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Today — 22 December 2024Main stream

I work at Microsoft and teach a Stanford Online course on AI. These are my tips for non-technical workers.

22 December 2024 at 01:27
Aditya Challapally headshot
I work at Microsoft and teach a Stanford Online course about generative AI.

Aditya Challapally

  • Aditya Challapally teaches a Stanford Online course on generative AI for tech-adjacent professionals.
  • Challapally explained how individuals can skill up technically or become an AI domain expert.
  • He also said using tools like ChatGPT or Claude can help people understand AI better.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Aditya Challapally, a 30-year-old Microsoft employee who teaches a course for Stanford Online about generative AI. This story has been edited for length and clarity.

I started working in AI about a decade ago. I started as a data science intern at Uber, then did AI consulting at McKinsey, and later joined Microsoft, where I now work on Copilot.

I started guest teaching at Stanford four years ago and recently co-created a course called Mastering Generative AI for Product Innovation, which launched on Stanford Online in August 2024. It's an online, self-paced course that runs throughout the year. All of the research comes from talking to 300-plus users and 50-plus executives.

A lot of the people who take the class are tech adjacent, such as customer support representatives for a technical product, or product managers for a software or hardware product. They'll often be working on somewhat of a technical product and the course helps them understand gen AI a little bit more.

We teach three modules in this course. The first module explains what Gen AI is and where the biggest opportunities are. In the second module, we talk about what great Gen AI products look like.

The third module talks about how great Gen AI products are built and what individuals can do to set themselves up to be more influential, relevant, and useful when building Gen AI products.

These are the two main pathways you can take to do so.

Track 1: Skill up technically

When I go out and talk to Fortune 500 leaders, they say that their most burning need is for professionals who bridge both worlds — those who understand the business requirements but also understand the technical requirements.

This doesn't necessarily mean that you have to learn how to code, but you at least need to have enough technical literacy that you can translate product visions into technical requirements.

The beginner version is just getting really good at prompt engineering. This sounds like it would be quite basic, but understanding the exact limitations of prompts and all of the different tools across text, audio, and image makes you already very valuable in a business setting because you can help generate ideas even before they get to the technical team.

At an intermediate stage you also should start to understand a little bit about how gen AI systems work in systems design, like how gen AI models can be called within your data boundary.

Companies have data boundaries for which they have an agreement with their customers that their data can't go beyond. So if you're a bank, you may have an agreement with your customers that only the bank will use their information. If you send that in some sort of chat to OpenAI, that would be breaking the company data boundary. So something as simple as knowing that is already really helpful.

In the advanced stage of this track, there are two options.

Some people who don't work in big companies go deeper into understanding coding a little more. People who work in Big Tech companies usually dive deeper into system architecture. So they'll understand things like data boundaries and data flow diagrams in a lot more detail.

Track 2: Become an AI expert for your industry

The domain expertise track is where business people automatically lean toward and have an advantage. This is not necessarily knowing more about the industry, but knowing how gen AI can apply to the domain in more detail.

For example, in finance, you have to know things like what data you can use to train a specific model. You also have to know things like what types of privacy and security regulations you have to go through to get an app approved or release a gen AI-related app.

This skillset is so valuable that companies pay large amounts to consultants that have this specialized expertise. I know this guy who used to work as an operations manager at a bank and he figured out where gen AI was the most valuable. Now, companies will just call him to figure out where to launch their gen AI product.

Use the tools and learn their limitations to improve your prompts

The best thing I see people do is try to automate a lot of their lives with gen AI. They use ChatGPT or Claude for everything and that helps them understand the limitations of AI really well and how to prompt it.

When beginners start to use gen AI, they're not used to what I call the abundance of intelligence. They'll say "Can you give me a response to this text message?"

Experts who use gen AI a lot will say something like, "Can you give me 20 responses to this text message?" And then they'll go and use their taste to pick one.

Outside of work, I use it in many ways to think through a lot of plans. It's really helpful as a thought partner for me, even if for communication, for general planning, or for something even as banal as trip planning.

Instead of asking a friend for advice you should think about asking an LLM or a chatbot for advice. That's when you really start to understand how it's useful.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Before yesterdayMain stream

She's worked at nearly every FAANG company. In her free time, she built a free tool to appeal health insurance denials.

17 December 2024 at 10:56
Holden Karau in pink jacket
Canadian Holden Karau decided to create Fight Health Insurance after her own frustrations navigating the US healthcare system.

Holden Karau

  • Holden Karau works in Big Tech during the day and builds her startup, Fight Health Insurance, at night.
  • Karau said personal experiences with health insurance denials led her to create the platform.
  • The platform uses AI and machine learning to streamline the insurance appeal process.

Holden Karau works as an open-source engineer in California — but just about every day after work, she's building Fight Health Insurance, a free AI-powered platform designed to help people appeal healthcare claim denials.

