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Many new Bluesky users are praising the feeling on the site as being similar to "old Twitter." This week, the app shot to the top of Apple's App Store and Google's Play Store, and a Bluesky spokesperson told Business Insider it hit 18.3 million registered users. Advertisement"Consumers, time and time again, show us that they will put a brand in jeopardy if the leadership is associated with ideology the consumers don't care for," Lind told Business Insider. A spokesperson for Bluesky told Business Insider that the platform aims to give users more choice and offer creators independence from being locked into specific platforms. A few weeks ago, Bluesky had less than 1 million daily users in the US, "so the acceleration is tremendous," said David Carr, an editor at Similarweb.
Persons: Bluesky, Elon Musk's, Jonathan Bellack, Mark Cuban, he'd, That's, Stephen Lind, Lind, We've, Jack Dorsey, Twitter, Dorsey, David Carr Organizations: Social, Business, Applied Social Media, Cuban, Meta, USC Marshall School of Business, Bluesky, Twitter Locations: Similarweb
Federal prosecutors have charged the founder of an education technology startup spun out of Harvard who was recognized on a Forbes 30 Under 30 list in 2021 with fraud. AdvertisementAllHere, which came out of the Harvard Innovation Lab, created an AI chatbot that was supposed to help reduce student absenteeism. Smith-Griffin was featured on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for education in 2021. AllHere's investors included funds managed by Rethink Capital Partners and Spero Ventures, according to a document filed in bankruptcy court. Representatives for Harvard, Forbes, and Inc. didn't immediately respond to a comment request on Tuesday.
Persons: Joanna Smith, Griffin, Smith, Sam Bankman, Charlie Javice, Martin Shkreli —, spotlighted, Damian Williams, AllHere, didn't, Griffin wasn't Organizations: AllHere, Forbes, Harvard Innovation, Los Angeles Unified School District, Inc, Prosecutors, New York City Department of Education, Atlanta Public Schools, Capital Partners, Spero Ventures, Harvard Locations: Harvard, New York, North Carolina
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe Fed in some ways is accepting rather than defining reality, says Harvard's Jason FurmanJason Furman, professor at Harvard’s Kennedy School and former CEA chair, joins CNBC's 'Squawk Box' to discuss central bank independence, expectations for the Trump administration, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Jason Furman Jason Furman, Trump Organizations: Harvard’s Kennedy School, CEA
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email'No argument' for Trump tariffs on Mexico, says Harvard's Jason FurmanJason Furman, Harvard Kennedy School professor and former CEA chair, joins CNBC's 'Money Movers' to discuss outlooks on both Trump and Harris economic plans, macro expectations, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Jason Furman Jason Furman Organizations: Trump, Harvard Kennedy School, CEA, Harris Locations: Mexico
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThere are no elections that aren't bitter, says Harvard's Arthur BrooksArthur Brooks, American Enterprise Institute president emeritus, Harvard University professor and ‘Build The Life You Want’ author, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the 2024 election, mood of the country ahead of the election, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Arthur Brooks Arthur Brooks Organizations: American Enterprise Institute, Harvard University
Among Muslims, the difference was 43% agreeing with the statement versus an estimated 66% who privately agreed. While 27% of Democratic respondents publicly agreed with the statement "I support defunding the police," just 3% privately supported the movement. While 50% of Republicans publicly said "we live in a mostly fair society," just 11% privately agreed. Similarly, 2% of Republicans were thought to privately trust the government to tell the truth, while 14% said so publicly. A lack of social trust causes people to resent each other, look for scapegoats, and become susceptible to demagoguery, he said.
Persons: Alessia Gonzalez doesn't, Gonzalez, Israel, she'd, Fernando, YouGov, , James Gibson, Louis who's, Gibson, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Todd Rose, Rose, Elisabeth Noelle, Neumann, Noelle, what's, Harris, You've, Gen Zers Organizations: Republican, Washington University, Harvard's Graduate School of Education, Roman Catholic, Pew, Gallup, Republicans, Democratic, Trump, Locations: Brooklyn, Bay, MAGA, Gaza, Colombia, New York, Israel, America, St
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailIt's hard not to be enthusiastic about this macro economy, says Harvard's Jason FurmanJason Furman, Harvard Kennedy School professor and former CEA chair under President Obama, and Kevin Hassett, Hoover Institution distinguished visiting fellow and former CEA chair under President Trump, join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the economy, 2024 presidential election, whether Trump or Harris has the better economic agenda, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Jason Furman Jason Furman, Obama, Kevin Hassett, Trump, Harris Organizations: Harvard Kennedy School, Hoover Institution, Trump
Employers might not ask if you have a degree, but many still care, a labor market expert told BI. AdvertisementDeming said many employers look upon a worker with a four-year degree as an investment — one that can be molded into what the firm wants. "What people are looking for, because it's the easiest and laziest filter, is a four-year degree from a 'good school,'" he said. "He's been the finalist for five different positions where they said, 'You're actually the best candidate we interviewed, but we require a four-year degree,'" Hyams said. Often, that might mean a four-year degree.
