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What DOJ's focus on Google means for the tech company
  + stars: | 2024-11-19 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWhat DOJ's focus on Google means for the tech companyAneesh Chopra, former White House CTO under President Obama and Arcadia chief strategy officer, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Department of Justice's aim at Google, what could change with the company's ad network, and much more.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra, Obama Organizations: White, Google Locations: Arcadia
To navigate this change — and maybe even new job requirements — Mark Cuban says you'll need to be curious, agile and adaptable. And yet, "it's a skill that can be rare to find," Joseph Fuller, a professor at Harvard Business School, recently told CNBC Make it. Honing these three soft skills — curiosity, agility and adaptability — will never stop paying dividends for your career, Cuban adds. "The skills you need for a job today, 10 years, 100 years from now, are always the same," he says. Sharpening your curiosity skills will help you come up with stronger solutions to work problems faster, she added.
Persons: — Mark Cuban, Aneesh Raman, Joseph Fuller, , Barbara Pécherot Organizations: Economic, CNBC, LinkedIn, Employers, Harvard Business School, Arizona State University's Thunderbird School of Global Management
In 2014, the 53-year-old founded her Minnesota-based communications firm, Digital and Savvy, to provide public relations services to large companies and CEOs, from Target to entrepreneur Gary Vaynerchuk. That was after she worked as a public relations executive for over 10 years in the Middle East, most notably as Google's head of communications for that region. One habit helped Abouelenein continue advancing her career even after starting over in another country, she tells CNBC Make It. Though she's a public relations veteran and successful CEO, she still took a "finance for non-finance executives" course last year. "In today's world, everything is changing rapidly," Chaudry told CNBC Make It recently, adding that "the way you work, how you work, where you work — all that is changing."
Persons: Maha Abouelenein, Gary Vaynerchuk, doesn't, Abouelenein, Aneesh Raman, she's, We're, Jay Chaudhry, Chaudry Organizations: Digital, CNBC, Research Locations: Minnesota
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer White House CTO Aneesh Chopra on Epic Games' antitrust win against GoogleAneesh Chopra, Arcadia chief strategy officer and former White House CTO, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Google as the search engine giant is ordered to open its Android app store in the Epic Games trial.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra, Google Aneesh Chopra Organizations: White, Epic Games, Google, White House Locations: Arcadia
Instagram adds teen protections: Here's what to know
  + stars: | 2024-09-17 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailInstagram adds teen protections: Here's what to knowAneesh Chopra, Arcadia chief strategy officer and former White House chief technology officer under former President Obama, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Meta's efforts to make Instagram safer for teens, how to protect kids online, and more.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra, Obama Organizations: White House Locations: Arcadia
In this article CRWD Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTwatch nowThe frequency of large-scale attacks on corporate enterprise IT is increasing. Earlier this year, AT&T had a nationwide outage attributed to a technical update. Selcuk Acar | Anadolu | Getty ImagesSingle-point failure risk management is an issue that companies need to plan for and protect against. Companies that the Chertoff Group works with are closely reviewing software development and update standards in the wake of the CrowdStrike outage. That's likely after the recent string of incidents, from AT&T to the FAA and CrowdStrike, since this type of technical failure has now been shown to impact the lives of citizens and operations of critical infrastructure on a widespread basis.
