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When you’re an NFL head coach, you’re in charge of a lot of things. Brian Callahan, the first-year head coach of the Tennessee Titans, is now overseeing aspects he didn’t have to think about before as an assistant. He was head coach of the Oakland Raiders from 2002 to 2003 and the University of Nebraska from 2004 to 2007. Tennessee Titans head coach Brian Callahan. “Sometimes I’ll call them ‘Coach Bill’; sometimes I’ll call Brian ‘Coach Cally.’ I mean, whatever comes out.”Running backs coach Randy Jordan remembers getting confused early on.
Persons: you’re, Brian Callahan, Bill Callahan, , Bill, “ We’re, Brian, ” Brian, ” Bill, Cleveland, Justin Ford, , Lloyd Cushenberry, Bill ’, Brian ‘, Cally, Randy Jordan, Nick Holz, it’s, ” Holz, that’s, , It’s Organizations: NFL, Tennessee Titans, NBC News, Oakland Raiders, University of Nebraska, Cleveland Browns, Getty, The Titans, Cincinnati Bengals, Browns, National Football League, Titans
Go to newsletter preferencesSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The move furthers the Big Tech trend of flattening org charts that Mark Zuckerberg and others like Elon Musk have talked about in recent years while preaching the need for efficiency. Related stories"I don't think you want a management structure that's just managers managing managers, managing managers, managing managers, managing the people who are doing the work," the Meta CEO reportedly said in an internal meeting in January 2023. Before Meta's layoffs, Zuckerberg said he inquired about the average number of direct reports each manager had at Meta and learned it was around three to four. AdvertisementBut if Amazon is following Meta and other Big Tech companies' lead — don't be surprised if a middle-management culling is on the horizon.
Persons: , Mark Zuckerberg, Elon, Andy Jassy, he's, Jassy, Zuckerberg, Meta, Shopify, Brian Chesky, Business Insider's Ashley Stewart Organizations: Service, Amazon, Business, Meta, Wall Street, Big Tech Locations: Silicon Valley, Airbnb
It’s Week 3 of the NFL Power Rankings, and Tennessee Titans coach Brian Callahan speaks for all of us. ETGO DEEPER NFL Week 2 takeaways: What Chiefs' latest survival shows, Ravens problems, Saints thrivingLast week: 3Thursday: Beat Miami Dolphins 31-10Week 1 was the Josh Allen Show — four touchdowns and 279 combined passing and rushing yards. Dallas Cowboys (1-1)Last week: 7Sunday: Lost to New Orleans Saints 44-19The roller-coaster ride of being a Cowboys fan never ends, does it? That’s been enough because the defense hasn’t allowed either opponent to top 90 yards rushing. Look for a heavy dose of De’Von Achane, who had 96 rushing yards and 69 receiving yards against the Bills, as long as he’s healthy.
Persons: Brian Callahan, Malik Willis, Wanya Morris, Travis Kelce, Morris, Kelce, Patrick Mahomes, He’s, Tom Brady, Roger Staubach, Josh Allen, Allen, BetMGM, Alvin Kamara, Sam Darnold's, shouldn’t, C.J ., Chris Godwin, Nic Antaya, Quarterback Baker Mayfield, Aidan Hutchinson, Khalil Mack’s, Jared Goff, Randy Moss, Justin Jefferson, Jefferson, Sam Darnold, it’s, Darnold, Brock Purdy, Deebo Samuel, Jordan Mason, Christian McCaffrey, San Francisco, Steve Young quarterbacked, Dobbins, Jim Harbaugh, DK Metcalf, Jaxon Smith, Kenneth Walker III, Walker, Geno Smith, Saquon Barkley hadn’t, Kirk Cousins, Josh Jacobs, Jordan Love, Dak, Dallas, CeeDee Lamb, Dallas pic.twitter.com, 2JC9Sidf35 —, Kyler Murray, Marvin Harrison Jr, Murray’s, enver B, ike T, aron R odgers, odgers, amar, ackson,, asser, orth, hase, rong, alf, eason, ong, olk, J r., roy T aormina, ike, ating, ake, ackers, hird, own., aguars, rian C, ade, ade Y ork, enver B roncos, hinks., iants, enver, ince, rian D Organizations: NFL, Tennessee Titans, National Football League, Vikings, 49ers, Raiders, Ravens, Buccaneers, Lions, Packers, Colts, New, New Orleans Saints, Cowboys, Bengals, Rams, Chargers, Saints, Seahawks, Beat Cincinnati Bengals, Kansas City, Chiefs, Falcons, Beat Miami Dolphins, Bills, Dolphins, Jaguars, Beat Dallas Cowboys, New Orleans ’, Philadelphia Eagles, Sam Darnold's Vikings, Beat Chicago Bears, Texans, Bears, Houston, Four Texans, Minnesota Vikings, Bucs, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Beat Detroit Lions, Tampa Bay, Detroit, Denver Broncos, Detroit Lions, Arizona Cardinals, San Francisco 49ers, Houston Texans, Niners, Los Angeles Rams, Los Angeles Chargers, Beat Carolina Panthers, Panthers, Steelers, Pittsburgh Steelers, Seattle Seahawks, New England Patriots, Seattle, Miami Dolphins, Atlanta Falcons, Eagles, Green Bay Packers, Beat Indianapolis, Sunday, Green Bay, Dallas Cowboys, Cleveland, Dallas, Baltimore Ravens, T, 2JC9Sidf35 — Dallas Texas TV, MURRAY, FC, ards, ashington, eads, ams, ust, alton Locations: New Orleans, Buffalo, C.J, C.J . Stroud, Detroit, Tampa, San, Minnesota, J.K, Seattle, ards, ife, verall,
