The Wall Street Journal: Meta pays Buzzfeed nearly $10 million to generate content for Facebook, Instagram
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I’m Suing Meta So Users of Facebook Can Control the Content They See
We must be able to create a more civic-minded internet, with tools that would empower users to better control what they see.The New York Times - Top stories - Facebook -
'Green Shoots' Grow Out of Control on Wall Street
Bankers are dropping the phrase like seeds at spring planting, optimistic about signs of an end to dealmaking’s long freeze.The Wall Street Journal - World -
Wall Street Bonuses Expected to Rise This Year
A buoyant stock market, an IPO uptick,and rising investment banking deal counts will meanpayouts as much as 25 percent higher than 2023.Inc. - Business -
US job market shows signs of cooling, with just 175,000 jobs added in April
The latest snapshot on US employment was a shocker: The economy added 175,000 jobs, far below expectations for 235,000 and a reversal of the trend for robust monthly gains.CNN - Top stories -
Talent war between family offices and Wall Street drives up salaries
Wealthy families are spending an average of $3 million to run their family offices, according to a J.P. Morgan Private report, and the biggest cost is staffing.CNBC - Business -
Stock Market Rises After Jobs Report Revives Investors’ Hopes for a Rate Cut
A cooler-than-expected jobs report for April shifted the tone on Wall Street, rekindling investors’ expectations that the Federal Reserve may cut rates soon.The New York Times - Business -
Top Wall Street analysts suggest these dividend stocks for income investors
TipRanks' analyst ranking service highlights Wall Street's best-performing stocks, including Coca-Cola and Energy TransferCNBC - Business -
The Office-Market Meltdown Comes for Trump's Prized Wall Street Building
Donald Trump’s downtown Manhattan office tower has lost tenants and has a big mortgage bill coming due next year.The Wall Street Journal - World - Donald Trump -
Qantas to pay A$100 million fine for selling tickets for canceled flights
Qantas said it has agreed to pay a civil penalty of 100 million Australian dollars (US$66.1 million) to resolve court proceedings with a regulator which alleged the airline had advertised tickets for more than 8,000 flights it had already canceled.MarketWatch - Business -
Qantas to Pay $79 Million For Selling Tickets on Canceled Flights
Qantas, Australia’s national carrier, apologized and said it would pay a fine and compensation to settle a suit brought by a consumer watchdog.The New York Times - Business -
When journalism is exiled
The journalist who exposed this corruption scandal in Maduro's regime hasn’t set foot in his home country in more than five years.The Hill - Politics -
U.S. stocks rally on ‘Goldilocks’ jobs report as Wall Street’s fear gauge slides
U.S. stocks have swung to an upbeat start in May, with Wall Street’s “fear gauge” easing to its lowest level since the end of March as investor anxieties tied to inflation appeared to subside.MarketWatch - Business -
How Goldman grew up: 25 years since Wall Street’s elite firm went public
Lloyd Blankfein, Hank Paulson, David Solomon and others on what has changed since its seminal listing in 1999Financial Times - Business -
R.F.K. Jr. Claims Censorship After Facebook and Instagram Briefly Block New Ad
The ad, a sleek 30-minute production, was blocked for several hours on Friday and Saturday. Meta, which owns both platforms, said the link had been incorrectly flagged as spam.The New York Times - Top stories - Facebook -
Confronting the audience and breaking the fourth wall: why Black drama is getting meta
On stage and screen, self-referential works such as A Strange Loop and American Fiction are on the rise, with playful postmodernism a potent weapon in the fight against inequality. Officers storm a ballroom, releasing a flurry of bullets that ...The Guardian - World -
Heineken vows nearly $50 million to transform "tired pubs" in U.K.
Heineken said the investment is a demonstration of "confidence in the resilience of the great British local in the face of uncertainty."CBS News - Top stories -
Settlement could cost NCAA nearly $3 billion; plan to pay athletes would need federal protection
The NCAA and major college conferences are considering a possible settlement of an antitrust lawsuit that could cost them billions in damages and force schools to share athletics-related revenue with their athletesABC News - Sports -
Vendor that mishandled Pennsylvania virus data to pay $2.7 million in federal whistleblower case
A staffing company that performed COVID-19 contact tracing for Pennsylvania and exposed the private medical information of about 72,000 residents will pay $2.7 million in a settlement with the U.S. Justice Department and a whistleblowerABC News - Health -
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Qantas agrees to pay $79 million in compensation and a fine for selling seats on canceled flights
Qantas Airways has agreed to pay $79 million in compensation and a fine for selling tickets on thousands of cancelled flightsABC News - World