Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Regulator"


25 mentions found


"These conditions have allowed, in some instances, the biggest technology companies to get a layup in the AI space," Khan said. In particular, Khan called for AI models' weights to be publicly available. In the age of AI, Khan said both consumers and enterprises are uncertain of their data's protections when using foundation models. "We only focus on deals that have problems…it's a narrow set of deals that satisfy a narrow set of criteria." In March, Microsoft paid $650 million in a licensing deal to Inflection AI, an emerging OpenAI rival, to use its AI models and hire most of its employees.
Persons: , Lina Khan, Khan, We've, you've, Jonathan Kanter, Kevin Dietsch, Kanter, execs Organizations: Service, Federal Trade Commission, FTC, Big Tech, Microsoft, Google, Business, Meta, Antitrust, Department of Justice, DOJ, Apple, Tech, New York VC, YC, Amazon Locations: OpenAI, America
UK's Thames Water's troubles mount as credit rating cut to junk
  + stars: | 2024-07-24 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Britain's largest water provider Thames Water suffered a blow in its battle to avoid renationalisation on Wednesday as credit rating firm Moody's downgraded its corporate family rating (CFR) and its safest tranche of debt to junk. Moody's downgraded Thames Water's CFR to Ba2 - two rungs into 'junk' rating territory - from Baa3, which is an investment grade and something water firms are supposed to maintain as part of their licence requirements. It safest tranche of debt known as senior secured "Class A" bonds were cut to Ba1, which is one notch into junk, while its riskier "Class B" bonds were dumped five notches lower at B3. Moody's said the downgrade followed this month's provisional ruling from British regulator Ofwat that Thames would not be allowed to raise prices as much as it had requested, and because of its "weakening liquidity position". "Almost certainly it will mean special administration for the company," Seaport credit analyst Satish Pulle said, adding that the downgrade had not come as a surprise.
Persons: Moody's, Satish Pulle Organizations: Thames, CFR, Seaport Locations: Ba2, Baa3, Thames
LONDON — The U.K.'s health regulator on Tuesday approved the use of Novo Nordisk 's Wegovy weight loss drug to reduce the risk of overweight and obese adults suffering from serious heart problems or strokes. The new approval from the U.K.'s Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) makes the Danish pharmaceutical giant's GLP-1 obesity drug the first in the country to be prescribed for prevention of cardiovascular events in people with obesity. It follows similar label expansion by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in March. Shares of Novo Nordisk were up after the announcement, trading 1.46% higher by 4:10 p.m. London time after pushing higher for much of the session. The MHRA's deputy director of innovative medicines, Shirley Hopper, said the decision marked an "important step forward" in combatting the effects of obesity.
Persons: Shirley Hopper Organizations: Novo Nordisk, Medicines, Healthcare, Agency, U.S . Food, Drug Administration Locations: London
CNN —The Philippines has announced plans to ban offshore gaming operators, targeting an industry that mostly caters to Chinese gamblers and has sparked growing alarm from law enforcement over its alleged connections to organized crime. Known locally as POGOs, Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators have spawned across the country, both licensed and illicit, employing tens of thousands of Chinese and foreign nationals. Ezra Acayan/Getty ImagesThere are 46 licensed offshore gaming operators and dozens more illicit gambling hubs in the Philippines, according to the country’s gaming regulator, which Marcos has ordered to close by the end of the year. Since then, the Philippines has become a major hub for online gaming catering to tens of thousands of players based in China. “Even if overseas casinos are legally opened, cross-border gambling by Chinese citizens is suspected of violating the laws of our country,” the embassy said in a statement.
Persons: Ferdinand Marcos Jr, ” Marcos, Marcos, Ezra Acayan, Marcos ’, Rodrigo Duterte Organizations: CNN, Philippine Offshore Gaming, Macao –, Philippine News Agency Locations: Philippines, Philippine, Manila, Beijing, South China, China, Macao, Southeast Asia, United States, China’s, Singapore
In this article GOOGL Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTGoogle announced in a surprise move that it would reverse its years-long plan to phase out third-party cookies. The U.S. internet giant said late Monday it is reversing a long-planned move to ditch third-party cookies — the critical text files that track users' web activity for advertisers. And what does Google's decision mean for how you interact with the web moving forward — or, for that matter the advertising industry? Roughly 40.9% of websites globally use cookies to gather data on users, according to data from W3Techs, a web technology research firm. This issue forms the main reason why Google has now decided to terminate its planned depreciation of third-party cookies.
