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Uber Eats to begin self-driving robot deliveries in Japan
  + stars: | 2024-02-20 | by ( Alex Koller | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Uber announced Tuesday that its Uber Eats business is partnering with Mitsubishi Electric and delivery robotics company Cartken to begin transporting food using self-driving robots in Japan. The sidewalk robot deliveries are set to start by the end of March in a select area of Tokyo, according to the companies. Uber Eats said Japan will be the first international site of its autonomous delivery operations, which have so far been limited to a few cities in the United States. The news out of Japan marks the latest joint effort by Uber Eats and Cartken, which already offer sidewalk robot deliveries in Miami and in Fairfax, Virginia. Uber Eats has also partnered with robotics companies Motional, Nuro and Serve Robotics to pilot autonomous deliveries in other U.S. cities.
Persons: Uber, Uber Eats, Cartken, Anjali Jindal Naik, Cartken's Organizations: Mitsubishi Electric, Google, Robotics Locations: Japan, Tokyo, United States, Oakland , California, Miami, Fairfax , Virginia, U.S
Prime members are more likely to buy groceries online at Walmart than Amazon's stores, per a survey. Previously, Prime members could get free delivery from Amazon Fresh if they ordered at least $35 in items. Although they tend to prefer Walmart, Amazon Prime members are much more likely to order from Whole Foods than non-Prime members are. Noam Galai/ContributorDespite Walmart gaining ground, Coresight found that Prime members were still more likely than non-Prime subscribers to order from Amazon-owned grocers. Do you work or shop at an Amazon Fresh or Whole Foods store and have a story to share?
Persons: , Sujeet Naik, Naik, Coresight, Noam Galai, Jason Buechel, Alex Bitter Organizations: Walmart, Foods, Service, Amazon Prime, Coresight Research, Amazon, Kroger, Costco, Shoppers Locations: Bentonville , Arkansas
REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File PhotoWASHINGTON, June 23 (Reuters) - Narendra Modi's denial that discrimination against minorities exists in India contradicts thorough documentation by rights advocates, according to activists disappointed by President Joe Biden's embrace of the Indian prime minister. "When I say deliver - caste, creed, religion, gender - there is no space for any discrimination." Rights advocates said that by not publicly calling out the human rights situation in India, Biden had lost their trust. He failed on his campaign promises of promoting human rights," said Raqib Hameed Naik, the founder of Hindutva Watch, a group that monitors reports of attacks on Indian minorities. The U.N. human rights office described a 2019 citizenship law as "fundamentally discriminatory" for excluding Muslim migrants.
Persons: Joe Biden, Narendra Modi, Evelyn Hockstein, Narendra, Joe Biden's, Biden, Modi, Sunita Viswanath, Raqib Hameed Naik, Modi's, Angana Chatterji, Kanishka Singh, Trevor Hunnicutt, Grant McCool Organizations: India's, White, REUTERS, WASHINGTON, Human Rights, U.S . State Department, Modi's U.S, Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP, Rights, Hindutva, University of California, World Press, 161st, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, India, State, Washington, China, Berkeley, United States, Karnataka
Biden said he discussed human rights and other democratic values with Modi during their talks in the White House. In reports on human rights and religious freedom, the State Department raised concerns over treatment of Muslims, Hindu Dalits, Christians and other religious minorities in India while also listing a crackdown on journalists. India has become a black-hole for religious minorities," said protester Raqib Hameed Naik, the founder of Hindutva Watch, a group that monitors reports of attacks on Indian minorities. Senator Bernie Sanders said Modi's "aggressive Hindu nationalism" has "left little space for India's religious minorities." The U.N. human rights office described a 2019 citizenship law as "fundamentally discriminatory" for excluding Muslim migrants.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Joe Biden, Kevin Lamarque WASHINGTON, Biden, Modi, MODI'S, Raqib Hameed Naik, Ilhan Omar, Rashida, Alexandria Ocasio, Bernie Sanders, Modi's, Barack Obama, Obama, Kanishka Singh, Jonathan Oatis, Grant McCool Organizations: India’s, U.S, White, REUTERS, Indian, State Department, Rights, Biden's Democratic Party, Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP, Hindutva, U.S . Congress, World Press, 161st, CNN, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, India, China, Washington, Cortez, Karnataka
This is an as-told-to story based on a conversation with Priyanka Naik, the food blogger behind the brand Chef Priyanka. All the while, I was building my brand: Chef Priyanka. Eventually, I started getting recognition from various food media sites. Twitter gave me flexibilityOne of the reasons I stayed so long at Twitter was because of the reach and flexibility it gave me to grow Chef Priyanka. And in some ways, it was the nudge I needed to turn Chef Priyanka into a full-time gig.
Facebook users have offered for sale on the platform handguns, rifles, shotguns and bullets to members of a forum devoted to an extremist Hindu organization with a history of violence in India. Eight posts, some of which had been up since April, caught the eye of Raqib Hameed Naik, the founder of a group that monitors attacks against religious minorities in India. He began reporting them to Meta Platforms Inc. in late January as contravening the company’s publicly stated policy that prohibits private individuals from buying or selling firearms or ammunition on Facebook platforms.
The law minister said in the upper house of the parliament in December that 165 high court judges were appointed last year against 331 vacancies. A bill passed by parliament to change the process was rejected by the Supreme Court in 2015. The dispute has exacerbated a shortage of high court judges and a backlog of cases. Several lawyers and retired judges told Reuters they believed the government was seeking to influence the judiciary, which would be unconstitutional. When asked about Naik's case, a senior law ministry official said the government's decisions about appointments are confidential.
The amount of compensation will be determined by a “data score” reflecting factors such as whether consumers answer demographic survey questions and which apps and services’ data consumers are sharing. Caden’s app, which will let consumers share their data in exchange for cash. SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS Would you share your data with an app like Caden? She said if consumers’ data is used in ways they don’t expect, they could be turned off and abandon such platforms. Some other players that offer compensation for data have required consumers share their entire profile with all brands.
Investors stuck to crypto startups they considered "safe bets," but FTX's failure challenges that idea. Crypto startups held yacht parties through the summer and into early fall at events such as NFT.NYC and Messari Mainnet. "The whole crypto space is a high-leverage space, and it's susceptible to cascading failures." The events of the past week are unlikely to whet risk-averse LPs' appetite for crypto, investors told Insider. Even so, several investors who have backed crypto startups told Insider that despite the industry's recent travails, they remain believers in the technology.
FTX US, led by Sam Bankman-Fried, was set to buy the assets of the bankrupt crypto-lender Voyager. Bankman-Fried tweeted Thursday that FTX US, which is a separate company from FTX, was "100% liquid." FTX US' bailout was set to offer some relief to Voyager's customers, who faced the complete loss of their crypto assets, with claims of about $1.8 billion in total. Furthermore, some FTX customers had reported issues making withdrawals from their accounts, raising concerns about FTX's liquidity. On Thursday, Bankman-Fried estimated that FTX only had 80% available in liquid assets of the roughly $5 billion in assets customers withdrew on Sunday.
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