Persons: , Ranji McMillan, that's, McMillan, She's, what's, McMillan David Deming, Deming, Mona Mourshed, Mourshed, Chris Hyams, Hyams, He's, Forsa, Gartner, Jon Lester, Lester, they've Organizations: Service, Ranji, McMillan, Harvard's Kennedy School, Glass, Harvard Business School, Census, McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group, Employers, Workers, US Department of, Georgetown University Center, Education, Savvas Learning Company, IBM, BI, Research, McKinsey Locations: Northridge, Los Angeles, America
Harvard donations are down following a year of campus turmoil. AdvertisementHarvard saw a dip in donations in the most recent fiscal year amid a wave of big-name backers pulling their financial support after fallout from the university's response to the Israel-Hamas war. In fiscal year 2024, which ended June 30, the Ivy League institution brought in just under $1.2 billion in cash gifts, according to a Harvard financial report released Thursday. Some wealthy alumni publicly vowed to suspend donations to Harvard following the university's bungled response to the campus unrest that spread across higher education institutions nationwide last year. Earlier this month, Garber hinted at the coming downturn in donations, telling the university's student newspaper, The Harvard Crimson, that the year's commitments were "disappointing" compared to prior years.
Persons: , Alan Garber, Garber, Ritu Kalra, Kalru, Karlu, Claudine Gay Organizations: Service, Harvard, Ivy League, University, Business, Harvard Crimson, Bloomberg Locations: Israel
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHarvard's Arthur Brooks on 2024 election: We've 'productized' the voters in this countryArthur Brooks, American Enterprise Institute president emeritus, Harvard University professor and ‘Build The Life You Want’ author, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of politics in the U.S., impact of the 2024 election on the mood of the nation, how voters have become productized in this country, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Arthur Brooks, We've, Arthur Brooks Organizations: American Enterprise Institute, Harvard University Locations: U.S
Helping your children develop the resilience to handle life's inevitable setbacks is the key to raising them into happy and successful adults, says Dr. Tovah Klein. The truth is, "it's much more dynamic," says Klein, a child psychologist, author and director of the Barnard College Center for Toddler Development. "What children learn is, 'Oh, we can come apart, we can come back together, and it actually builds trust," Klein says. Once children feel comfortable talking about their emotions, parents can help them learn to regulate those feelings. Tovah Klein director of the Barnard College Center for Toddler Development"Children are constantly learning about emotions," Klein says, and parents can help.
Persons: Tovah Klein, Klein, I'm, who's, You've, Robert Waldinger Organizations: Barnard College Center, Resilience, CNBC
Pires applied strategies from the course to enhance content creators' business models in Brazil. She designed The Business of Entertainment, Media, and Sports course in 2013 and is a rock star in the entertainment industry. AdvertisementIt's a four-day course for professionals not enrolled at Harvard Business SchoolThe course costs $12,500, which includes all accommodation and meals, and it's worth every cent. This was relevant to my work with gamers and content creators. Have you taken a business course that changed the trajectory of your career?
Persons: Manuelle Pires, Anita Elberse, Pires, , Nobru, I've, There's, Anita, He's, he's, Lionel Messi, David Beckham, Karim R, Lakhani, Kristin W, I'm, Lauryn Haas Organizations: Harvard, Service, YouTube, UCLA, Entertainment, Media, Harvard Business School, Google, UFC, lhaas Locations: Brazil, São Paulo, YouTube Brazil, Harvard, Boston
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHarvard's Jason Furman on the Fed's interest rate decision, Harris vs. Trump's economic policiesJason Furman, Harvard Kennedy School professor and former CEA chair, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's inflation fight, what was behind the central bank's 50 basis point cut, state of the economy, 2024 election, Harris vs. Trump's economic agendas, and more.
