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| Don't like ads? Go ad-free with TradeBriefs Premium CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer! S8 S36Change Healthcare Faces Another Ransomware Threat--and It Looks Credible  For months, Change Healthcare has faced an immensely messy ransomware debacle that has left hundreds of pharmacies and medical practices across the United States unable to process claims. Now, thanks to an apparent dispute within the ransomware criminal ecosystem, it may have just become far messier still.In March, the ransomware group AlphV, which had claimed credit for encrypting Change HealthcareâÂÂs network and threatened to leak reams of the companyâÂÂs sensitive health care data, received a $22 million paymentâÂÂevidence, publicly captured on BitcoinâÂÂs blockchain, that Change Healthcare had very likely caved to its tormentorsâ ransom demand, though the company has yet to confirm that it paid. But in a new definition of a worst-case ransomware, a different ransomware group claims to be holding Change HealthcareâÂÂs stolen data and is demanding a payment of their own.
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S9The consequences of traveling in a straight line forever   The Universe is a vast, wondrous, and strange place. From our perspective within it, we can see out for some 46 billion light-years in all directions. Everywhere we look, we see a Universe filled with stars and galaxies, but are they all unique? Is it possible, perhaps, that if you look far enough in one direction and see a galaxy, that you’d also see that same galaxy, from a different perspective, in the opposite direction? Could the Universe actually loop back on itself? And if you traveled far enough in a straight line, would you eventually return to your starting point, just as if you traveled in any one direction for long enough on the surface of the Earth? Or would something stop you?It’s a fascinating question to consider, and one that Bill Powers wants us to investigate, asking:
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S10How Quine's rabbit can teach you to be a better communicator   Imagine two anthropologists, Willard and Orman, who stumble over some never-before-seen tribe. There is the usual first-contact kind of behavior: pointing, laughing, and frustrated misunderstandings. It becomes apparent that the anthropologists need to decipher this tribe’s language. But, without Google Translate or pocket dictionaries, it turns out that working out a language from scratch is hard work. One day, a hunting party and the anthropologists are out in a woodland clearing when a rabbit bolts past. A tribesman points excitedly and shouts, “Gavagai!”“Aha!” Orman shouts, “We now know that gavagai is their word for rabbit.” And he goes to take out his nascent dictionary. His friend raises a hand to stop him.
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S18Immigrant Labor Is the Secret Sauce to Bubbling U.S. Economy   Having fled economic and political chaos in Venezuela, Luisana Silva now loads carpets for a South Carolina rug company. She earns enough to pay rent, buy groceries, gas up her car--and send money home to her parents.Reaching the United States was a harrowing ordeal. Silva, 25, her husband and their then-7-year-old daughter braved the treacherous jungles of Panama's Darien Gap, traveled the length of Mexico, crossed the Rio Grande and then turned themselves in to the U.S. Border Patrol in Brownsville, Texas. Seeking asylum, they received a work permit last year and found jobs in Rock Hill, South Carolina.
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S24Model Taylor Hill Is Getting Into the Pet Care Category With Her New Business, Tate & Taylor   Instead of ending the project, Hill channeled her grief into an opportunity to help other pet lovers. Launched today, Tate & Taylor is an online community platform for pet parents that features a Shopify-powered marketplace of Hill's favorite pet products; so far, the site features 23 SKUs, including a "F*ck Cancer" merchandise line, which donates a portion of profits to the Buddy Fund at the Schwarzman Animal Medical Center to help fund pet medical costs and rescue organizations like Animal Aid USA. Starting a business wasn't a walk in the park for Hill. Without a business school education, she says she accumulated knowledge through speaking with friends, family, and her extended network. She sent surveys to pet owners to identify gaps in the market and spent two years developing her brand. "You can't build a business alone," Hill says.Â
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S37House Votes to Extend--and Expand--a Major US Spy Program  A controversial US wiretap program days from expiration cleared a major hurdle on its way to being reauthorized.After months of delays, false starts, and interventions by lawmakers working to preserve and expand the US intelligence communityâÂÂs spy powers, the House of Representatives voted on Friday to extend Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) for two years.
