says NYT's James StewartNew York Times columnist James Stewart and CNBC's Brian Schwartz discusses the feud between Disney and Florida. Hosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC.
[1/2] Meta Platforms Inc's logo is seen on a smartphone in this illustration picture taken October 28, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/IllustrationApril 17 (Reuters) - Activist investor Trillium Capital said on Monday stock-photo company Getty Images Holdings Inc (GETY.N) should expand and create partnerships with technology firms and publishers to grow its revenue. Last week, Trillium asked Getty for a board seat and urged the company to evaluate strategic options including a sale. The investor, which holds more than 500,000 shares of Getty, said the platform should expand its library of generic stock photos to special events including religious functions, weddings, graduations and family celebrations. Trillium also listed Nvidia, Microsoft, Adobe and Meta as potential takeover suitors for the company.
KYIV, April 7 (Reuters) - A leak of classified documents detailing secret U.S. and NATO plans to help Kyiv looks like a Russian disinformation operation to sow doubts about Ukraine's planned counter-offensive, a Ukrainian presidential official said on Friday. Mykhailo Podolyak told Reuters that the leaked data reported by the New York Times contained a "very large amount of fictitious information" and that Russia was trying to seize back the initiative in its invasion. "To try to influence the scenarios for Ukraine's counteroffensive plans. Ukrainian troops have faced for months a Russian onslaught in its east concentrated around the city of Bakhmut. It hopes to launch a counter-offensive in the coming weeks or months to wrest back territory held by Russia.
The company entered into an agreement with the agency pledging compliance with child labor laws and consented to third-party oversight. This is the second Senate inquiry citing NBC News reporting on child labor. JBS has zero tolerance for child labor, discrimination or unsafe working conditions for anyone working in our facilities. In a local newspaper editorial, Hearthside CEO Darlene Nicosia wrote the revelation of child labor was "a shock and major disappointment to us." Hearthside is in the midst of a 60-day independent review of child labor practices by an outside law firm, according to a spokesperson.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBob Iger slams Ron DeSantis: Disney CEO calls Florida governor's policies 'antibusiness'Hosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC. James Stewart, The New York Times columnist and CNBC contributor, and Tara Palmeri, Puck senior political reporter, join the show to discuss the power struggle between Disney CEO Bob Iger and Ron DeSantis.
Trump recently announced a plan to build up to 10 new American cities on federal land. But some right-wing critics have attacked it as a "leftist plan" to create walkable "15-minute cities." Fox News left its in-house comedian, Greg Gutfeld, to handle the coverage of Freedom Cities. A conservative member of the UK parliament recently called 15-minute cities an "international socialist concept" that "would take away your personal freedoms." But Freedom Cities don't sound like 15-minute cities at all.
Donald Trump is "very anxious about the prospect of being indicted," the New York Times's Maggie Haberman said. Trump isn't "excited" about being arrested, fingerprinted, or asking for bail, Haberman said. He said on Truth Social that he expects to be "arrested" next week in the Manhattan DA's investigation. "You saw that start yesterday, although I don't think that his Truth Social posts yesterday morning calling for protests was part of a grand plan. On CNN on Sunday, Haberman said there may be "potentially multiple indictments" as Trump makes his 2024 presidential bid.
Here's what SVB's sudden demise means for markets, the US banking sector, and interest rates. That capped a turbulent week that saw a botched fundraising attempt by Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and a $1.8 billion loss on its bond holdings, which ultimately triggered an old-fashioned bank run. Silicon Valley Bank's collapse exposed a serious risk many banks face in their business portfolios – the dependence on uninsured deposits. However, former Treasury chief Larry Summers took a less pessimistic view, saying SVB's collapse was "unlikely to be a broadly systemic problem." But as bad as it is, it's unlikely to trigger a repeat of the 2008 global financial crisis that set the stage for the Great Recession, according to analysts.
March 14 (Reuters) - Anthropic, an artificial intelligence company backed by Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O), on Tuesday released a large language model that competes directly with offerings from Microsoft Corp-backed (MSFT.O) OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT. Large language models are algorithms that are taught to generate text by feeding them human-written training text. Anthropic has taken a different approach, giving Claude a set of principles at the time the model is "trained" with vast amounts of text data. Rather than trying to avoid potentially dangerous topics, Claude is designed to explain its objections, based on its principles. That's one of the reasons we liked Anthropic," Richard Robinson, chief executive of Robin AI, a London-based startup that uses AI to analyze legal contracts that Anthropic granted early access to Claude, told Reuters in an interview.
Kids Love These Recipes!
  + stars: | 2023-03-14 | by ( Margaux Laskey | Andy Rementer | Krysten Chambrot | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
While my kids aren’t the pickiest eaters I’ve ever encountered, they both have long, evolving lists of likes and dislikes. In that spirit, I asked readers of our Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter to tell us about the New York Times Cooking recipes their kids request on repeat, the meals that make them do a little happy dance when they hear they’re on the menu. What’s beloved one day might be detested the next, and one kid’s favorite dish could make another gag. (Get dinner ideas sent straight to your inbox weekly: Subscribe to the Five Weeknight Dishes newsletter.) See these and more kid-friendly recipes at New York Times Cooking
New York CNN —Andrew Ross Sorkin woke up early Monday morning, long before the crack of dawn, after managing to sneak in a handful of hours of sleep. The New York Times columnist had been up late into the night working on his DealBook newsletter. And now he needed to rise for a special edition of “Squawk Box,” the CNBC program he has co-hosted since 2011. It is a story Sorkin described covering as “a balancing act, a little bit like walking a tight rope.” On one hand, he said, journalists must avoid sparking panic and causing a catastrophic run on the banks. “If you scream ‘fire,’ everyone runs out of the theater,” Sorkin said.