The 38-year-old Canadian has worked in the big data space for years, previously holding jobs at every FAANG company aside from Facebook.

Karau told Business Insider that while she had never worked on anything healthcare-related, her personal experiences with health insurance claim denials in the US led her to create an open-source tool to automate as much of the appeals process as possible.

Karau said that she's "seen different healthcare systems and the trade-offs," and the Canadian version isn't "perfect either." However, she grew increasingly frustrated with the US healthcare system while seeking out trans healthcare in California and recovering from a motorcycle crash.

Karau said denied claims lead to "a lot of suffering in the world today," and those challenges led her to start working on the AI project to help dispute health insurance denials.

"I'm not going to put up with this anymore. It's time to fight back," Karau said she told herself as she set out to build the tool. "And I think that's probably where the name came from."

She told BI that a later experience navigating her dog's pet insurance pushed her "over the edge" and made her determined to turn the proof of concept into a consumer product other people could use.

"I was like, I've had enough. This needs to not just be like a curiosity," Karau said. She wanted to "make it accessible to the average person," which factored into the decision to make it a free service.

Now, anyone in the US can generate an appeal with Fight Health Insurance by inserting some basic information, uploading a claim denial letter, and, if relevant, their plan documents.

The platform uses machine learning to identify and confirm details, and a fine-tuned large language model to pull data from PubMed, Karau said. The company uses an in-house AI tuned from a base model from Mistral AI, Karau said. To ensure patients' privacy, the system helps anonymize information by removing names and addresses.

Once the appeal is generated, users can review and edit it before mailing it off — or have the company fax it for $5. Karau said she added the faxing service after receiving emails from users saying they loved the platform but didn't have a printer and it was costly to get it printed somewhere else.

"It's a little weird working on an AI project and then going on to eBay to buy fax modems," Karau said. "But, hey, what is life if not a little weird?"

With insurers increasingly using AI to sift through claims, Karau said Fight Health Insurance offers a way to "level the AI playing field." She said while she wants doctors to make decisions about medications and diagnoses, she sees an opportunity for more AI tools to be used in the grunt work of dealing with insurance. Karau said AI could be useful in following up with patients after appointments, whether it be for reminders about surgery or to submit an out-of-network provider form.

The company now has two full-time staff and a few part-time contractors. Eventually, Karau said she plans to monetize the platform by building a professional version for hospital systems and medical vendors, who are also "feeling the pain from health insurance denials."

"Doctors are just super frustrated with all the time they spend dealing with insurance companies," Karau said.

Karau said that she plans to keep the consumer version free, aside from the $5 optional cost to have the company fax out an appeal.

"I think that it's really important that patients don't want to pay to use Fight Health Insurance because they already pay so much," Karau said.

Since launching the side project in August, Karau said over 1,000 have used the platform to help generate an appeal, and a handful have reached out to her to share success stories. She said just the other day she was talking to someone whose back surgery was successfully appealed using Fight Health Insurance.

"Now they're looking forward to getting back to riding motorcycles next year," Karau said.

Exactly how many of those appeals were successful isn't clear because users get responses directly from their health insurers rather than through the platform. The company also doesn't store user emails unless users opt-in, Karau said, so it currently doesn't have a way to follow up with people to learn the outcome unless they choose to share their contact information. However, she plans to incorporate replies from the platform in the future professional version to better track success stories.

In regard to recent conversations about the health insurance industry following the shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Karau said she understands the intensity of emotions surrounding what can sometimes be life-or-death treatment decisions made by insurance companies.

She also said there's been an increase in traffic to the Fight Health Insurance website in the wake of the larger discussion online about frustrations with the healthcare system in the US.

"I think consumers are hurting a lot in the health insurance space right now," Karau said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

'Mystery drones' drive local residents to surveillance apps Ring and Citizen to discuss possible sightings

16 December 2024 at 14:43
Ring logo on phone screen
Ring app users are using the "Neighbors" forum to speculate about possible drone sightings.

Smith Collection/Gado/Gado via Getty Images

  • Ongoing drone interest has led Ring users to use the "Neighbors" forum to discuss possible sightings.
  • Some users shared frustration on Reddit about the influx of posts on the app unrelated to home security.
  • The unidentified sightings have been reported since mid-November across the East Coast.

The "mystery drones" over the East Coast have sparked concern from local residents, some of whom are flocking to neighborhood surveillance apps to post about the topic.

Owners of Amazon-owned Ring video doorbells have taken to the accompanying app, which sends motion alerts, to discuss the possible drone activity in the app's "Neighbors" section.

Typically, Ring's forum is used to share information about lost pets, wildlife sightings, or stolen packages — activities happening on the ground. However, some are now using the forum to discuss what's happening in the sky above their homes.