Persons: Jason Furman, Harris Organizations: Harvard Kennedy School, CEA
Harvard's Hal Scott on the ancillary effect of a wealth tax
  + stars: | 2024-09-10 | 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 EmailHarvard's Hal Scott on the ancillary effect of a wealth taxHal Scott, Committee on Capital Markets Regulation president and Harvard Law School professor emeritus, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the potential plans to tax unrealized capital gains, how this would impact the private-to-public company pipeline, and much more.
Persons: Hal Scott Organizations: Markets, Harvard Law
Read previewGetting a job at Goldman Sachs is even harder than Havard, according to its CEO. In an episode of "The David Rubenstein Show," CEO David Solomon revealed that of over 300,000 applications last year for entry-level jobs out of undergraduate university, the bank hired around 2,500 people — less than 1%. AdvertisementWhile he listed off more classic desirable traits — people who are hardworking, smart, and "believe in excellence" — Solomon emphasized tenacity. In a letter to their 2024 summer internship cohort, Solomon advised them to "embrace your unique skills and experiences." AdvertisementThe investment bank received a record-breaking 315,126 applications for its 2024 internship program, admitting only 2,700 spots — slightly less than 0.9%.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Havard, David Rubenstein, David Solomon, Solomon, — Solomon, Rubenstein, Goldman, Robbie Stankard Organizations: Service, Business, Colombia University
For some Americans, the American Dream has become more like a vision. That's according to a recent Pew Research Center survey, in which more than 8,700 U.S. adults were asked to describe their views of the American Dream. "The American Dream is changing, according to small-business owners," Fara Howard, GoDaddy's chief marketing officer, told CNBC Make It at the time. Thirty-one percent said they'd already achieved the American Dream, and 36% said they were on the right path toward it. "These views are nearly identical to when the Center last asked this question in 2022," the Pew report noted.
Persons: , it's, Raj Chetty, Chetty, Michael Sandel, GoDaddy, Fara Howard, Gen Z, Ted Rossman, they'd Organizations: Pew Research Center, CNBC, Harvard University, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, Harvard Locations: U.S, homeownership
A general view of the Baker Library/Bloomberg Center on February 17, 2024, at Harvard Business School in Allston, MA. Harvard University failed to persuade a U.S. judge to dismiss a lawsuit in which Jewish students accused the Ivy League school of letting its campus become a bastion of antisemitism. Without ruling on the merits, U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns said the plaintiffs plausibly alleged that Harvard's response to on-campus incidents was inadequate, and that "the facts as pled show that Harvard failed its Jewish students." Students sued in January, accusing Harvard of selectively enforcing its anti-discrimination policies to avoid protecting Jewish students from harassment, ignoring their pleas for protection, and hiring professors who supported anti-Jewish violence and spread antisemitic propaganda. Stearns found sufficient allegations that Harvard acted with deliberate indifference toward its Jewish population.
Persons: Richard Stearns, Stearns, Harvard, Harvard's, Claudine Gay, Gay Organizations: Baker Library, Bloomberg Center, Harvard Business School, Harvard University, Ivy League, District, Harvard, U.S, Civil Locations: Allston ,, U.S, Israel, Gaza
He's even expanded his job search to restaurant and retail jobs — e.g. AdvertisementHesmondhalgh shared why he thinks his job search has been so challenging and what he plans to do moving forward. AdvertisementIdeally, he'd land a job in journalism — the field he has two degrees in. He thinks he's struggled to land journalism roles because most of the positions he's looked at require three to five years of formal newsroom experience, and he doesn't have that. Going forward, Hesmondhalgh said he plans to continue his job search for as long as necessary.
Persons: , Roland Hesmondhalgh, He's, Hesmondhalgh, hasn't, he's, it's, he'll Organizations: Service, Florida Institute of Technology, Business, Georgetown, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Supreme, US Capitol Locations: Virginia, Washington, DC, Arlington , Virginia
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe strength of our country is in our unity, says Harvard's Arthur BrooksArthur Brooks, American Enterprise Institute president emeritus and Harvard University professor, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss his thoughts on former President Trump's speech at the RNC, searching for unity in the U.S., calming the political rhetoric, and more.