Two former high-ranking New York City Fire Department chiefs were indicted by federal prosecutors Monday on charges of pocketing bribes to expedite fire safety reviews. The charges come as Mayor Eric Adams' administration has been under scrutiny from prosecutors from the U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan. "New Yorkers deserve better," U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said at a press conference where he announced the charges against the former chiefs, Anthony Saccavino and Brian Cordasco. Jocelyn Strauber, head of the New York City Department of Investigation, told reporters all the sites have since been re-inspected. Both are no longer with the FDNY — Saccavino retired in March and Cordasco retired in June.
Persons: Eric Adams, Edward Caban, Damian Williams, Anthony Saccavino, Brian Cordasco, Cordasco, Williams, Jocelyn Strauber, Saccavino, Robert Tucker, Adams, Caban’s, Sheena Wright, Public Safety Philip Banks III, , ” Williams Organizations: New York, New York City Fire Department, Police, U.S, FDNY, department's, of Fire Prevention, New York City Department of Investigation, Department, FBI, Public Safety Locations: New York City, Manhattan
In Trump's case, Electric Avenue was used for a commercial purpose, not for an allowable non-profit, research, or educational purpose, the judge wrote. The second factor looks at whether the copyrighted work was "creative" or "factual." The third factor weighs how much of the copyrighted work was taken for an unauthorized use. AdvertisementThe final factor asks "whether, if the challenged use becomes widespread, it will adversely affect the potential market for the copyrighted work," the judge wrote. "In this case, there is no public benefit as a result of the defendants' use of 'Electric Avenue'" the judge wrote.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Eddy Grant's, Trump, Grant, Brett Van Benthysen, Brian Caplan, Mr, Caplan, Van Benthysen, Grant's, Eddy Grant, Dan Scavino, Joe Biden feebly puttering, Pence, John G, Koeltl, Scavino Organizations: Service, Business, Trump Locations: Manhattan, Barbados
It's also common to draw parallels between the dot-com bubble and today's hype, leading investors to wonder if there's an AI bubble that's about to pop, too. Goldman Sachs' big AI headline of the month is "To buy, or not to buy, that is the question." The note from September 5, led by Peter Oppenheimer, suggests the answer is "to buy" but also to diversify. And the third is the application providers, which are the companies creating services for end users to harness AI. It comes from machine learning or big data workloads that various companies and governments use, Belton noted.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Peter Oppenheimer, John Belton, doesn't, Brian Colello, Nancy Tengler, that's, it's, Tengler, Wall, Larry Ellison, Colello, Belton Organizations: Service, Business, Gabelli Funds, Morningstar Equity Research, Investments, Nvidia, Companies, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle, IBM, Broadcom, AMD, Cadence Design Systems, Google, AWS, Eaton Corporation Locations: GenAI, Belton
New York CNN —The battle over “founder mode” versus “manager mode” is one of those manufactured dramas that only a small segment of the world cares about — like going to Davos or Cannes or the Vanity Fair Oscar Party. The idea is that a founder knows their company the way a parent knows their child. Graham doesn’t really define founder mode because every founder and every firm is different. I’ll offer another: Ray Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater, one of the world’s biggest hedge funds. The most successful “founder mode” guys (they’re almost all male, as far as I can tell) seemed to always have a trusted manager by their side.
