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6 votes
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The Messenger shuts down amid journalism industry-wide layoffs
5 votes -
Baltimore Orioles agree to be sold to a group led by Baltimore native David Rubenstein for $1.7 billion
3 votes -
23andMe’s fall from $6 billion to nearly $0
25 votes -
A cycle of misery: The business of building commercial aircraft
6 votes -
Why Walmart pays its US truck drivers six figures
16 votes -
Fujitsu bugs that sent innocent people to prison were known “from the start” but concealed from lawyers and judges
104 votes -
Court orders China Evergrande property developer to liquidate after it failed to reach debt deal
23 votes -
Detroit’s LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce is helping create a business renaissance
10 votes -
Walkers’ Sensations Poppadoms vs HMRC: Crunch time
23 votes -
Boeing whistleblower: production line has “enormous volume of defects” bolts on MAX 9 weren’t installed
74 votes -
US companies including Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Starbucks are using new legal playbook against unions, experts say
30 votes -
‘No cash accepted’ signs are bad news for millions of unbanked Americans
55 votes -
HomeVestors (the “We Buy Ugly Houses” company) overhauls policies in the wake of ProPublica investigation
19 votes -
‘Impossible’ to create AI tools like ChatGPT without copyrighted material, OpenAI says
44 votes -
The farmers had what the billionaires wanted
23 votes -
Billionaire backers of new California city seek voter approval after stealthily snapping up farmland
27 votes -
Moose, maple syrup and monopolies: Is Canada finally taking on its oligarchs?
10 votes -
Exclusive: Reddit seeks to launch IPO in March
91 votes -
Half of recent US inflation due to high corporate profits, report finds
35 votes -
Food scientists at Finnish startup SuperGround have found a way to make chicken nuggets and fish cakes out of otherwise discarded bones and hard tissues
28 votes -
OpenAI quietly removes ban on military use of its AI tools
43 votes -
Cloudflare CEO says viral firing video is 'painful': 'We were far from perfect… We don't always get it right'
28 votes -
US judge blocks JetBlue-Spirit merger after DOJ’s antitrust challenge
12 votes -
A theory of grift
8 votes -
‘Don’t mess with us’: WebMD parent company demands return to office in bizarre video
68 votes -
To fight absenteeism, US schools turn to private companies
22 votes -
‘This has been going on for years.’ Inside Boeing’s manufacturing mess.
28 votes -
Will US companies hire fewer engineers due to Section 174?
20 votes -
Hertz is selling 20,000 electric vehicles to buy gasoline cars instead
26 votes -
Norway is to allow mining waste to be dumped in its fjords after the government won a court case against environmental organisations trying to block the plan
29 votes -
Red Sea attacks halt Tesla production at German plant
10 votes -
Piracy is surging again because streaming execs ignored the lessons of the past
136 votes -
You don’t need more resilience. You need friends. And money.
44 votes -
OECD urges Denmark to address gender stereotypes in education and suggested introducing quotas to get more women in top management
5 votes -
US radio giant Audacy files for bankruptcy
13 votes -
ABBA stars Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus have shared in a dividend of nearly £1m after a surge in profits at their production company Littlestar Services
6 votes -
Can Denmark's world-beating drugs maker Novo Nordisk stay ahead after Wegovy propelled them into the big league?
8 votes -
Blumhouse-Atomic Monster merger now complete
4 votes -
Pizza Hut is lying: They’re not firing their drivers because of a minimum wage hike
61 votes -
Breaking "DRM" in Polish trains. Reverse engineering a train to analyze a suspicious malfunction.
26 votes -
Six Flags | Bankrupt
12 votes -
Sweden's Aira, which offers subscription service at no upfront cost, has sights set on UK's growing heat pump market
14 votes -
Sweden's Modvion inaugurates world's tallest wooden wind turbine – 105m tower's strength comes from 144 layers of laminated veneer lumber that make its thick walls
12 votes -
We techies are responsible for "You'll own nothing, and you'll enjoy it."
This hit me while watching the latest Gamers Nexus video discussion with Wendell, and Steve recited the quote. It's often brought up as the inevitability of modern product ownership as company...
This hit me while watching the latest Gamers Nexus video discussion with Wendell, and Steve recited the quote.
It's often brought up as the inevitability of modern product ownership as company executives push profit-first practices like subscriptions, licenses and anti-right-to-repair designs. However this neglects the fact that these systems don't come from nowhere - they have to be built by programmers, engineers and designers.
I don't know if those same people support right-to-repair and freedom to manipulate what you buy in their private lives (or if they have even thought about it), but it seems like every techie I speak to does support it, yet somehow these things keep getting made.
I want to try and escape my bubble about this. I don't believe the engineers are powerless against the executives - if the engineering community works together and don't backstab, I think these systems can be prevented at the technical level and never see the light of day.
What happens at these notorious companies (John Deere, Apple etc.) that I'm missing? Is the lure of money too great? Is the threat of being back stabbed too large?
41 votes -
Manchester United reaches agreement for Sir Jim Ratcliffe to acquire 25% of the company
13 votes -
"The secretive industry destroying the economy" (it's private equity)
16 votes -
Cummins pickup truck engines systematically tricked US air pollution controls, feds say
38 votes -
Warner Bros. Discovery in talks to merge with Paramount Global
20 votes -
Sculptor sues Swedish glassmaker Kosta Boda for €1m in test of EU ‘bestseller clause’ – landmark case may open door to retrospective claims across bloc
6 votes