OpenAI Co-Founder Leaves for Amazon-Backed Rival Anthropic
OpenAI co-founder John Schulman said in a post late Monday on social-media platform X that he wanted to focus more on AI alignment.
OpenAI co-founder John Schulman said in a post late Monday on social-media platform X that he wanted to focus more on AI alignment.
The wounds to a Palestinian detainee were so severe they needed surgery, triggering the rare decision by Israel to investigate its own reservists.
The unwinding of some of Wall Street’s most popular trades intensified, handing Japanese stocks their worst day since the 1987 market crash and walloping U.S. tech shares. The S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow shed 3%, 3.4% and 2.6%, respectively.
Fannie and Freddie are preparing to impose stricter rules for commercial-property lenders and brokers following a regulatory crackdown on fraud in the multitrillion-dollar market.
The investment firm that paid $375 million to Trump’s family firm for the rights to its luxury Washington, D.C., hotel lost the property in a foreclosure auction.
L’Oréal agreed to buy a minority stake in Swiss skin-care company Galderma valued at $1.85 billion.
Woodside Energy agreed to a roughly $2.35 billion deal to buy an ammonia plant being built for OCI in Texas.
Thrive Capital raised $5 billion for its largest-ever pair of venture-capital funds, a sign of how the AI boom is encouraging some startup investors to go big again.
A judge ruled that Google engaged in illegal practices to preserve its search engine monopoly, delivering a major antitrust victory to the Justice Department.
Infineon said it would cut about 1,400 jobs and again lowered its sales forecasts amid a persistent inventory glut in the semiconductor industry.
Studies being used to decide whether the U.S. should authorize an ecstasy-based drug for traumatized patients missed serious side effects and were marked by bias.
Recent economic turbulence threatens to reinforce voters’ view that the U.S. economy is shaky, giving Trump’s campaign a chance to shift onto stronger ground in his race against Harris.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., an independent candidate for the presidency, said he left a dead bear cub in New York’s Central Park a decade ago.
The U.S. and Mexico, both motivated by presidential elections this year, cooperated to cut the number of illegal crossings at the border, resulting in a stark decline in the past six months.
Debby was downgraded to a tropical storm after hitting Florida with heavy rain and leaving four people dead.
The Middle East braced for another round of violence after Secretary of State Blinken said on a call with G-7 foreign ministers that Iran could attack Israel within 24 to 48 hours.
Nine employees of the U.N. agency that for decades has assisted Palestinians in Gaza were fired after an investigation found they might have participated in the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel.
The Biden administration mounted a last-ditch appeal to Tehran, while also pushing to keep cease-fire talks alive.
Utilities are investing billions to upgrade infrastructure and build out green energy, passing budget-breaking costs to households.
The standard advice is to do nothing, but there are some exceptions.
The news outlet, which took disciplinary action against several staffers, says the premature article “could have endangered” the prisoner swap.
Does he think his opponent is Brian Kemp or Kamala Harris?
Biden is so far silent on this blatant election theft in the Americas.
The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals tosses a ‘universal service’ tax delegated by Congress to the FCC.
Jerome Powell must be wishing he had cut rates last week. He still has time to catch up to the market.