Persons: Chad Sweet, Selcuk, doesn't, Sweet, That's, Aneesh Chopra Organizations: Microsoft, FAA, Staff, Department of Homeland Security, CNBC, Anadolu, Getty, Companies, Chertoff, White House Locations: New York City, United States, Arcadia
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer White House CTO Aneesh Chopra on major technical outages worldwide: 'It's a wake-up call'Aneesh Chopra, Arcadia chief strategy officer and former White House CTO, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss whether the country needs to start worrying about the threat of software updates, whether there's a risk of becoming over-digitized, and whether regulations around software companies are needed.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra Organizations: White, White House Locations: Arcadia
The key to success is to never stop trying to learn new things, according to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. "You have to be ravenous and hungry to find ways to learn," Jassy said last week in a video posted by Amazon about the company's famous list of 16 leadership principles, originally penned by founder Jeff Bezos. One of those principles, "Learn and Be Curious," says the best leaders "are never done learning and always seek to improve themselves." Jassy said he's seen that ability make the biggest difference between people who successfully grow their careers and those who remain "stagnant." Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It's newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Jassy, Jeff Bezos, he's, Aneesh Raman, Bezos, Julia Stewart, Stewart, I've, I'm Organizations: Amazon, CNBC
AI skills could rival job experience in hiring decisions — and not just in techClose to 70% of leaders say they won't hire someone without AI skills and would rather hire a less experienced candidate with AI skills than a more experienced person without them, according to the report, which surveyed more than 30,000 people in 31 countries. Some companies including Google and Amazon have announced investments in teaching their workforce AI skills, but such initiatives aren't the norm: Only 25% of companies are planning to offer training on generative AI tools like ChatGPT and Microsoft Copilot, Microsoft and LinkedIn found. There are dozens of free online courses people can use to learn AI skills offered by companies like IBM and Google and Ivy League institutions like Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvania. "Less than two years after generative AI burst onto the scene, we're seeing this technology being woven into the fabric of work across a wide range of industries," Stallbaumer says. Generative AI tools in particular have seen a surge in workplace adoption, with usage doubling in the last six months, Microsoft and LinkedIn report.
Persons: Raman, it's, Colette Stallbaumer, Stallbaumer, It's Organizations: , Microsoft, LinkedIn, CNBC, Google, IBM, Ivy League, Harvard University, University of Pennsylvania
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer White House CTO: OpenAI is showing they have to make tradeoffs and safety team is oneAneesh Chopra, former White House CTO and CareJourney president, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss AI safety and the necessary guardrails for the new technology.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra Organizations: White House, White
Time running out for TikTok? How a ban could impact tech
  + stars: | 2024-04-19 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTime running out for TikTok? How a ban could impact techAneesh Chopra, CareJourney president and former White House Chief Technology Officer, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the TikTok bill on Capitol Hill, the impact of a possible TikTok ban or forced divestment if the legislation is passed, and more.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra Organizations: White House Chief Technology, Capitol
It's a question that most people have asked themselves or been asked in job interviews, by mentors, career advisors or even just their parents. "The thing that matters most is skills," Raman said. Next to skills, learning should be another key focal point and goes hand in hand with being able to adapt in an ever-changing job market. He has said that asking about the culture of learning is the most important question job seekers can ask in interviews. This is due to the changing nature of jobs and the labor market, Raman said.
Persons: it's, Aneesh Raman, Raman, you've, Organizations: CNBC, LinkedIn's, Employers
There are plenty of good questions to ask during a job interview to get to know your potential new employer. "The most important question to ask before you accept a job is: What is your culture of learning?" These offerings are pretty typical but don't address the actual culture of learning, Raman says. Instead, listen for evidence of the following six components of a culture of learning, according to LinkedIn expert Britt Andreatta: Learning opportunities aren't just limited to scheduled courses. Junior workers may especially benefit from asking how managers promote a culture of learning, Raman says.
Persons: Aneesh Raman, Raman, they'll, Britt Andreatta, , Young Organizations: LinkedIn, Junior
Political preferences are often summarized on two axes. models allows us to see how a model’s political preferences develop. Source: Rozado (2024), The Political Preferences of LLMsWhat determines the political preferences of your A.I. Political preferences learned from those topics may then be broadly applied across the board to many other subjects as well. If one wants to steer this process directionally, Mr. Rozado proves it is straightforward to do.