Persons: Daniel Acker, Matthew Holman, Cripps, it's, Google's, Steve Silvers, there's, Silvers, Authority —, Vasiliki, Makou, Jennifer Elias Organizations: Google, Bloomberg, Getty, CNBC, Competition, Authority, ICO, Data Locations: U.S, W3Techs, Europe, London
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission appears to have given the green light for exchange-traded funds that hold ether , the world's second-largest cryptocurrency. It approved rule changes for exchanges to list ether funds in May. Some of the companies that have been vying to launch ether funds include massive asset managers such as BlackRock, Fidelity and VanEck. The ether ETFs come about six months after the launch of bitcoin ETFs, which saw some of the most successful debuts in the industry's history. The ether funds are not expected to be as popular as the bitcoin funds, in part because the total market for ether is roughly one-fourth the size of the leading cryptocurrencies.
Persons: Matt Hougan, doesn't, Hougan Organizations: U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Fidelity, VanEck, Trust, ETF, Bitwise Locations: BlackRock, U.S
AI companies in China are undergoing a government review of their large language models, aimed at ensuring they "embody core socialist values," according to a report by the Financial Times. The review is being carried out by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), the government's chief internet regulator, and will cover players across the spectrum, from tech giants like ByteDance and Alibaba to small startups. AI models will be tested by local CAC officials for their responses to a variety of questions, many related to politically sensitive topics and Chinese President Xi Jinping, FT said. An anonymous source from a Hangzhou-based AI company who spoke with the FT said that their model didn't pass the first round of testing for unclear reasons. They only passed the second time after months of "guessing and adjusting," they said in the report.
Persons: Xi Jinping Organizations: Financial Times, Cyberspace Administration of China, CAC, U.S Locations: China, Hangzhou, Beijing
In a statement, AT&T said, “We have long supported a comprehensive federal privacy policy protecting all Americans that applies across the internet ecosystem. Currently, data privacy laws exist in 19 states covering at least 150 million Americans, though differing in scale and scope. Industry trade groups say that while cyber security and data privacy can be interrelated, there is tension between those concepts that might not be fully covered in a data privacy law. What it’s like trying to pass data privacy lawsWhen Collin Walke, a data privacy and cybersecurity attorney, was in the Oklahoma House, he focused on data privacy legislation. One lobby, the State Privacy & Security Coalition, represents AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, Meta, as well as automobile, healthcare and payment card companies.
Persons: It’s, , ” Dominic Sellitto, ” Sellitto, They’re, Alan Butler, , Eric Noonan, ” Andrew Kingman, Collin Walke, ” Walke, ” Monica Priestley, ” Priestley, something’s, ” Noonan, ” Butler Organizations: New, New York CNN, FBI, Securities and Exchange Commission, Consumer, Big Tech, Social, University at Buffalo, Privacy, , State Privacy, Security Coalition, Industry, Oklahoma House, Amazon, Google, Verizon, CNN, U.S, Privacy & Security Coalition, Mobile, Meta, “ Industries, Tech, Companies, FCC, Federal Communications Commission Locations: New York, , Oklahoma, California, Vermont
CNN —A significant Microsoft outage brought low-cost carrier Frontier Airlines and some competitors to a standstill for hours after a regulator halted departures. “Our systems are currently impacted by a Microsoft outage, which is also affecting other companies,” Frontier said in a statement on its website. The Federal Aviation Administration said Frontier asked it to pause the airline’s departures across the United States. “Due to a global outage at a third party vendor, our booking, check-in, and trip-managing capabilities are temporarily unavailable,” SunCountry said on its site. United, Southwest and American Airlines said they were not impacted by the outage.
