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This article is part of “Dealing the Dead,” a series investigating the use of unclaimed bodies for medical research. Two members of Congress are pressing officials for answers after NBC News exposed failures to notify relatives of dead people whose bodies were used for medical research. The Dallas and Tarrant medical examiner’s offices did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The Health Science Center declined to comment. In response to the investigation, a Texas state lawmaker has vowed to ban the use of unclaimed bodies for research.
Persons: Jasmine Crockett, Marc Veasey, , Crockett, Veasey, , Tarrant, Victor Honey, Honey’s, ” Crockett Organizations: NBC, NBC News, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Army, Reps, Health Science Center, Dallas County Medical, , Dallas, Health Science Locations: Texas, Dallas, Tarrant, Tarrant County
This article is part of “Dealing the Dead,” a series investigating the use of unclaimed bodies for medical research. Texas Senate Media ServicesThe Health Science Center did not comment on Parker’s plans for legislation. The Health Science Center suspended its body-donation program, fired the officials who led it and said it would stop accepting unclaimed bodies. The University of North Texas Health Science Center suspended its body-donation program and fired the officials who led it. Dallas County officials have said moving forward they won’t provide unclaimed bodies for research unless survivors choose to do so.
Persons: Sen, Tan Parker, Parker, , , Andy North, Shelby Tauber, Alisa Simmons, Brenda Cloud, Victor Honey, Maddie McGarvey, NBC News Cloud, ” Cloud, ” Terrence Hayes, “ Mr, Honey, Al Sharpton, MSNBC’s, ” Sharpton, Thomas Champney, ” Champney, Eli Shupe, Tarrant, ” Shupe, Louisa Harvey, Michael Coleman, Michael, ” Harvey, Louisa Harvey ., Louisa Harvey Harvey, Harvey, she’s Organizations: NBC News, Republican, NBC, Fort, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Army, Texas, Media Services, Health Science Center, Dallas, Fort Worth National, U.S . Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans, Health Science, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, University of Texas Locations: Texas, Dallas, Tarrant, Fort Worth, North Texas, Mississippi, United States, Arlington
In this article CPRITPR Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTPedestrians walk past a Coach store and a Michael Kors store. One of the major debates in court has surrounded who are Coach and Michael Kors' true competitors. She said in her experience, Coach, Kate Spade and Michael Kors have never come up in customer surveys or company conversations about the competition. And he said it wouldn't need to worry as much, even if Michael Kors' brand continued to be challenged. "Once they come together, if Michael Kors continues to decline, some of that decline is going to benefit the Coach brand," he said.
Persons: Michael Kors, Scott Olson, Kate Spade, Stuart Weitzman, Capri's Versace, Jimmy Choo, Joanne Crevoiserat, Biden, LVMH, Louis Vuitton, Crevoiserat, she's, fanny, Chanel, Rebecca Minkoff, Suwon Yang, Saint Laurent, Hermes, Loren Smith, Smith, Kors, Capri Organizations: Federal Trade Commission, Capri, FTC, CNBC, Capri's, Burberry, Tapestry, D.C Locations: New York City, Manhattan, Zara, Suwon, Italy, France, Washington, U.S
Why scammers target student loan borrowersStudent loan scams are common, especially as confusion remains over student loan forgiveness. There are currently forgiveness programs in place for federal student loans, like Public Service Loan Forgiveness, and accommodating repayment options, like Income-Driven Repayment Plans. What are the real student loan forgiveness programs? Real student loan forgiveness programs include Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) forgiveness, teacher forgiveness, etc. Student loan scams: ConclusionDon't let scammers profit off your student debt.
Persons: Scammers, Biden, I've, you've Organizations: Public, of Education, Social, Federal, Bureau, Federal Trade Commission, Department of Education, Chevron, Real
A simple way to fix search: Bright pink ads
  + stars: | 2023-11-13 | by ( Alistair Barr | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +10 min
One simple solution: Require all Search ads to be bright pink. One simple solution: Require all Search ads to be bright pink. AdvertisementAdvertisementWhen Search ads aren't labeled clearly, consumers don't spot them as much and click more often on the paid listings. 'Defects'Amazon entered the advertising business in a big way, and search ads are one of its most successful offerings. A 'uniform standard for labeling ads'Which brings us back to the simple solution: Search ads should be bright pink.
Persons: , Mary Engle, Engle, Microsoft's Bing, BILL O'LEARY, Ben Edelman, Edelman, Jeff Bezos, wouldn't, Bing Organizations: Service, Federal Trade Commission, Google, Consumers, Getty, FTC, Microsoft, Amazon Locations: Washington
SHANGHAI, Nov 13 (Reuters) - Chinese company information provider Qichacha has passed a data export security assessment newly required by the government and is set to launch an overseas version of its database in several countries, state news agency Xinhua reported. Qichacha, which is widely used to research companies in China, is the first case to have passed the test in the field of enterprise credit information, Xinhua said on Friday. Reuters reported in May, citing sources, that Qichacha and other data providers such as TianYanCha had stopped services for offshore users. Regulators introduced rules requiring data exports to undergo security reviews last year. Lawmakers also passed a wide-ranging update to anti-espionage legislation earlier this year, banning the transfer of any information related to national security and broadening the definition of spying.