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S43What Is Pollution Doing to Our Brains? 'Exposomics' Reveals Links to Many Diseases   The new science of "exposomics" shows how air pollution contributes to Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, bipolar disorder and other brain diseasesBy 1992, burgeoning population, choking traffic, and explosive industrial growth in Mexico City had caused the United Nations to label it the most polluted urban area in the world. The problem was intensified because the high-altitude metropolis sat in a valley trapping that atmospheric filth in a perpetual toxic haze. Over the next few years, the impact could be seen not just in the blanket of smog overhead but in the city’s dogs, who had become so disoriented that some of them could no longer recognize their human families. In a series of elegant studies, the neuropathologist Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas compared the brains of canines and children from “Makesicko City,” as the capital had been dubbed, to those from less polluted areas. What she found was terrifying: Exposure to air pollution in childhood decreases brain volume and heightens risk of several dreaded brain diseases, including Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, as an adult.
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S23How Elon Musk Leaned on Starlink to Achieve Profitability at SpaceX   Elon Musk has grown SpaceX revenue by upwards of 500 percent in five years, largely thanks to the success of its satellite internet service Starlink. But new reports question the profitability of the business.Musk's aerospace company SpaceX grew from operating with a net loss on revenue of $1.45 billion in 2019 to an operating profit of about $3 billion on $9 billion in revenue in 2023, according to the Information and documents viewed by TechCrunch. In the five years since, Starlink has become a major part of the aerospace company's business model. A separate report from Bloomberg, however, suggests the costs associated with the satellite program may undermine some of its profitability claims.
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S21Could AI Help With Your Team's Burnout?   In the next year, 41 percent of CEOs are planning to increase their investment in generative AI, according to a new survey of 100 U.S. CEOs from KPMG. Nearly seven in 10 see it filling talent gaps in a still-tight labor market. But 61 percent want their teams to use the technology to "automate mundane tasks to better manage their workload and relieve stress," according to the report.  In fact, on the list of ways that CEOs are aiming to reduce burnout and support employee well-being, AI ranks above team development, manager training, and the four-day workweek. With the help of AI, people could have "more time to focus on creative, strategic work," said Sandy Torchia, vice chair of talent and culture at KPMG, in an email. Â
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S7A Wandering Mind: How Travel Can Change the Way You Think   Here’s a situation familiar to many of us: We decide to take a vacation and go somewhere exotic. We plan the trip and mark our calendars, and as the date gets closer we get increasingly excited. Before we step on the plane, the possibilities seem endless. Anything could happen! Accidental encounters and adventures could change our lives!We go. We have a good time. We see what we wanted to and enjoy the break from work. Upon returning home, we share the pictures and recount some of our experiences with friends. We give away the souvenirs. We step back into our lives. The glow fades and we settle to planning the next round of travel in our daydreams.
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Editor's Note: Travel without participation and reflection is entertainment. Try to notice yourself in the journey, and capture the experience and insights when you interact with all the new things you are confronted with. You can get more out of your travel by using mental models to weave yourself into the experience, and come away enriched as well as entertained and rested. S17Eva Longoria Just Joined Siete Foods as It Seeks to Grow Sales From $500 Million to $1 Billion   On Thursday, the Austin-based packaged food company announced that Longoria was investing an undisclosed sum in the company and will serve as a strategic adviser. Siete, an Inc. 2023 Best Workplaces honoree, expects to hit $500 million in annual sales in 2024 and sells its products at 37,000 stores, including Target, Walmart, and many grocery stores. With this partnership, the goal is to double that revenue to a billion dollars per year, Forbes reported."I'm a long-standing fan of Siete's products, but more important, I feel deeply aligned with their mission," Longoria said when the partnership was announced. "As a fellow Texan who is dedicated to elevating Latinos in business, I'm very excited to partner with Siete and contribute to their next chapter."
