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Search resuls for: "Emil Lendof"


13 mentions found


In 2013, Birkenstock Group was formed out of a loose association of family companies, creating a corporation with three divisions. Oliver Reichert became CEO, meaning that, for the first time, the company was no longer run by a Birkenstock family member. Ellen Emmerentze Jervell for The Wall Street Journal
Persons: Oliver Reichert, Ellen Emmerentze Jervell Organizations: Birkenstock, Wall Street
Judge Revokes Bail, Sends FTX’S Sam Bankman-Fried to Jail
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
AI Makes Hacking Easier, Even for Non-HackersGenerative artificial intelligence tools, like ChatGPT, are opening up new avenues for cybercriminals, even ones without traditional hacking skills. WSJ reporter Robert McMillan joins host Zoe Thomas from Las Vegas, where those new techniques are on display. Plus, why more people are using celebrities to deliver bad news. Photo Illustration By Emil Lendof
Persons: Robert McMillan, Zoe Thomas, Emil Lendof Locations: Las Vegas
Attorney General Appoints Special Counsel for Hunter Biden Probe
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
AI Makes Hacking Easier, Even for Non-HackersGenerative artificial intelligence tools, like ChatGPT, are opening up new avenues for cybercriminals, even ones without traditional hacking skills. WSJ reporter Robert McMillan joins host Zoe Thomas from Las Vegas, where those new techniques are on display. Plus, why more people are using celebrities to deliver bad news. Photo Illustration By Emil Lendof
Persons: Robert McMillan, Zoe Thomas, Emil Lendof Locations: Las Vegas
AI Makes Hacking Easier, Even for Non-HackersGenerative artificial intelligence tools, like ChatGPT, are opening up new avenues for cybercriminals, even ones without traditional hacking skills. WSJ reporter Robert McMillan joins host Zoe Thomas from Las Vegas, where those new techniques are on display. Plus, why more people are using celebrities to deliver bad news. Photo Illustration By Emil Lendof
Persons: Robert McMillan, Zoe Thomas, Emil Lendof Locations: Las Vegas
AI Makes Hacking Easier, Even for Non-HackersGenerative artificial intelligence tools, like ChatGPT, are opening up new avenues for cybercriminals, even ones without traditional hacking skills. WSJ reporter Robert McMillan joins host Zoe Thomas from Las Vegas, where those new techniques are on display. Plus, why more people are using celebrities to deliver bad news. Photo Illustration By Emil Lendof
Persons: Robert McMillan, Zoe Thomas, Emil Lendof Locations: Las Vegas
AI Makes Hacking Easier, Even for Non-HackersGenerative artificial intelligence tools, like ChatGPT, are opening up new avenues for cybercriminals, even ones without traditional hacking skills. WSJ reporter Robert McMillan joins host Zoe Thomas from Las Vegas, where those new techniques are on display. Plus, why more people are using celebrities to deliver bad news. Photo Illustration By Emil Lendof
Persons: Robert McMillan, Zoe Thomas, Emil Lendof Locations: Las Vegas
Chris Gordon, who has worked at Yellow for 17 years, most recently as a truck driver, said he wasn't informed by supervisors or given any notice about his employment status on Monday when he reported for work. Chris Gordon
Persons: Chris Gordon
Governments Want Kids Off Social Media. Why Aren't Platforms Doing It? Local and national governments in the U.S. and Europe want social media companies to do more to keep children off their platforms. Efforts to require age verifications come as evidence shows companies aren’t effectively enforcing their own policies, limiting what children see and do on social media. WSJ reporter Sam Schechner joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss the new laws and the challenges to implement them.
Governments Want Kids Off Social Media. Why Aren't Platforms Doing It? Local and national governments in the U.S. and Europe want social media companies to do more to keep children off their platforms. Efforts to require age verifications come as evidence shows companies aren’t effectively enforcing their own policies, limiting what children see and do on social media. WSJ reporter Sam Schechner joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss the new laws and the challenges to implement them.
Governments Want Kids Off Social Media. Why Aren't Platforms Doing It? Local and national governments in the U.S. and Europe want social media companies to do more to keep children off their platforms. Efforts to require age verifications come as evidence shows companies aren’t effectively enforcing their own policies, limiting what children see and do on social media. WSJ reporter Sam Schechner joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss the new laws and the challenges to implement them.
Biden: ‘Defaulting on Our National Debt Is Not an Option’
  + stars: | 2023-05-25 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Governments Want Kids Off Social Media. Why Aren't Platforms Doing It? Local and national governments in the U.S. and Europe want social media companies to do more to keep children off their platforms. Efforts to require age verifications come as evidence shows companies aren’t effectively enforcing their own policies, limiting what children see and do on social media. WSJ reporter Sam Schechner joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss the new laws and the challenges to implement them.
Wall Street Journal staff members celebrate the Pulitzer win in the paper’s New York office on Monday. Photo: Emil Lendof/The Wall Street JournalThe Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Associated Press and New York Times were among news outlets awarded Pulitzer Prizes Monday, honoring journalists who uncovered financial conflicts of interest and delved into issues of racism, immigration and abortion. The Journal was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in investigative reporting for its series examining how more than 2,600 federal officials invested in companies that stood to benefit from their agencies’ work.
SpaceX's Starship Explosion: How We Got Here
  + stars: | 2023-04-20 | by ( Dave Cole | Emil Lendof | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
SpaceX and other companies are looking to step up the frequency of rocket launches, prompting regulators to rethink how they handle such flights. “Due to the increasing pace of space activity, the FAA is taking steps to optimize and equitably manage the airspace in the vicinity of launch sites,” the Federal Aviation Administration said. Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images
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