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Twitter users have long complained about the social media network, especially with recent turmoil after Elon Musk’s takeover last year.
A dizzying number of competitors have emerged, from Mastodon to Bluesky, but since launching Wednesday evening, Meta’s Threads so far seems to be sticking, even if its user experience differs from Twitter. It has attracted more than 30 million signups, including big names like Oprah Winfrey and the Dalai Lama.
The battle between tech rivals heated up when Twitter threatened a lawsuit, with an attorney accusing Meta of misusing the company’s “trade secrets and other intellectual property.”
BREAKING NEWS
OceanGate, the company that operated the Titan submersible that imploded in June, is suspending all exploration and commercial operations, according to its website. OceanGate had previously operated dives to the Titanic wreckage and to hydrothermal vents in Portugal, and had commercial offerings like underwater filming and deep sea testing, but the company has been under scrutiny for failing to meet industry standards for the Titan sub.
The Food and Drug Administration granted full approval to the anti-Alzheimer’s drug marketed as Leqembi, made by Biogen and Japanese drugmaker Eisai, just six months after it received accelerated approval. It’s the first Alzheimer’s treatment with full approval through the FDA, but experts have expressed concern over its severe and potentially fatal side effects.
BUSINESS + FINANCE
Major stock indexes posted one of their worst days in months as investors sell off ahead of further anticipated tightening measures from the Federal Reserve. The Dow Jones industrial average tanked as much as 520 points, or 1.5%, by midday, before recovering slightly to notch a 1% loss for the day, while the S&P and Nasdaq tumbled 0.8% apiece Thursday.
MORE MARKETS: The price of bitcoin briefly rose to a 13-month high Thursday as a long-awaited bitcoin ETF could finally become a reality. BlackRock last month filed an application to register its own bitcoin ETF, and CEO Larry Fink told Fox Business he believes bitcoin can “revolutionize finance.”
Layoffs fell nearly 50% from May to June to a seven-month low, a sign employers’ fears of an impending recession could be cooling. Still, cuts are up 25% from June last year, with major firms like KPMG, Ford and Grubhub slashing positions.
TECH + INNOVATION
Multiple analysts upgraded their outlook for Meta stock in the first hours following the Threads launch, suggesting Meta could add another $150 billion in market valuation despite its buzzy new platform having no revenue prospects. Meta was the second best-performing stock on the S&P 500 during 2023’s first half.
Electric car maker Tesla is on the verge of delivering fully driverless cars this year, billionaire CEO Elon Musk said on Thursday, though he’s made a number of failed predictions in this area. A number of technical breakthroughs are still needed to realize fully driverless cars, and experts are divided as to when this might actually happen.
MONEY + POLITICS
Social media companies are struggling to self-regulate deep fakes and AI-generated content on their platforms, and there’s a lack of regulation on how AI can be used in political campaigns. “These are threats to our very democracies,” says Hany Farid, an electrical engineering and computer science professor at UC Berkeley.
Walt Nauta, an aide to former President Donald Trump, pleaded not guilty to charges of helping Trump hide classified documents and lie to investigators about their whereabouts in a court hearing Thursday. Nauta was indicted last month alongside Trump in the Justice Department’s probe into Trump’s handling of classified documents after leaving office.
SPORTS + ENTERTAINMENT
Fans have recently thrown items onstage during concerts, ranging from their cellphones to their mother’s ashes, in some cases harming the performer, as was the case at a Bebe Rexha concert in June. It can also lead to criminal charges or other legal consequences for the offender.
In an attempt to compete with music streaming giants like Apple and Spotify, TikTok launched a new music streaming service called TikTok Music in Brazil and Indonesia, though it’s unclear when it could launch more broadly. It will allow TikTok users to sync their accounts to a TikTok Music account to save songs heard in viral TikTok videos and stream their full versions.
TRAVEL + LIFESTYLE
Nikola, a cash-strapped maker of zero-emission heavy-duty trucks, said California awarded it $41.9 million in grant funding to build some of the first U.S. fueling stations for hydrogen-powered semis, an alternative to carbon-spewing diesel models. Some of the six stations, designed to refuel up to 100 trucks a day, may open as soon as later this year.