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S6Editor's Note: Epirus' Leonidas Counter-Uncrewed Aerial System produces a powerful beam of microwaves, which generates currents inside electronic devices, causing them to overload. At best, electronics suffer temporary faults; at worst, components completely burn out. Either way, the microwave weapon effectively zaps drones out of the sky. S194 Ways to Prepare Your Business for a Private Equity Investment   Imagine yourself embarking on a climbing expedition. You wouldn't just throw on a pair of sneakers and head out, right? You'd research the route, train your body for the rigorous conditions, and gather the necessary gear. The same could be said about approaching a private equity partner. It requires thoughtful preparation to secure the capital and expertise needed to scale your ambitions.Every company eventually encounters a plateau in its organic growth trajectory. Even with an inspired vision, a proven product or service, and a dedicated customer base, reaching the next peak often requires an infusion of capital and strategic expertise. That's where PE firms come in. Their resources and expertise can be invaluable for everything from operational investments and scaling to strategic marketing and identifying mergers and acquisitions opportunities.
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S11The case for stopping efforts to contact aliens   The new Netflix series 3 Body Problem, based on Cixin Liu’s epic science-fiction trilogy, reignites an old debate among researchers concerned with the possibility of extraterrestrial communication. In the fictional account (spoiler ahead!), the trouble starts when one of the characters beams a powerful radio signal out into space. Is that realistic? And is it likely aliens could receive and decode the messages we send?The answer to the first question is a clear yes. In fact, more than 25 relatively weak signals have already been sent, with the first being a three-word morse code message in 1962. Nearly all of these radio messages targeted specific stars between 17 and 69 light-years away, in the hope that inhabited planets might be orbiting them. One exception is the Arecibo message that was beamed in 1974 toward M13, a globular star cluster approximately 24,000 light-years away. The Morimoto-Hirabayashi Message sent in 1983 should have reached the star Altair in 1999, and there’s been plenty of time for us to receive an answer. So far…nothing.
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S20Here's How One Startup Is Cutting Emissions From Cement Making   It's a major contributor to climate change--the way buildings and roads are made with concrete. It's also a problem that's growing as more of the world develops. So the race has been on to find solutions for a material that's responsible for roughly 8 percent of global carbon dioxide emissions.Now one California startup has developed a technology that reduces carbon dioxide in the making of cement and could have the potential to operate at large scale. Fortera intercepts carbon dioxide exhaust from the kilns where cement is made and routes it back in to make additional cement. In its first effort at commercial scale, the technology is being added to a CalPortland facility in Redding, California, one of the largest cement plants in the western U.S. It opens Friday.
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S25Research: How to Close the Gender Gap in Startup Financing   A global analysis of previous research over the last three decades shows that women entrepreneurs face a higher rate of business loan denials and increased interest rates in loan decisions made by commercial bankers. Interestingly, the data also reveals that the formal and informal standing of women in a particular society can provide clues to some of the true hurdles to positive change. This article reviews these hurdles, and offers three recommendations for change.
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S40Black Scientists Are Building Their Own Vital Communities   A person-centric scientific conference demonstrates that gathering can counter the isolation of underrepresentation“Started from the Bottom” by Drake blared over the speakers, as more than 200 scientists turned toward the back of the room. The double doors burst open, and marine ecologist Tiara Moore danced down the aisle in a bright pink bra and blazer. She strutted to the podium and grabbed the mic, opened with a note on body positivity, and reveled in the Black community she has built.
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S44Massive Cosmic Map Suggests Dark Energy Is Even Weirder Than We Thought   In just one year of observations, a program that is creating the largest 3D map of the universe to date has sniffed out hints that dark energy may be stranger than scientists supposedDESI has made the largest 3D map of our universe to date. Earth is at the center of this thin slice of the full map. In the magnified section, it is easy to see the underlying structure of matter in our universe.
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S13Sex in 3 places: Your brain, your bedroom, and in society   Let our sponsor BetterHelp connect you to a therapist who can support you – all from the comfort of your own home. Visit https://betterhelp.com/bigthink and enjoy a special discount on your first month.Is polyamory a sustainable model for societies? Do partners really need to maintain the “spark” to have a healthy sex life? And should sex, romantic love, and attachment be viewed as phases of a relationship or as systems in the brain?