Persons: Chatbots, Tomi Um, David Rozado, Rozado’s, , , Elon Musk, ” A.I, Google’s Gemini, tinker, Rozado, RightWingGPT, LeftWingGPT, chatbots Organizations: Google, Big Tech, Conservative, Government, Self, Mr, Liberal, Democratic, Yorker, YouTube, Facebook Locations: A.I, , America
But according to one LinkedIn expert, one particular soft skill may be as coveted as an Ivy League education. Given the fast-changing world of business, hiring managers "want to look for growth mindset," says Aneesh Raman, a vice president and workforce expert at LinkedIn. "This is the new degree, the way that you've been looking for a Harvard degree." A growth mindset, coined by psychologist Carol Dweck, is the idea that you can continue to improve your abilities, talents and knowledge over time by learning through new experiences. With a growth mindset, you will see those blind spots as things that are within your control to improve."
Persons: Aneesh Raman, Carol Dweck, Raman, Shekhinah Bass, Goldman Sachs, You've Organizations: Ivy League, LinkedIn, CNBC
When your boss is the president of the United States and gives you career advice, you take it. Aneesh Raman was working as a speechwriter for President Barack Obama from 2011 to 2013 and remembers one key piece of career advice the president would often share: "Worry about what you want to do, not who you want to be." Before his political career, Obama got his start in community organizing in Chicago. LinkedIn recently identified fast-growing jobs on the rise in 2024, including chief growth officer and sustainability analyst — many of which didn't exist 20 years ago. This framework is the "safest" way to think of a long-lasting career, Raman says, "because you can control all of those levers, versus job title.
Persons: Aneesh Raman, Barack Obama, Obama, Raman, who's Organizations: CNBC, LinkedIn Locations: United States, Chicago
That's according to a new report from career-site Indeed analyzing educational requirements in US job postings since January 2019. As employers shift from formal educational requirements to skills-first hiring, job seekers might want to think about their skills. Even with a shift away from college degree requirements, there could be assumed credentials and levels of education, per the new report. "There's a lot of sectors where it's really common for jobs to not include any educational requirements whatsoever," Stahle said. Controlling for occupational mix, the percentage of job postings that require a college degree has only fallen by 3.6 percent over that period."
Persons: , Cory Stahle, Stahle, haven't, it's, there's, Raman, we've, they're Organizations: Service, Business, Labor, Delta Air Lines, IBM, BI, Burning Glass Institute, Harvard Business School, LinkedIn, Employers
There have been just a handful of moments over the centuries when we have experienced a huge shift in the skills our economy values most. Technical and data skills that have been highly sought after for decades appear to be among the most exposed to advances in artificial intelligence. But other skills, particularly the people skills that we have long undervalued as “soft,” will very likely remain the most durable. In today’s knowledge economy, many students are focused on gaining technical skills because those skills are seen as the most competitive when it comes to getting a good job. For decades, we have viewed those jobs as “future-proof” given the growth of technology companies and the fact that engineering majors land the highest-paying jobs.
Organizations: Workers
The difference between landing a job offer or a rejection can come down to how well you adjust to a fast-paced environment and interact with your colleagues. Communication is the top skill companies are hiring for right now, while adaptability is a soft skill that's "increasingly in demand" across a wide range of industries, according to new research from LinkedIn. Employers want to hire people who can quickly adapt to these ongoing changes, says LinkedIn vice president Aneesh Raman. "Adaptability is the best way to have agency right now," he notes in the report. "At its core, communication is essential for connecting, inspiring, building trust and getting work done effectively," she adds.
Persons: Catherine Fisher, Aneesh Raman, Fisher, What's, they're, you've Organizations: LinkedIn, Project, CNBC, Employers Locations: U.S
A new LinkedIn report noted adaptability as the "top skill of the moment." LinkedIn's Aneesh Raman said this skill is important given how AI is emerging in the workplace. Adaptability is important too given the number of jobs impacted by AI. "The main takeaway for me is that communication, not coding, is the number one skill across jobs," Raman said. AdvertisementAs job seekers search for work in a labor market with 1.4 US job openings per unemployed person as of December, being adaptable could be important regardless of whether you're looking for work.