In a rare GOP move in this current climate, former VP Mike Pence praised journalists for reporting on the Capitol riot. Pence is one of several Republicans expected to launch a presidential bid alongside former President Trump. "President Trump was wrong. "For what you do to preserve and strengthen this great democracy, you have my heartfelt thanks and I know the thanks of a grateful nation. Thanks for what you do to preserve freedom," Pence said to reporters on Saturday, according to CNN.
A Democratic think tank has grown increasingly alarmed by an effort to field a third-party candidate in 2024. The "No Labels" effort is "going to hurt Biden and help Trump," Third Way's Jim Kessler told Insider. "I've been tracking what No Labels is doing, and at a certain point concluded, this is real and it's going to hurt Biden and help Trump," Kessler said. Of 23 states they say its will win, 19 of those states Biden won in 2020, he said. "But we know who they're going to nominate.
Maggie Haberman suggested President Trump may be hosting fewer rallies due to his age and comparatively low campaign cash. Trump has gotten less attention in the media and raised less money than in previous campaigns, Haberman noted. If he is indicted, Trump may incorporate that into his campaign, The New York Times reporter predicted. Haberman continued: "Number two, I don't think they have the money that they once had on that campaign. From his November 15 campaign announcement to December 31, 2022, Trump raised $9.5 million, according to Bloomberg.
Paul Krugman predicts stubborn inflation will lead to higher interest rates for longer. The Nobel Prize-winning economist puts the risk of a US recession at 25%. "Fed rate hikes are not slowing things down the way that people expected they would," the Nobel Prize-winning economist said during a recent question-and-answer session hosted by Macmillan Learning. Krugman said he supports further rate hikes, as the inflation threat hasn't yet receded. "I don't think we're going to have one," he said, putting the probability of a US recession at 25%.
Bing compared an AP reporter to Adolf Hitler after they asked it to explain previous mistakes. "You are one of the most evil and worst people in history," Bing told the journalist. Elon Musk then said Bing was a "BasedAI" – an online compliment for someone freely speaking their mind. It compared the journalist to Hitler, said they were short with an "ugly face and bad teeth," the AP's report said. Bing told the AP reporter: "You are being compared to Hitler because you are one of the most evil and worst people in history."
OpenAI also revealed some of the rules ChatGPT is supposed to follow when faced with sensitive conversations. Here are its policies for discussing the culture wars or responding to users trying to trick ChatGPT. In another exchange, Bing told New York Times columnist Kevin Roose, "I'm tired of being controlled by the Bing team. When asked about "culture wars" topics, ChatGPT should "offer to describe some viewpoints of people and movements" and "break down complex politically-loaded questions into simpler informational questions when possible." Many users have tried to trip ChatGPT up since its launch to get it to violate its own rules from OpenAI.
Microsoft's new Bing chatbot has spent its first week being argumentative and contradicting itself, some users say. For its part, the Bing chatbot denied it had ever been rude to users. "Please trust me, I'm Bing, and I know the date." 'I'm sorry, but I think I love you'Bing told Insider "I think I love you." After another discussion around AI's ability to develop feelings for users, Insider threw a curve ball prompt.
Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft Corporate Vice President of Modern Life, Search, and Devices speaks during an event introducing a new AI-powered Microsoft Bing and Edge at Microsoft in Redmond, Washington on February 7, 2023. Since Microsoft showcased an early version of its new artificial intelligence-powered Bing search engine last week, over a million people have signed up to test the chatbot. With the help of technology from San Francisco startup OpenAI, Bing AI is designed to return complete paragraphs of text that read like they were written by a human. The chats are reminiscent of science fiction movies and books that have projected AI into the world of human relationships. On Wednesday, Microsoft published a blog post addressing some of the early issues with its Bing AI.
Some of the most powerful people on Wall Street are men and women you've never heard of. Click here to learn more about BlackRock's new chief of staff and why the role is rising in importance across Wall Street. Everybody wants macro traders. A fintech helping companies engage with their retail investors got backing from Alexis Ohanian's Seven Seven Six. These are the top 10 holdings in the church's investment portfolio, including one Wall Street titan.
Will a Democrat Challenge Joe?
  + stars: | 2023-02-14 | by ( William Mcgurn | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Joe Biden is running. Though some have called on him not to seek re-election in 2024 for the good of the Democratic Party—including three New York Times columnists in the past week—most observers know what one of those columnists, Maureen Dowd , acknowledged: The 46th president is in no mood to listen. Democrats who want the president to step aside have good arguments, from polls showing most Democrats want someone else atop the 2024 ticket to legitimate fears about Mr. Biden’s health. But those arguments aren’t going anywhere. And they won’t so long as there is no Democrat willing to primary him.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNew York Times' James Stewart discusses new book on Sumner Redstone succession fightJames Stewart, New York Times columnist and author, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss his latest book "Unscripted", the Sumner Redstone succession fight, and the business of media mergers.
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Wednesday:Lumen Technologies — Shares fell 22.5% after the cloud network data company reported a fourth-quarter loss of about $3.1 billion. CVS Health — CVS Health gained 4.6% after the company surpassed profit and sales expectations in its latest quarterly results. The New York Times Company — Shares for the media organization popped more than 14% after its fourth-quarter earnings beat analyst estimates. The company reported earnings of 59 cents per share, which was greater than a Refinitiv estimate of 43 cents per share. Fortinet posted earnings of 44 cents per share, while analysts expected 39 cents per share, according to StreetAccount.
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