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S45 S50 S12Can chatbots hold meaningful conversations?   Arseny Moskvichev dreams of the day he can have a meaningful conversation with artificial intelligence. “By meaningful, I mean a conversation that has the power to change you,” says the cognitive and computer scientist. “The problem,” says Moskvichev, “is that LLMs are complete amnesiacs. They only have so much context they can attend to. If you’re out of this context, they forget everything you spoke about with them.”Even the most advanced chatbots can only process about 16,000 words of text within a prompt when in conversation with a human user. This is called a “context window.” And they can’t connect the information they receive during different “conversations” with a human, or build a storyline.
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S14Do you really need to use toothpaste?   Billions of people around the world dutifully brush their teeth with toothpaste every day, but some are starting to question this status quo. These contrarians see sense in brushing but aren’t sure whether the paste is really necessary. And it’s not just laypersons wondering out loud about this apparent blasphemy — critiques are coming from dentists themselves.“While toothpaste manufacturers claim that you need toothpaste to brush your teeth, it’s not true. Toothpaste is not necessary to make your teeth clean or healthy,” writes Dr. Todd Bertman of New York’s Advanced Dental Arts.
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S15Here's What Business Owners Need to Know About Their Gen Z Employees   Members of Gen Z, people born between 1995 to 2010--give or take a few years--are entering the workforce in big numbers. They're arriving with a fair bit of unflattering reputational baggage bestowed by older age cohorts that call them lazy, willful, and allergic to criticism. Those labels are may arise from clashing generational perspectives, experts say--differences company owners and managers need to address quickly for the sake of their businesses.The urgency for companies to improve their views of and relations with Gen Z employees is driven by their bulging numbers in the workforce. After decades of decreasing percentages of younger people at work, Gen Z began charging en masse into the job market before and during the pandemic. Among U.S. 16- to 19-year-olds, 37 percent are working, and according to a Washington Post story their age cohort will represent more than a third of everyone employed by 2032.
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S26What to Do When Your Team Blames You   When you’re a manager, at some point, regardless of how the circumstances arise, your team will blame you for something that’s making them unhappy, whether you have control over it or not. Being accused by your team of failing them in some way induces a threat state in your brain, impairing your ability to think clearly and triggering a variety of cognitive distortions and defensive behaviors. The authors offer several strategies to help you work through the experience while keeping important relationships intact.
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S3 S38How to Get the Most Out of a One-on-One with Your Boss   Regular one-on-one meetings with your boss may seem like just a routine way for them to check in on your work, but especially if you’re just starting out, these conversations can fundamentally influence your workplace experience, your relationship with your manager, and your future growth and success. The author has studied these meetings and found that they are most successful when centered around the employee’s needs. Here are five critical behaviors for you to use in your first one-on-one with your boss.
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S22Mug Root Beer Celebrates UConn's NCAA Victory With Free Drinks: Why It's a Winning Marketing Play   March Madness is over, and for the second year in a row, the University of Connecticut Huskies have secured the NCAA Men's Basketball National Championship. It's a win that Mug Root Beer is celebrating by offering free root beer to fans nationwide.The Pepsi-owned brand announced this offer at the beginning of the tournament on social media, stating that it would provide the freebie if any of the 17 teams with a dog as a mascot won March Madness. And on Monday, after UConn took home the trophy, the company followed through with posts on both Instagram and TikTok, offering instructions for redeeming the offer.
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S46 S47 S16Amazon Names AI Maven Andrew Ng to Board   The Seattle company said Thursday that Ng, a managing director at the Palo Alto, California-based AI Fund, will replace a seat vacated by Judy McGrath, a former CEO of MTV who told Amazon she won't run for reelection.Ng's AI Fund, which he founded in 2017, invests in entrepreneurs building artificial intelligence companies. Previously, he led AI teams at the Chinese tech company Baidu and Google, where the team he oversaw taught a computer system to recognize cats in YouTube videos without ever being taught what a cat was.