Persons: , SunCountry, ” SunCountry, ” Allegiant Organizations: CNN, Microsoft, Frontier Airlines, , Federal Aviation Administration, Frontier, FAA, American Airlines Locations: United States, Central, Southwest
King Charles III, wearing the Imperial State Crown and the Robe of State reads the King's Speech from the The Sovereign's Throne next to Queen Camilla, wearing the George IV State Diadem in the House of Lords chamber, in the Houses of Parliament on July 17, 2024 in London, England. LONDON — The U.K.'s new Labour government on Wednesday outlined a raft of proposed legislation, including the nationalization of rail operators and the creation of a publicly-owned clean power company. In a speech delivered by King Charles III on behalf of the administration, the government said it is "committed to a clean energy transition that will lower bills for consumers over time," adding that it would establish Great British Energy, headquartered in Scotland, to help accelerate investment in renewable energy such as offshore wind. The speech listed a broad range of proposals, many of which have already been announced. A pledge of economic growth was yet again front and center in the speech, described in the opening lines as a "fundamental mission" which would help the country move on from the cost of living crisis.
Persons: King Charles III, Queen Camilla, George IV, Charles Organizations: Imperial State Crown, George, Labour, British Energy, Microsoft Locations: State, London, England, Scotland
Deutsche Bank incorrectly disclosed deferred tax assets in its 2019 financial statement which did not meet international accounting standards, the German regulator BaFin said on Tuesday. "The declarations on deferred tax assets in the consolidated financial statement were not complete," the regulator, known formally as the Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, said in a statement translated by CNBC. It said that 2.076 billion euros ($2.26 billion) worth of deferred tax assets had not been disclosed separately in the notes for Deutsche Bank's U.S. business. The bank should have made the disclosure because it recorded several years of losses, it said. The disclosure error was against rules laid out by the International Accounting Standards, BaFin said in a second statement.
Persons: BaFin Organizations: Deutsche Bank, Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, CNBC, Deutsche Bank's, International
Read previewElon Musk has seemingly confirmed Tesla's Robotaxi event has been delayed and revealed one reason the company needs more time before the big reveal. AdvertisementThe apparent reveal event delay isn't a complete shock — Musk often underestimates how long it will take to bring the ideas he has to market, saying he tends to be optimistic about product timelines. Not much is known about Tesla's Robotaxi event aside from that the public will get a glimpse at whatever the company has been working on. Tesla is also facing a number of lawsuits and regulator scrutiny related to safety concerns over its self-driving software. Tesla has yet to officially announce a new date for the Robotaxi event.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Warren Redlich, Tesla, Rosalie Nathans, she's Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Business, Tesla, EV
Read previewElon Musk has seemingly confirmed Tesla's Robotaxi event has been delayed and revealed one reason the company needs more time before the big reveal. AdvertisementThe apparent reveal event delay isn't a complete shock — Musk often underestimates how long it will take to bring the ideas he has to market, saying he tends to be optimistic about product timelines. The same happened with the Cybertruck, Tesla's Full Self-Driving software, and Starlink's high-speed internet access in remote areas. Not much is known about Tesla's Robotaxi event aside from that the public will get a glimpse at whatever the company has been working on. Tesla has yet to officially announce a new date for the Robotaxi event.
Persons: , Elon Musk, Musk, Warren Redlich, Tesla, Rosalie Nathans, she's Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Business, Tesla, EV
The insurance industry is setting homes on fire — just to make a point. The fires are controlled, kindled in a research lab or staged at training facilities used by fire departments. Across the United States, insurers lost $33 billion in 2023 on personal home and auto insurance, according to AM Best, a ratings agency for the industry. In California, where fires have consumed more than roughly 220,000 acres of land in just this year, major insurers like State Farm, Allstate and Farmers have all pulled back. Earlier this month, State Farm asked California’s insurance regulator to approve a 30 percent rate increase for the owner-occupied home insurance it still provides in the state.
Organizations: Farm, Allstate, Farmers Locations: Lahaina, Maui, United States, California
Boeing begins 777-9 certification flight trials with FAA
  + stars: | 2024-07-13 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Boeing has started certification flight testing of its long-delayed 777-9 with U.S. aviation regulators onboard, the U.S. planemaker said in an emailed statement. The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment out of office hours. Type inspection authorization is typically associated with the start of the certification process, made after the FAA has examined technical data. The milestone allows FAA pilots to participate in flight testing needed to certify the plane for normal operation. Boeing has said that the 777-9 test fleet will undergo the most thorough commercial flight test effort the planemaker has ever undertaken.