Persons: CNN Business ’, Paul Graham, Graham, ” Graham, Brian Chesky, Chesky, Steve Jobs, It’s, Graham doesn’t, Jobs, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, Ray Dalio, narc, Rob Copeland, , Rich Hagberg, Ashley Herd, Jessica Lessin, , Tim Cook Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Bridgewater, New York Times, LinkedIn Locations: New York, Davos, Cannes, Silicon Valley
Read previewDuring his decade at Airbnb, Vlad Loktev picked up some pointers from CEO Brian Chesky. Although Loktev noted that their booking numbers were up and things appeared to be running smoothly, the CEO responded, "Things are just too calm. Loktev said he learned from how Chesky strategically inserted some disarray into an otherwise calm process. And he learned it from Chesky, whom Loktev said would continuously grow. AdvertisementIt's not about hitting the goalWhen it came to thinking big, Loktev said Chesky taught him how to rethink big goals.
Persons: , Vlad Loktev, Brian Chesky, Loktev, Chesky, you've, That's, Brian, Paul Graham, Graham, Steve Jobs, they'll, it's Organizations: Service, Zynga, Ventures, Business, Airbnb, VP, Apple Locations: Airbnb, Chesky
You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. What works is to flood the market with supply: lots of oil means lower oil prices, lots of labor means lower labor prices, lots of whatever means lower prices — it's a simple supply and demand curve. Obviously, this is a populist political gesture — a way to offer something to voters upset about high food prices. Krugman noted that many states including Texas have laws banning businesses from overcharging for essentials like food and fuel during disasters.
Persons: , Kamala Harris, Harris, Lindsay Owens, Donald Trump, Mark Zandi, Kamala, Dave Ramsey, It's, cramp, Kevin O'Leary, there's, That's, There's, O'Leary, it's, Kamala Harris's, Gus Ruelas, Paul Krugman, I've, Richard Nixon, Nicolas Maduro, Krugman, Brian Cornell, Cornell Organizations: Service, Democratic, Business, Federal, CBS, Republican, York Post, Fox, Netflix, Fox News, Laureate, Princeton, New York Times, CNBC Locations: York, America, Cuba, Venezuela, North Korea, Soviet Union, Texas, overcharging
New York CNN —CEOs of many of the biggest US hotel and travel companies are coming off a bit like doomsayers these days with their warnings about the declining health of consumers and their waning appetite for travel. Gary Hershorn/Getty ImagesMuch of the revenue growth that travel companies reported in recent years resulted from inflation, said David Tinsley, a senior economist at Bank of America Institute. “It was always going to be tough to expect travel spending to be showing the kind of momentum it showed 12 months ago,” he told CNN. “I don’t think the current situation is particularly bleak — it’s reasonable to see more normalization playing out,” he said, referring to travel spending getting back on par with pre-pandemic trends. Still, it’s not hard to see why this mixed picture is prompting travel companies to tread carefully.
Persons: , , Brian Chesky, “ It’s, Ellie Mertz, Chris Nassetta, Airbnb’s Mertz, haven’t, Jan Freitag, ” Freitag, Walt Disney, Gary Hershorn, David Tinsley, Tinsley, , Steve Hafner, it’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Conference, Bank of America Institute, CNN Locations: New York,
But Brown told Business Insider that more recent disappointing experiences with short-term rentals have led to a change of heart. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. It's a far cry from the record-setting demand Airbnb saw immediately following COVID-19 lockdowns, when travelers craved private homes and acres of outdoor space. Hotels are winning over travelers in some areasDemand for Airbnbs is stalling or slipping in some categories where hotels are competitive, according to AirDNA. "I'm going to go check hotels and see if this is actually the best value," he told Business Insider.