Persons: Raman, , Aneesh Raman, they're Organizations: LinkedIn, Service
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. White House CTO on Google antitrust case: There'll be opportunity for a new search alternativeAneesh Chopra, CareJourney president and former White House Chief Technology Officer, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the U.S. government's antitrust case against Google, the upcoming testimony from Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai, and more.
Persons: Chopra, Sundar Pichai Organizations: White, Google, White House Chief Technology
The iPhone maker in June announced its Vision Pro mixed-reality headset at an eyepopping price of $3,499 when it goes on sale next year. "There's curiosity for sure with Apple entering the market," said Tom Symonds, CEO of the UK-based VR firm Immerse. Apple CEO Tim Cook stands next to the new Apple Vision Pro headset. At its high price point, the Vision Pro will likely be more of a product for businesses, Seitz said. Initially, the price is too high and the Vision Pro will require users to wear a battery pack, creating an added nuisance during a workout.
Persons: Andrew Bosworth, Josh Edelson, Mark Zuckerberg, it's, Tom Symonds, Meta, Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Justin Sullivan, Aneesh Kulkarni, Kulkarni, Josette Seitz, Seitz, Gaspar Ferreiro, Apple, Ferreiro, Jeffrey Morin, Morin, Litesport, " Morin, Apple's Organizations: Facebook, Meta, AFP, Getty, VR, Menlo, Apple, Street, Apple Vision, Baltu Technologies, Car Studios, Vision Locations: Menlo Park , California, Web3, billings
De Graaf, a 30-year veteran of the European Commission, was tasked with resurrecting the EU office in the Bay Area. The generative AI boomGenerative AI was a virtually foreign concept when de Graaf arrived in San Francisco last September. In June, the European Parliament cleared a major step in passing the EU AI Act, which would represent the EU's package of AI regulations. Tech companies that have for years criticized the EU for overly aggressive regulations are now asking, "Why is it taking you so long?" The rapidly changing landscape of generative AI makes it tricky for the EU to quickly formulate regulations.
Persons: Yves Herman, Gerard de Graaf, De Graaf, de Graaf, Union hasn't, Mark Zuckerberg, Mandel Ngan, Thierry Breton, Elon Musk, Breton, we've, We've, who's, they've, Aneesh Chopra Organizations: EU, European Commission, Digital Services, Nasdaq, Meta, Google, Apple, DSA, EC, Valley Bank, Irish Consulate, The, Union, U.S, Facebook, Financial, Financial Services, AFP, Getty, Twitter, Digital Markets, Washington , D.C, European, Tech, Stanford, Nvidia, White Locations: Brussels, Belgium, Europe, San Francisco, Bay, U.S, Silicon Valley, Silicon, Rayburn, Washington , DC, Poland, Graaf, Washington ,, United States
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. White House CTO Aneesh Chopra on A.I. regulation: Right now this is an open marketplaceAneesh Chopra, CareJourney president and former White House Chief Technology Officer, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the A.I. startup ecosystem, the role of Big Tech on the sector, potential regulations that could form around the sector, and more.
Persons: Aneesh Chopra Organizations: White, White House Chief Technology, Big Tech
(Perez also seems aware that his angular cheekbones and roguish swagger make him resemble a young Al Pacino.) Their centerpiece sex scene is intimately staged with Galitzine tracing Perez with his fingertips as though his character wants to remember the moment forever. The D.C. sequences are snappy, freshened-up versions of the banter we’ve long seen on TV. (Sarah Shahi as the president’s no-nonsense aide and Aneesh Sheth as a gruff Secret Service officer are standouts.) Trust me, you’re in good hands.”Red, White & Royal BlueRated R for swearing and some royal hanky-panky.
Persons: Alex, , ” Henry, Clifton Collins Jr, Perez, Al Pacino, Sarah Shahi, Aneesh, Organizations: Royal, Amazon Prime Locations: Mexican
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