The posts have ranged from written reports of drone sightings to shared videos showing light movements in the sky and footage of plane-like objects.

"Multiple drones spotted flying over Mount Laurel in Countryside Farms just off Church road," wrote one Ring user in New Jersey earlier this month, posting footage showing an aircraft with blinking lights.

Another Ring user in Union City, New Jersey, posted footage over the weekend of lights seeming to streak across the clouds. "Looks like the old club days when they used to put lights in the sky, but these are different," the person wrote.

Other Ring users have also posted video footage online captured by their doorbell cameras, though it wasn't clear if the footage showed unidentified aircraft or simply time-lapses of the moon.

"It has become something that pops up everywhere — on my Ring sightings, on the Neighbor's function, constantly, constantly, constantly, people saying that they are seeing drones out there," said "Squawk Box" co-anchor Becky Quick on Monday.

Ring declined to comment on the forum discussions.

People on Citizen, a neighborhood safety app, joined the conversation and posted footage of suspected drones on the platform. The company behind the app encouraged its users to livestream drone-related footage "to alert the community and protect the world."

🚨#BREAKING | Report of Four Drones Heading Eastbound Above Belt Parkway

Police have received a report of 3 to 4 drones over the Belt Parkway. When incidents happen near you, you can go live on #CitizenApp to alert the community and protect the world.

Download 👉… pic.twitter.com/15RHEdf7yN

— Citizen (@CitizenApp) December 13, 2024

Not everyone is eager to join the discussions. Some have taken to Reddit to complain about the amount of drone talk taking place in Ring's community forum.

One Reddit user questioned if the Ring App was "the new Facebook for useless posts," and complained about the amount of drone speculation. Others echoed similar sentiments, expressing annoyance at the free-wheeling nature of the discussions and an increase in their app notifications.

"I had over 100 ring neighbor notifications last night because people thought it would be funny to troll about a (fake) helicopter flying in our area. Like over 100 troll posts… about helicopters," one user commented on the Reddit post. "I officially turned off the notifications when I woke up."

Many of the forum posts aren't showing videos captured by Ring's video doorbells but rather videos users uploaded that were captured elsewhere, such as from smartphones. And in the age of generative AI video tools and editing software, it can be difficult to tell what's real — and what the footage is actually showing.

The White House has said many of the drone sightings are likely crewed aircraft that are operating lawfully. It has also said that it doesn't believe the drone sightings are a public safety threat.

However, the FBI and Homeland Security have both said they want more authority to deal with drones. An FBI official said that the drone investigation is "limited in scope" and that pending counter-UAS legislation could expand their legal power in implementing counter methods.

Reports of the drone sightings have been ongoing across the East Coast since mid-November. The mystery has mostly been centered on New Jersey sightings, where drones have reportedly been seen above military facilities and critical infrastructure sites.

Read the original article on Business Insider

ChatGPT can now see through your phone's camera and screen — one of its most impressive features yet

13 December 2024 at 11:10
ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode Demo
OpenAI launched the video feature it's been promising since its Spring Update in May.

OpenAI

  • OpenAI launched its widely anticipated video feature for ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode.
  • It allows users to incorporate live video and screen sharing into conversations with ChatGPT.
  • ChatGPT can interpret emotions, assist with homework, and provide real-time visual context.

ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode can now help provide real-time design tips for your home, assistance with math homework, or instant replies to your texts from the Messages app.

After teasing the public with a glimpse of the chatbot's ability to "reason across" vision along with text and audio during OpenAI's Spring Update in May, the company finally launched the feature on Thursday as part of day six of OpenAI's "Shipmas."

"We are so excited to start the rollout of video and screen share in Advanced Voice today," the company said in the livestream on Thursday. "We know this is a long time coming."

OpenAI initially said the voice and video features would be rolling out in the weeks after its Spring Update. However, Advanced Voice Mode didn't end up launching to users until September, and the video mode didn't come out until this week.

The new capabilities help provide more depth in conversations with ChatGPT by adding "realtime visual context" with live video and screen sharing. Users can access the live video by selecting the Advanced Voice Mode icon in the ChatGPT app and then choosing the video button on the bottom far left.

ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode with video
ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode now has a live video and video sharing option.

OpenAI

In the livestream demonstration on Thursday, ChatGPT helped an OpenAI employee make pour-over coffee. The chatbot noticed details like what the employee was wearing and then walked him through the steps of making he drink, elaborating on certain parts of the process when asked. The chatbot also gave him feedback on his technique.

To share your screen with ChatGPT, hit the drop-down menu and select "Share Screen." In the "Shipmas" demo, ChatGPT could identify that the user was in the Messages app, understand the message sent, and then help formulate a response after the user asked.