Persons: , Duane Brown, Brown, there's, Airbnb, AirDNA, Brian Chesky, Chesky, Jamie Lane, Lane, Adam Burgh, Burgh, might've Organizations: Service, Business, Daytona, Seattle, Marriott Locations: London, Toronto, Budapest, Florida, Sarasota, Rio de Janeiro, South America, Airbnbs, Whidbey, Seattle
— President Joe Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act into law on Aug. 9, 2022, authorizing nearly $53 billion to rebuild the nation’s semiconductor industry. A Purdue University summer program gives undergrads hands-on experience in the chip-development process. The domestic semiconductor manufacturing workforce has dropped from a peak of 714,500 in 2001 to 392,100 as of July, according to government data. In addition, the CHIPS Program Office, run out of the Commerce Department, has announced major commitments for research and development, including workforce skilling, with a $5 billion package unveiled in February. Some of the students in Purdue University’s inaugural STARS program last summer, which began with about 70 trainees.
Persons: Joe Biden, Robert Zhang, doesn’t, ” Zhang, Feichi Huang, Mark Lundstrom, Purdue University Bill Wiseman, , Lundstrom, Sujai, Shivakumar, , that’s, Taylor Roundtree, there’s Organizations: WEST LAFAYETTE, Purdue University, Semiconductors, Intel, Texas, STARS, Purdue, U.S, McKinsey & Co, Semiconductor Industry Association, Micron, Commerce Department, McKinsey, South, SK Hynix, Apple, Nvidia, TSMC, Center for Strategic, International Studies . Universities Locations: Ind, Syracuse , New York, Phoenix, U.S, Taiwan, Korea, Japan, Singapore, West Lafayette , Indiana, South Korean, United States,
Airbnb CEO and co-founder Brian Chesky speaks at The Fast Company Innovation Festival on September 21, 2022, in New York. Airbnb shares dropped 14% in after-hours trading after the company reported second-quarter earnings that missed analyst expectations and warned that it's seeing signs of slowing demand from U.S. customers. Here's how the company did compared to LSEG estimates for the quarter ended June 30:Earnings per share: $0.86 versus $0.92 expected. Revenue: $2.75 billion versus $2.74 billion expected. It also cautioned that it was "seeing shorter booking lead times globally and some signs of slowing demand from U.S.
Persons: Brian Chesky, Airbnb Organizations: Revenue, Asia Pacific, Federal Reserve Locations: New York, Latin America
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAirbnb CEO Brian Chesky on 2024 Olympics: This is the biggest event in Airbnb historyAirbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the 2024 Paris Olympics, the rollout of Icons experience, Airbnb demand in Paris, summer travel demand outlook, and more.
Persons: Brian Chesky, Airbnb Locations: Paris
More specifically, they're taking aim at a widespread rule that requires almost every new apartment building in the US to include at least two separate stairwells. This part of local codes, they say, is an outdated safety measure that really just makes apartment units smaller, more expensive, and darker (yes, darker). City planners there sometimes call these single-stair buildings "Seattle Specials" — they simply wouldn't be possible in pretty much any other city. Almost all of Europe, as well as Asia, Mexico and South America, allows single-stair buildings of six stories or higher. Germany allows single-stair buildings to stretch to about 20 stories, while Switzerland has no such limit.