Persons: Harvard's Arthur Brooks Arthur Brooks, Trump's Organizations: American Enterprise Institute, Harvard University, RNC Locations: U.S
Developers have built a lot of new small apartments over the last few years, and the boost in supply has driven rents down. Rents for newly finished one-bedroom apartments are also falling — the median rent fell 11.9% year over year in the first quarter of 2024, the report found. More than 90,000 new apartments came online in the fourth quarter of 2023, finishing a big year of apartment construction, Redfin noted. The Redfin report is based on US Census data on "unfurnished, unsubsidized, privately financed rental apartments in buildings with five or more units." Studios and one-bedrooms tend to be more profitable for developers to build than larger apartments, and developers aren't building enough apartments suitable for big families.
Persons: Redfin, you've, Sheharyar Bokhari, Organizations: Service, Business, Harvard Locations: Redfin
America has a serious ugly home problem
  + stars: | 2024-07-02 | by ( James Rodriguez | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +14 min
Recently she posted a video on her YouTube channel in which she phrased the question more bluntly: "Why are homes so 'ugly' now?" Most people agree that America needs more houses, but nobody seems all that thrilled with the ones being built. Related storiesThe blame for America's architectural nightmare, however, doesn't stop at production builders, rising costs, or local codes. Homes look this way because they're not just places where we live — they're also supposed to help us get rich. As they stare down these rising costs, builders and architects have almost no choice but to streamline or opt for cheaper design elements.
Persons: Bailey McInnes, McInnes, they're, James Wentling, John Burns, Peter Dennehy, They're, Dan Reynolds, Horton, Lennar, Kate Wagner, she's, , Wagner, Marcia Straub, William Morgan, it's, Queen Anne Organizations: HGTV, YouTube, Facebook, Builders, Bureau of Labor Statistics, National Association of Home Builders, John Burns Research, Consulting, Harvard's, for Housing Studies, Harvard, The Locations: Northern Virginia, America, homebuilding, Providence , Rhode Island
Related storiesIn Florida, there are five metro areas where more than 60% of renters are cost-burdened. Two Pennsylvania metro areas were in the top 10 for the highest percentage of cost-burdened renters: State College and East Stroudsburg, at 63% and 61%, respectively. According to the Harvard report, 45% of renters in Stillwater, Oklahoma, are severely cost-burdened, the highest percentage in the nation. AdvertisementCorvallis, Oregon; Port St. Lucie, Florida; and State College, Pennsylvania, are the three metro areas that are in the top 10 for both cost-burdened and severely cost-burdened renters. Home prices and mortgage interest rates have surged in recent years, putting homeownership out of reach for even more renters.
Persons: , Alexander Hermann, erelman@businessinsider.com Organizations: Service, Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, Business, Harvard, Harvard's, for Housing, State College, East, State College , Locations: Naples , Florida, Corvallis , Oregon, Florida, Naples, Marco, Port St, Lucie , Florida, Pennsylvania, East Stroudsburg, Stillwater , Oklahoma, State College , Pennsylvania
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHarvard's Jason Furman: 'A skewed set of risks' makes taming inflation a challenge for the FedJason Furman, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government economics professor and former CEA chairman, joins CNBC's 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's path to taming inflation, rate cuts, and more.
Persons: Jason Furman, Fed Jason Furman Organizations: Fed, Harvard's Kennedy School of Government
Here's how bad housing affordability is now
  + stars: | 2024-06-25 | by ( Diana Olick | In Dianaolick | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Home prices set another record in April, even as mortgage rates rose and the supply of homes for sale increased. Usually, under those circumstances, prices would weaken, but today's housing market is unlike any other in recent history. The housing cost burden has hit a record, according to a new report from Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. Housing supply was already low before the Covid pandemic hit, because homebuilders had yet to recover from the 2008 financial crisis. Then there was a pandemic-induced run on housing, causing supply to drop to record lows for several years.
Persons: Brian Luke, Dow, HJCH, homebuilders, Homebuilders couldn't, Orphe Divounguy Organizations: Mortgage News, Dow Jones, Harvard's, for Housing Studies
With the rise of remote and hybrid work following the pandemic, work relationships have forever changed. AdvertisementHow workplace connections have changedWith remote work, developing a work-spouse relationship is much more difficult due to limited in-person interactions. Still, Pillemer said, relationships aren't all lost with remote work. AdvertisementWigert noted that work best friends, work spouses, and similarly strong work connections can lead to being "more engaged, productive, and committed to their organization." What is your experience with work friendships, work spouses, and loneliness at work?
Persons: Erin Mantz, Mantz, Zeno, skews, they'll, Ben Wigert, Wigert, Vicki Salemi, Salemi, Julianna Pillemer, Pillemer, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, X, I'm Organizations: Service, Business, New York University, Harvard's Business School, Work Initiative
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