Persons: Qichacha, TianYanCha, Brenda Goh, Christopher Cushing Organizations: Qichacha, Xinhua, Reuters, Lawmakers, Thomson Locations: SHANGHAI, China
LinkedIn is adding an AI career coach to help Premium users with job-hunting. AdvertisementAdvertisementLinkedIn has added an AI career coach to help Premium users with job-hunting. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe AI options are still in beta and available only to a limited number of LinkedIn Premium members. LinkedIn, which says it now has more than 1 billion members, has been working to integrate AI tools into its platform. Along with the AI job coach, LinkedIn is also integrating AI-powered tools it says will analyze information in users' feeds and turn it into "actionable takeaways."
Persons: LinkedIn's, , Nima Owji, Tomer Cohen, you'll Organizations: Service, LinkedIn
The cofounders of Arch Companies tried to fire each other amid accusations of misappropriating funds. "I'm really kind of flabbergasted by this," said a New York judge in response to their spat. "I'm really kind of flabbergasted by this," New York Judge Joel Cohen said of the firing at a recent hearing, The Real Deal reported. Nonetheless, the judge maintained in a hearing earlier this week that the two "seem to me to be frankly childish." Arch Companies did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider, made outside normal working hours.
Persons: Jeffrey Simpson, Jared Chassen, Simpson, Chassen, NurPhoto, Oak, JJ Arch, Joel Cohen Organizations: Arch Companies, Service, Companies, Simpson, York Locations: New York, Wall, Silicon, York, Greenwich, SoHo , Brooklyn, Queens, Toronto, Simpson
I pulled my money out and put it in a CD with a 5% APY, and I'm happier with the guaranteed return. Irresponsible buying decisions and a lack of attention on my stock portfolio caused me to lose thousands of dollars over the past few years. That's why in 2023, my goal was to try to fix my investment strategy and eliminate risk. Since my initial lack of strategy had failed me, I decided that keeping the money in these declining stocks wasn't going to benefit me. My plan was to take some money out of the stock market and grow it in 5% APY CDs and then reinvest the money made on the CDs next year in a more thoughtful long-term stock market portfolio.
Organizations: Service Locations: Wall, Silicon
Recent college graduates may be feeling lost, especially with students returning to campuses. To help recent grads feel more work-ready, we wrote "Survive & Thrive." We wrote " Survive & Thrive: A Graduate's Guide to Life After University " to help recent grads navigate this new era in their lives and aid them in landing their dream jobs. In a 2023 survey from Intelligent.com, 40% of business leaders polled said they thought recent college graduates were ill-prepared to join the workforce. Many recent grads we talked to also felt like their colleges did not properly prepare them for the job search.
Persons: résumé, you've, I'd Organizations: Service, Life, Google Locations: Wall, Silicon, Intelligent.com
Our experts choose the best products and services to help make smart decisions with your money (here's how). Fraudulent activity by scammers trying to get your personal information has increased significantly. Check washing, robo calls, and even student loan forgiveness scams can walk scammers right into your bank account. Student loan forgiveness scamHow it works: Under the Biden Administration, student loan forgiveness applications opened in 2022. Be skepticalRight now, money scams are at an all-time high.
Persons: , scammers, they're, It's Organizations: Service, Biden Administration, Social, Department of Education, US Postal Service
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDraining the Fed's reverse repos will helps maintain bank liquidity, says Strategas' Dan CliftonDan Clifton, head of policy research at Strategas Research Companies, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss using reverse repo operations to remove liquidity from the banking sector, the issuance of treasury bills driving net interest costs, and fears of a government shutdown.
Persons: Strategas, Dan Clifton Dan Clifton Organizations: Strategas Research Companies
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDraining the Fed's reverse repos will help maintain bank liquidity, says Strategas' Dan CliftonDan Clifton, head of policy research at Strategas Research Companies, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss using reverse repo operations to remove liquidity from the banking sector, the issuance of treasury bills driving net interest costs, and fears of a government shutdown.
Persons: Strategas, Dan Clifton Dan Clifton Organizations: Strategas Research Companies
Who Is Liable for A.I. Creations?
  + stars: | 2023-06-03 | by ( Ephrat Livni | Sarah Kessler | Ravi Mattu | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
Does Section 230 apply to generative A.I.? search engines? Typically, search engines are considered vehicles for information rather than content creators, and search companies have benefited from Section 230 protection. Generative A.I. And hallucinations — the falsehoods that generative A.I.