Persons: Chris Gannon, Gannon, Stephen Smith, Michael Eliason, Eliason, James F, Brian Court, We're, Sean Jursnick, Jursnick Organizations: City Council, Center for, Housel, Miller Hull Partnership, Eliason, City, Fire Protection Association Locations: Texas, Austin, Seattle, New York City, America, California, Minnesota, Washington and Oregon, North America, It's, Union, Seattle's, Hill, Denver, Europe, Asia, Mexico, South America, Germany, Switzerland, Honolulu, California , Oregon, Washington
Read previewProminent tech CEOs and billionaires condemned the shooting at a Trump rally on Saturday, with some voicing their support for former President Donald Trump. "I fully endorse President Trump and hope for his rapid recovery," Musk wrote on X. Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said in a statement posted on X that he was "thankful President Trump wasn't seriously injured." "A full and speedy recovery to President Trump. There is no room in our country for political violence," he wrote.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Biden, Mark Cuban, Joe Biden, Tesla, Elon Musk, Trump, Musk, David Sacks, Shaun Maguire, Sacks, Marc Andreessen, Andreessen Horowitz, Tim Cook, Trump's, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Bezos, Satya Nadella, Brian Chesky, Trump wasn't, Marc Benioff, hasn't Organizations: Service, Trump, Business, Secret Service, Bloomberg, PAC, Biden Administration, Big Tech, Apple, Amazon, Microsoft Locations: Butler , Pennsylvania, Cuban, America
A CNN investigation found that Airbnb consistently fails to protect its guests despite knowing hidden cameras are a persistent concern within its industry. Video Ad Feedback A woman describes the moment she realized her Airbnb host had placed a hidden camera in her room. And, while hotels can be held legally responsible for guests harmed on their property, Airbnb frequently is not. In January, CNN began reaching out to former Airbnb employees to ask about hidden camera concerns within the industry. “Less than a month for every victim,” said Wyzynajtys, the guest who found Allee’s hidden camera.
Persons: Airbnb, , Brian Chesky, Chloe LeBrument, , LeBrument, … it’s, Bianca Zuniga, Goldwater, “ I’ve, Comfort , Texas David Wyzynajtys, Airbnb’s, Wyzynajtys, ” Wyzynajtys, David Wyzynajtys, Austin Steele, CNN Wyzynajtys, Jay Allee, Allee, , Vrbo, CNN Allee, Butch Matjeka, ” Matjeka, Kim van Sparrentak, Murray Cox, Cox, Shannon Schott, “ They’re, They’re, ” Schott, Jan Schakowsky, Kyung, ’ Allee, didn’t, Airbnb superhost Peter Madden, Madden, he’d, “ I’m, ” Madden, undressed, Patricia DiCarlo, Matt Lait, Logan Whiteside, Yahya Abou, Ghazala Organizations: CNN, Social, ” CNN, Hyatt Hotels Corporation, Marriott International, Ontario Airbnb, Police, Sheriff’s, European Union, EU, Communications, Facebook, Illinois, Democratic, Airbnb’s San, Attorney, Westbrook Police, Vrbo Locations: Texas, San Francisco, London , Ontario, Ontario, Comfort , Texas, Jay Allee Kendall, Allee’s, California, Kendall, Allee, United States, New York, York, Florida, Airbnb’s, Airbnb’s San Francisco, Chesky, Melbourne, Australia, Maine, Cumberland County
The United States is producing less than 1% of the wind power it wants to generate by 2030. And as Eric Hines, the director of Tufts University's offshore wind energy graduate program, puts it, "We're going to need somewhere on the order of five of these installation vessels in just a few years." The Biden administration wants the U.S. to generate 30,000 megawatts from wind power within the next five and a half years. As of last year, that figure stood at just 42 megawatts, putting the nation far behind Europe — which added 18,300 megawatts of new wind energy capacity in 2023 alone, according to WindEurope. ("There are no known links between large whale deaths and ongoing offshore wind activities," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has said.)
Persons: it's, Eric Hines, Biden, Donald Trump Organizations: White, Tufts, Republican, Oceanic, Atmospheric Administration, Dominion Energy Locations: States, U.S, New Jersey, Brownsville , Texas
'A useful disguise' for the HouthisBetween December and March, Houthi attacks damaged at least 19 commercial ships, according to a June 13 report published by the Defense Intelligence Agency. US Central Command via AP, FileThe following weeks saw a decrease in the pace of successful Houthi attacks. AdvertisementYemen's Houthi group released a video showing an explosive-laden drone boat target a commercial vessel earlier this month. AdvertisementDouble taps and drone boatsBeyond the recent double-tap strikes, the Houthis' ability to learn from past attacks is visible in their drone boat operations. In this photo released by the French military, the MV Tutor sinks in the Red Sea after it was struck by a Houthi drone boat.