Persons: planemaker Organizations: Boeing Co, Boeing, Air Current, U.S . Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Emirates Locations: Renton , Washington, US, U.S
SpaceX's Falcon 9 is pictured launching satellites to orbit in space after it lifted off from the Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, U.S., in this screenshot obtained from a handout video released on July 12, 2024. SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket is grounded, pending an incident investigation, after an inflight failure — a rare misfire for the company's workhorse vehicle. The mission, known as "Starlink Group 9-3," launched from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base on Thursday evening and was carrying 20 satellites bound for low Earth orbit. But the rocket's upper second stage failed to reignite its engine as planned and was destroyed, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk confirmed. Falcon 9 is grounded until the Federal Aviation Administration signs off on SpaceX's investigation of the incident, the federal regulator confirmed.
Persons: SpaceX's, Elon Musk, Musk Organizations: Vandenberg Space Force, California's Vandenberg Space Force Base, SpaceX, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, CNBC Locations: California, U.S
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCitigroup CFO on the bank's transformation and beating Q2 expectationsMark Mason, Citigroup CFO, joins CNBC's Leslie Picker on 'The Exchange' to discuss Citi's business transformation, addressing regulator concerns, and more.
Persons: Mark Mason, Leslie Picker Organizations: Citigroup
In the long-simmering conflict between franchisers and franchisees, the federal government has weighed in on behalf of the smaller guys. In a business relationship that has become fundamental to American commerce, franchisers — brands like McDonald’s and Jiffy Lube — license the right to operate their concept to individual entrepreneurs, who provide start-up capital and may own one location or many. On Friday, the Federal Trade Commission issued a policy statement and staff guidance that cautioned franchisers not to restrict their franchisees’ ability to speak to government officials or to tack on fees that weren’t disclosed in documents provided to prospective franchise buyers. In a news release, the commission said it was acting amid “growing concern about unfair and deceptive practices by franchisers — to ensure that the franchise business model remains a ladder of opportunity to owning a business for honest small business owners.”
Persons: franchisers, weren’t, franchisers —, Organizations: Federal Trade Commission
The U.K.'s Financial Conduct Authority announced Thursday new rules for the country's stock market listings in a bid to boost growth following a slow down in IPOs. "They aim to support a wider range of companies to issue their shares on a UK exchange, increasing opportunities for investors," the regulator added. One key change is the removal of the 'premium' and 'standard' listing segments. Shareholder approval for key events, like reverse takeovers and decisions to take the company's shares off an exchange, is still required," the FCA said. Some rules around eligibility for listings will also change, such as the removal of a requirement for companies to provide track records of their revenue.
Organizations: Bank of England Locations: London, IPOs
With a broad smile and crisply delivered answers, Christy Goldsmith Romero, President Biden’s nominee to take over the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, appeared to cruise through her Senate confirmation hearing on Thursday. Ms. Goldsmith Romero’s testimony, before the Senate Banking Committee, is the first step in a process that could put her in charge of the regulator that oversees smaller banks, administers the fund that protects bank depositors’ cash and steps in when a bank fails; it was recently roiled by revelations of widespread sexual harassment and abuse of junior employees by their longtime managers. Over the course of the hearing on Thursday, Ms. Goldsmith Romero’s testimony drew praise not only from Democrats but also from some Republicans, suggesting that she was likely to be confirmed for the position. Ms. Goldsmith Romero is a lawyer who, after the financial crisis, spent more than 12 years in an office created by Congress to investigate fraud and other misconduct by banks that received money from the government’s roughly $450 billion crisis rescue package. Her work exposing fraud often put her at odds with not only bankers but also some government officials who were concerned about the potential damage it would do to overall public opinion of the bailout.
Persons: crisply, Christy Goldsmith Romero, Biden’s, Ms, Goldsmith Romero’s, Goldsmith Romero Organizations: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Banking Committee
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. In hopes of regaining compliance, CEO Jane Fraser bulked up a firm-wide initiative to overhaul the bank's technology. The head count for the so-called "Transformation" program has soared to 12,000 from some 3,000 since 2021, according to earnings reports. Citi's technology shortcomings are old news, according to Wells Fargo analyst Mike Mayo. Kathleen Martin, former interim data transformation chair, is suing the bank and Anand Selvakesari, the bank's chief operations officer who oversees Transformation.