JetBlue said it will wind down its alliance with American Airlines that a federal judge ruled was anticompetitive and turn its attention to the antitrust battle over its proposed $3.8 billion acquisition of Spirit Airlines. Decoupling from American Airlines makes it more likely that the Department of Justice will approve the merger, says airline analyst Savanthi Syth.
TRENDS + EXPLAINERS
There’s a correlation between higher temperatures and increased rates of crime during the summer months, which disproportionately affects impoverished, formerly redlined neighborhoods. About a quarter of all mass shootings this year have occurred since June 1.
DAILY COVER STORY
Why It Took A Civilian To Save The Military’s $8.5 Billion Retail Operation
TOPLINE A government entity is the 54th-largest retailer in the country, and one of the oldest.
The Army & Air Force Exchange Service, more commonly called the Exchange, is an $8.5 billion government-run retailing operation that manages over 2,000 big-box stores, convenience stores, gas stations and restaurants on U.S. Army and Air Force bases and more than 30 other nations where servicemembers are stationed.
For the 55,000 people who live or work on the Fort Cavazos base in Texas, for example, the PX store is the closest place by far to pick up pet food, shampoo, a pair of jeans or a new Xbox.
It’s technically under the Department of Defense, but the Exchange receives little in the way of government financial support. The arrangement allows the retailer to get free rent, avoid paying corporate taxes and be exempt from antitrust rules. Couple that with little debt and healthy cash flow, and it’s enough to earn unusually high marks from the credit agencies. Plus, the chance of a government bailout, if it were ever needed, doesn’t hurt.
But the customer base of active-duty personnel has declined 11% in the last decade, and when Tom Shull was brought on as CEO in 2012, the Dallas-based Exchange was a year away from running out of cash. A former soldier who went on to make a career reviving troubled retailers, Shull became the first civilian to run the Exchange and today is its longest-serving CEO.
Shull started by closing underperforming stores and persuading hundreds of employees to take early retirement. He spruced up the stores, started ditching private labels in favor of national brands and expanded the customer base.
Revenue has fallen 17% since Shull started, a function of the dwindling customer base and steep competition from Amazon and big-box stores. So his bigger focus has been squeezing every cent of profit he can from sales.
Instead of going to typical shareholder-friendly initiatives, like dividends or buybacks, profits help improve the quality of life on military bases and are reinvested into the business.
WHY IT MATTERS “Unless you live or work on a military base, you don’t hear much about PX stores,” Forbes reporter Lauren Debter says. “But the massive, government-run operation can be a lifeline to service members in the U.S. and overseas, offering duty-free staples like toiletries, clothes and toys. For this article, I traveled to Fort Cavazos in Killeen, Texas to see up close how its first civilian CEO has turned it around from the brink of bankruptcy and fashioned it into a retailer that can compete with Walmart.”
MORE Plenty More Retailers Will Go Bankrupt This Year. The Only Surprise Is It Didn’t Happen Sooner.
FACTS AND COMMENTS
PFAS, or “forever chemicals” that seep into the environment and can lead to adverse health outcomes, were recently found to be in 45% of U.S. tap water. PFAS have been used in everyday products from nonstick pans to firefighting foam since the 1940s and take a long time to break down:
25%: The probability of the chemicals not being in tap water in urban areas, versus 75% in rural areas
4 parts per trillion: The EPA’s proposed limits on the amount of forever chemicals that can be in drinking water, the lowest level that can be reliably measured
$1 billion: The amount the EPA will distribute “to help communities that are on the frontlines of PFAS contamination” in drinking water
STRATEGY AND SUCCESS
Most people with long careers have a disruption in their employment at some point, especially with recent economic downturns. When addressing gaps in employment during an interview, honestly and confidently describe what you did during that time and how you kept up with industry trends. Try practicing your response ahead of time.
VIDEO
QUIZ
Cocaine was discovered in the White House on Sunday, prompting an evacuation, though President Joe Biden wasn’t present. Which of the following musical icons has admitted in an autobiography to smoking at the White House?
A. Paul McCartney
B. Stevie Nicks
C. Willie Nelson
D. Robert Plant
Check your answer.
ACROSS THE NEWSROOM
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