Persons: , Archer Macy, Behshad, Houthis, Brian Carter, Ambrey, Carter, they're, des, they'll, Macy, they've, Alex Stark, John Kirby, Kirby, Yemen —, Dwight D, Theodore Roosevelt Carrier, Stark Organizations: Service, Business, US Navy, Defense Intelligence Agency, US military's Central Command, US, Command, AP, Military Times, American Enterprise, Houthi Media, Getty, des Armées, AP Experts, Center for Strategic, Studies ' Missile Defense, RAND Corporation, National Security, Eisenhower, Eisenhower Carrier Strike, Theodore Roosevelt Carrier Strike Group Locations: Gulf of Aden, Iran, Iranian, Yemen, Tehran, Israel, Gulf, Aden, Ukraine, Russian, Red, France, Sanaa
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says he leaned heavily on advice from his friend Brian Chesky — CEO and co-founder of Airbnb — after ChatGPT became a global phenomenon. Here's where you're behind, here's what you're screwing up, here's what you got to proactively do, here's what you got to think about.'" Chesky was "almost always right," Altman added. The hours of guidance impacted key areas of OpenAI's business, according to Altman: Chesky instructed him on who to hire and how to "map" out the company's strategy. More recently, Chesky told him that he was "probably not thinking enough about" the political consequences of the company's generative AI technology, Altman added.
Persons: Sam Altman, Brian Chesky, Airbnb, ChatGPT, Altman, Chesky, Altman's, Brian Organizations: Aspen Ideas, Microsoft
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said AI hasn't changed most people's lives yet. Despite ChatGPT's 2022 introduction, apps have still remained largely the same, he said. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky thinks that will manifest in the next two to three years.
Persons: Brian Chesky, hasn't, Chesky, Organizations: Service, CNBC, Aspen Ideas, Business
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky said the "worst moment" of Sam Altman's ousting happened around midnight. Chesky said Altman expected to get reinstated but OpenAI then announced Emmett Shear as CEO. Altman planned to go to Microsoft but Chesky said his friendship with Shear helped open a dialogue. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . But the hardest moment happened at midnight about two days in, according to an interview with Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky on CNBC.
Persons: Brian Chesky, Sam Altman's, Chesky, Altman, OpenAI, Emmett Shear, Shear, , Sam Altman Organizations: Microsoft, Service, CNBC, Business Locations: OpenAI
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAirbnb CEO on supporting OpenAI's Sam Altman: 'You learn a lot about people in a crisis'Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky sits down with CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin at the Aspen Ideas Festival to discuss his friendship with OpenAI's Sam Altman, Airbnb's AI developments, and more. NBCUniversal News Group is the media partner of the Aspen Ideas Festival.
Persons: OpenAI's Sam Altman, Brian Chesky, CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin Organizations: Aspen Ideas, NBCUniversal
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAirbnb is still trying to work with the city of Barcelona despite the ban, says CEO Brian CheskyAirbnb CEO Brian Chesky sits down with CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin at the Aspen Ideas Festival to discuss summer travel, how the company addresses Barcelona's ban on Airbnbs, and more. NBCUniversal News Group is the media partner of the Aspen Ideas Festival.
Persons: Brian Chesky, CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin Organizations: Aspen Ideas, NBCUniversal Locations: Barcelona
Read previewAs companies and startups race to implement artificial intelligence into their products, Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky and OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman have a word of caution: Don't leave society behind. "I think that if everyone here could feel like they could participate and they could have their input into it, then I don't think there's a huge thing to fear," Chesky said. A few former board members accused Altman of lying to colleagues and creating a toxic culture through "psychological abuse." While researchers fear that AI will exacerbate the loneliness epidemic, Chesky believes the tool will "help bring people together." "At the end of the day, it's not the technology; it's the people with the technology," Chesky said, referring to those who are building with AI.
Persons: , Brian Chesky, Sam Altman, Chesky, NBC News's Lester Holt, Altman, OpenAI's ChatGPT, ethicists, Sam didn't, Helen Toner, Jan Leike, Leike, it's Organizations: Service, NBC, Aspen Ideas, Business, OpenAI, Rhode Island School of Design
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