Persons: , Jane Fraser bulked, Wells, Mike Mayo, Mayo, Fraser, We're, We've, Jane Fraser, SAUL LOEB, Janney Montgomery Scott, Timothy Coffey, Kathleen Martin, Anand Selvakesari, Martin, Selva, Hayley Cuccinello Organizations: Service, Citigroup, Citi, Business, Federal Reserve Board, Revlon, OCC, Citi —, Federal Reserve, Reuters Locations: Wells Fargo, United States, Selva, hcuccinello@businessinsider.com
Engineers from a Thames Water leak hunting team unloads equipment from their van during a night shift in London, UK, on Wednesday, May 2, 2023. The chief executive of Britain's biggest water supplier stepped down with immediate effect on Tuesday. Regulator Ofwat said Thames Water would come under heightened scrutiny and must re-evaluate its plans to improve operational performance, delivery and financial resilience. Ofwat approved £16.9 billion ($21.8 billion) in spending for the company to invest in improving services for customers and the environment — a sum below the £19.8 billion that Thames Water had requested. In spring this year, shareholders rejected its bid for a £500 million equity injection, while its parent company Kemble defaulted.
Persons: Ofwat, Kemble Organizations: Engineers, LONDON, Thames Water, Home Counties Locations: London, England, Thames, Home
Experts quoted in official media also discussed health hazards of the alleged practices. “Using chemical tankers for edible oils will inevitably result in residual contamination,” said Liu Shaowei, a food safety expert cited by CCTV. Several executives found to be responsible for the 2008 case were ultimately handed death sentences, and the tragedy drove deep mistrust of domestic products and food safety in China. Another case in 2022, also exposed by state media, showed how “dirty” pickled cabbage was supplied to popular instant noodle brands. Xi has repeatedly stressed the importance of food safety and the security of grain and food staple supplies.
Persons: Xi Jinping, , , Liu Shaowei, Liu, , , Xi, ” Xi, Yanzhong Huang, Huang, Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Oil Group, Council, CCTV, ” Communist Party, Weibo, Monday, CNN, Food Safety, Foreign Relations Locations: China, Hong Kong, Beijing, Communist, New York
A new report from Moody's on Wednesday warns that generative AI and deepfakes are among the election integrity issues that could present a risk to U.S. institutional credibility. In a letter to Rosenworcel, it encouraged the FCC to delay its decision until after the elections because its changes would not be mandatory across digital political ads. Some social media platforms have already self-adopted some sort of AI disclosure ahead of regulations. Google requires all political ads with modified content that "inauthentically depicts real or realistic-looking people or events" to have disclosures, but doesn't require AI disclosures on all political ads. Thirteen states have laws on election interference and deepfakes, eight of which were enacted since January.
Persons: Gregory Sobel, William Foster, Jessica Rosenworcel, Dan Ives, Ives, Tony Adams, Moody's, Abhi Srivastava, Secureworks, Adams, they've Organizations: Federal Communications, FCC, Federal, Commission, Wedbush Securities, Meta, Google, Facebook, Unit, United Nations Locations: Moody's, New Hampshire
The Federal Trade Commission on Tuesday sharply criticized pharmacy benefit managers, saying in a scathing 71-page report that “these powerful middlemen may be profiting by inflating drug costs and squeezing Main Street pharmacies.”The regulator’s study signals a significant ramping up of its scrutiny of benefit managers under the agency’s chair, Lina Khan. It represents a remarkable turnabout for an agency that has long taken a hands-off approach to policing these companies. has so far stopped short of bringing a lawsuit or other enforcement action against a benefit manager. But the industry fears that the report could lead to a formal investigation into its practices or to a lawsuit accusing benefit managers of anticompetitive conduct. The agency’s findings could also fuel legislative efforts in Congress and in the states to impose limits on the industry.
Persons: Lina Khan Organizations: Federal Trade Commission
Total: 25