Persons: drafters, , Ron Wyden, don’t, Chris Cox, ” Wyden, Eric Goldman Organizations: Democrat, Republican, Microsoft, Google, Santa Clara University Locations: Oregon, California
Since then, Japanese equities have rallied. Even so, Strategas Securities' Chris Verrone has remained optimistic on Japanese equities, saying this week that the rally is not yet overbought. Meanwhile, JPMorgan chief market strategist Marko Kolanovic said in a note, also on Tuesday, that the rally in Japan still has "staying power." For international investors, those remarks signaled that Japanese companies may be more transparent with shareholders in the future. Investors can also take a company-specific approach, according to Diamond Hill's Mohanraj, who favors Japanese companies that boast differentiated products.
With large language models like OpenAI's GPT-4 and Google's Bard quickly increasing their power and reach, vLex and Fastcase are betting their combined document library will be a rich training data set for legal AI products. "It will always make sense to train legal LLMs on legal data instead of the World Wide Web," Walters said. The merger creates a law library that is "the biggest legal data corpus ever assembled," the companies said. Other large law firms are using new products from companies like Casetext, a legal research company that last month released a new generative AI legal assistant product. Casey Flaherty of legal innovation collective LexFusion predicted the new vLex would be a "serious player" among legal information companies as AI progresses.
TikTok search ads have been in beta testing for almost a year on an invite-only basis. One agency source predicts TikTok search ads will become more widely available by Q3. As Google and Microsoft duke it out over the future leadership of artificial intelligence-powered search, TikTok is quietly preparing a big search advertising play of its own. These moves, as well as recent TikTok job posts looking for search ads engineers to develop a "large-scale ads system," indicate a wider rollout of TikTok's search ad product. A TikTok spokesperson said the details it could share about TikTok search ads were limited during its initial testing phase.
BERLIN, March 6 (Reuters) - Extreme weather caused by climate change could cost Germany up to 900 billion euros in cumulative economic damage by mid-century, a study showed on Monday, as Europe's biggest economy seeks climate adaptation measures to cut the damages bill. The study, by economic research companies Prognos and GWS and Germany's Institute for Ecological Economic Research, comes as Berlin works on a climate adaptation strategy soon to be presented by the environment ministry. Germany's economy and environment ministries cited the study as showing that extreme heat, drought and floods could cost between 280 billion euros ($297.81 billion) and 900 billion euros between 2022 and 2050, depending on the extent of global warming. Climate change extreme weather events have already cost Germany at least 145 billion euros between 2000 and 2021, 80 billion of which were in the past five years only, including the 2021 floods in the states of Rhineland-Palatinate and North Rhine-Westphalia, the economy ministry said. The study did not mention how much climate adaptation measures could cost the federal and state governments.
Citadel, one of the largest hedge funds, accepts just 1% of applicants to its associate program. Few college students know what a hedge fund is, let alone that they want to work for one. Its associate program lets aspiring fund managers skip the traditional two-year investment banking program that is usually a prerequisite for a hedge fund job. The associate program is different from Citadel's broader internship program. But the accelerated nature of the CAP program appealed to him over other opportunities, he said.
Taiwan investigates TikTok for suspected illegal operations
  + stars: | 2022-12-19 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
In a statement late on Sunday, Taiwan's China-policy making Mainland Affairs Council said that on Dec. 9 a working group under the Cabinet had discovered that TikTok was suspected of "illegal commercial operations" in Taiwan. Taiwan prohibits a wide range of Chinese business operations on the island from social media platforms to its highly valued chip manufacturing industry. Facebook and Instagram, both owned by Meta Platforms (META.O), are the most widely used social media platforms in Taiwan. TikTok trailed its peers in Taiwan but is becoming increasingly popular among the youth, according to market research companies. Taiwan has long complained that China uses social media to spread disinformation on the island that Beijing claims as its own territory.
Apple puts more ads in the iPhone's App Store
  + stars: | 2022-10-25 | by ( Kif Leswing | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Apple on Tuesday expanded its search advertising inventory on its App Store to include units for purchase on the Today tab — essentially the front page of the app — and on individual product pages. The new ad units represent a significant expansion in Apple's ad inventory, which can only advertise one kind of product: Apps for Apple devices like the iPhone. CNBC confirmed new ad units showing up on app pages under a list of suggested apps titled "You Might Also Like." Apple's advertising sales are reported as part of its services business, which also includes App Store sales, online subscription revenue, hardware warranties, and revenue from licensing deals with search companies like Google. Last year, Apple released App Tracking Transparency (ATT) which gave iPhone users the option to refuse to share a unique tracking ID with app developers.
The number of job openings has been sky high over the past year in the red-hot labor market. That could be because some firms are posting "ghost jobs" that they're not actually hiring for. While many employers can't find enough workers, some qualified candidates are applying to open jobs and aren't hearing anything back. Some recruiters say that ghost jobs are on the rise due to the heightened level of uncertainty that's persisted for the past two and a half years. "There are too many jobs posted"Andrew Flowers, a labor economist at Appcast, the recruitment advertising technology company, expressed skepticism that "ghost jobs" are a widespread problem.
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