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S33Tech Leaders Once Cried for AI Regulation. Now the Message Is 'Slow Down'  The other night I attended a press dinner hosted by an enterprise company called Box. Other guests included the leaders of two data-oriented companies, Datadog and MongoDB. Usually the executives at these soirees are on their best behavior, especially when the discussion is on the record, like this one. So I was startled by an exchange with Box CEO Aaron Levie, who told us he had a hard stop at dessert because he was flying that night to Washington, DC. He was headed to a special-interest-thon called TechNet Day, where Silicon Valley gets to speed-date with dozens of Congress critters to shape what the (uninvited) public will have to live with. And what did he want from that legislation? âÂÂAs little as possible,â Levie replied. âÂÂI will be single-handedly responsible for stopping the government.âÂÂHe was joking about that. Sort of. He went on to say that while regulating clear abuses of AI like deepfakes makes sense, itâÂÂs way too early to consider restraints like forcing companies to submit large language models to government-approved AI cops, or scanning chatbots for things like bias or the ability to hack real-life infrastructure. He pointed to Europe, which has already adopted restraints on AI as an example of what not to do. âÂÂWhat Europe is doing is quite risky,â he said. âÂÂThere's this view in the EU that if you regulate first, you kind of create an atmosphere of innovation,â Levie said. âÂÂThat empirically has been proven wrong.âÂÂ
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S34Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 4 Review: Big but Still Beautiful  If you buy something using links in our stories, we may earn a commission. This helps support our journalism. Learn more. Please also consider subscribing to WIREDHow much is great sound worth to you? Sennheiser's top wireless earbuds ask that question in more ways than one. The previous version, the True Wireless 3, was praised by reviewers, but some users raised issues like battery drain and connection glitches. The Momentum True Wireless 4 set out to address these complaints with an all-new battery system among "over a dozen major upgrades," according to Sennheiser.
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S35Can You Really Run on Top of a Train, Like in the Movies?  Just because you see something done in a movie, that doesn't mean you should try it yourself. Take, for example, a human running on top of a moving train. For starters, you can't be sure it's real. In early Westerns, they used moving backdrops to make fake trains look like they were in motion. Now there's CGI. Or they might speed the film up to make a real train look faster than it really is.So here's a question for you: Is it possible to run on a train roof and leap from one car to the next? Or will the train zoom ahead of you while you're in the air, so that you land behind where you took off? Or worse, would you end up falling between the cars because the gap is moving forward, lengthening the distance you have to traverse? This, my friend, is why stunt actors study physics.
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S42Did Space Junk Strike a Home in Florida?   Three years ago astronauts threw out the largest piece of trash ever tossed from the International Space Station. Now some of it seems to have punched a hole through a house in Naples, Fla.A heavy pallet filled with tons of spent nickel-hydrogen batteries drifts above the Earth in March 2021, shortly after being discarded from the International Space Station. A nearly two-pound metallic cylinder that recently struck a house in Florida may be debris from the pallet’s uncontrolled atmospheric reentry.
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S41A Random Influx of DNA from a Virus Helped Vertebrates Become So Stunningly Successful   Insertion of genetic material from a virus into the genome of a vertebrate ancestor enabled the lightning-quick electrical impulses that give animals with backbones their smartsCharles Darwin proposed that evolution is driven by gradual variations in organisms that have a survival advantage in a changing environment. But University of Maryland evolutionary biologist Karen Carleton says that scientists have long grappled with the quandary that “evolution can happen abruptly, as described by Steven Jay Gould in [the theory of] punctuated equilibrium.” The question has always been: How does this happen?
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| S1The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows: Uncommonly Lovely Invented Words for What We Feel but Cannot Name   “Words are events, they do things, change things. They transform both speaker and hearer; they feed energy back and forth and amplify it. They feed understanding or emotion back and forth and amplify it,” Ursula K. Le Guin wrote in her exquisite manifesto for the magic of real human conversation. Each word is a portable cathedral in which we clarify and sanctify our experience, a reliquary and a laboratory, holding the history of our search for meaning and the pliancy of the possible future, of there being richer and deeper dimensions of experience than those we name in our surface impressions. In the roots of words we find a portal to the mycelial web of invisible connections undergirding our emotional lives — the way “sadness” shares a Latin root with “sated” and originally meant a fulness of experience, the way “holy” shares a Latin root with “whole” and has its Indo-European origins in the notion of the interleaving of all things.
Because we know their power, we ask of words to hold what we cannot hold — the complexity of experience, the polyphony of voices inside us narrating that experience, the longing for clarity amid the confusion. There is, therefore, singular disorientation to those moments when they fail us — when these prefabricated containers of language turn out too small to contain emotions at once overwhelmingly expansive and acutely specific.
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S2Editor's Note: All would be made right. "There will be no victims," he promised. "I personally declare that I will return to Turkey within a few days and ensure that the facts are revealed in cooperation with judicial authorities and that I will do my best to prevent users from suffering". Of course, there was this possibility too: He was in the midst of pulling off the biggest heist in Turkey's history. S30 S31'Civil War' Review: Alex Garland Plays Both Sides  When director Alex Garland sat down in 2020 to write his new movie, Civil War, he was clearly worried about the polarization of American society. The Covid-19 pandemic was just beginning to take hold, and former US president Donald Trump was still in the White House. It was a much different country from the one in which Garland is releasing his biggest film to date.The divisions Garland worried about have only increased, driven by rampant conspiratorial thinking around Covid and vaccines, Trump's baseless stolen-election conspiracies, a growing right-wing media empire spewing disinformation, and, of course, the attack on the US Capitol.
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S32The More People Say 'Megalopolis' Is Unsellable, the More We Need to See It  Of all the utterly depressing things printed in the Hollywood trades on any given day, this has got to be among the worst: "It's so not good, and it was so sad watching it ⦠This is not how Coppola should end his directing career."This was in response to an early screening of Francis Ford Coppola's Megalopolis, a $120 million sci-fi epic that the legendary Godfather director has been trying to make for roughly four decades. The quote, from an unnamed "studio head," was published in a piece in The Hollywood Reporter positioning the film as the kind of movie no one in the business wants to funnel money into because it (allegedly) doesn't have box office potential. While that quote was, in journalism parlance, the kicker, the real zinger came in the addendum at the end: "This story has been updated to include that Megalopolis will premiere in Cannes."
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S48"Ban Chinese electric vehicles now," demands US senator   Influential US Senator Sherrod Brown (D–Ohio) has called on US President Joe Biden to ban electric vehicles from Chinese brands. Brown calls Chinese EVs "an existential threat" to the US automotive industry and says that allowing imports of cheap EVs from Chinese brands "is inconsistent with a pro-worker industrial policy."
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S29 S49Google kills "One" VPN service, says "people simply weren't using it"   Another day, another dead Google product. The Google One VPN service we complained about last week is headed to the chopping block. Google's support documents haven't been updated yet, but Android Authority reported on an email going out to Google One users informing them of the shutdown. 9to5Google also got confirmation of the shutdown from Google.
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S5Editor's Note: "The body is great at adaptation," she said, but to maximize benefits, you want to "keep your body guessing". Variety also is good for heart health, including blood pressure. S4 S27This delivery app takes away health insurance when workers don't meet quotas   Delivery worker Rakesh was dropping off food orders in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad in late January when he received a distressing call from his wife — she was in severe pain. Over the next three weeks, Rakesh had to drop everything to go to hospitals seeking a diagnosis for her.Until then, Rakesh had been a “gold” level gig worker for Swiggy, India’s second-largest food delivery app. He delivered at least 100 orders a week, over 14-hour shifts. The prestigious ranking made him and his family eligible for company-sponsored health insurance, among other benefits. But by the time a gynecologist recommended an urgent procedure — which cost 1,20,000 rupees ($1,440) — for Rakesh’s wife, she was no longer covered by Swiggy’s insurance. He had missed days of work while attending to her health, which caused his app ranking to drop to silver, making his family ineligible for company benefits.
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S39Tides Move Heaven and Earth More Than You Know   The ocean’s twice-daily rise and fall is only the most obvious effect of tides—they slow Earth’s spin and shape stars and galaxies, tooThe Tadpole Galaxy, as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope. This galaxy’s long “tail” is a stream of stars, gas and dust shaped by tidal forces from an intergalactic close encounter.
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