During the company's Spring Update, OpenAI showed off some other uses of the video mode. The chatbot was able to interpret emotions based on facial expressions and also demonstrated its ability to act as a tutor. OpenAI Research Lead Barret Zoph walked through an equation on a whiteboard (3x+1=4) and ChatGPT provided him with hints to find the value of x.

The feature had a couple of stumbles during the Spring Update demonstration, like referring to one of the employees as a "wooden surface" or trying to solve a math problem before it was shown.

A photo of a plant with text about it from ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode
ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode identified an office plant as Aloe Vera and accurately described browning and drying on the leaf tips.

screenshot/ChatGPT

Now that it's out, we decided to give the feature a whirl — and so far, it seems pretty impressive.

We showed the chatbot an office plant and asked it to tell us about it, give context on whether it's healthy, and explain what the watering schedule should look like. The chatbot accurately described browning and drying on the leaf tips and identified it as an Aloe Vera plant, which seems to fit the right description.

The new video feature will be rolling out this week in the latest version of the ChatGPT mobile app to Team and most Plus and Pro users. The feature isn't available in the EU, Switzerland, Iceland, Norway, and Liechtenstein yet, but OpenAI said it will be as soon as possible.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The CEO using AI to fight insurance-claim denials says he wants to remove the 'fearfulness' around getting sick

12 December 2024 at 09:05
A headshot of a man in a gray blazer.
Warris Bokhari worked in the insurance industry before deciding to start a company to help fight claim denials.

Claimable

  • Warris Bokhari founded Claimable to tackle insurance-claim denials using AI technology.
  • Bokhari says denial is a major issue in the US healthcare system, causing fear about getting help.
  • Claimable's AI-driven platform boasts an 85% success rate in overturning claim denials.

After working in the insurance industry, Warris Bokhari saw that claim denial was a core issue in American healthcare.

So around two years ago, Bokhari started working on Claimable, an AI startup launched in October that aims to fight claim denials for a growing list of treatments.

"It's no wonder why people give up," the Claimable cofounder and CEO told Business Insider. "If you're a rational person, you would say this model was not fit for purpose."

Bokhari was raised in the UK and grew up with two disabled parents. Unlike people in the US, his parents never went bankrupt because of medical expenses, he said. He went on to work as an ICU doctor in the UK, where, he said, there was "never a time" when a necessary treatment was denied to a patient. When he came to the US, Bokhari continued working in the healthcare industry, including a two-year stint at insurance company Anthem.

In the US, he said, "there's no guarantee" of getting the medical care you need. Insurance companies can end up feeling like an obstacle, and that dynamic has created "fearfulness" about getting sick and seeking out help, Bokhari added.

The insurance industry has faced renewed scrutiny amid the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. While the motive behind Thompson's killing is under investigation, many of the responses to his death online have disclosed deep frustrations with the insurance industry.

Bokhari said the company didn't support violence toward individuals. "That is not the productive solution," Bokhari said. "The productive solution is appealing."

Claim-denial rates have been increasing for more than a decade. The health policy and research firm KFF reported that 17% of in-network claims by HealthCare.gov insurers were denied in 2021. The same report found that 41% of appealed claims got overturned, though less than 1% of consumers went through the process. Recent criticism has also been directed toward insurance companies that can rely on algorithms to assist in claim decision-making.

Bokhari said that Claimable had helped file hundreds of appeals and that its success rate of overturning denials was about 85%. It joins several startups leveraging AI to improve the insurance process.

Patients start by describing their experience of living with the condition and what it would mean to get denied their requested treatment. The platform then uses AI to analyze millions of data points from clinical research, appeal precedents, policy details, and the individual's medical history to generate a customized appeal within minutes.

Most Claimable appeals cost patients $39.95, plus shipping.

Claimable supports claims appeals for more than 70 FDA-approved treatments for autoimmune and migraine sufferers, some of which may have been denied because of medical necessity or being out of network. In addition to faxing and mailing the appeal to the insurance company, Claimable also sends a copy to every regulator that would have oversight of the insurer.

"Regulators probably assume that these denial cases are occasional," Bokhari said. "They make big headlines, but they don't know that these very private tragedies happen every day in American life."

Bokhari said patients "have a right to be heard," and Claimable helps legitimize those patients' stories.

Claimable closed its seed round in March, backed by Walkabout Ventures, Humanrace Capital, and others. The company is a part of Nvidia's startup program and has a team of about 11 employees.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Why Google's quantum computing breakthrough is such a big deal

11 December 2024 at 14:14
Google's Willow chip
Google announced a new quantum computing milestone with its Willow chip.

Google

  • Google unveiled its Willow chip this week, marking a milestone in the quantum computing space.
  • One quantum researcher compared Google's advancement to mobile networks jumping from 1G to 2G.
  • While the news represents a breakthrough, real-world applications are likely still years away.

Google's new Willow chip may not show up in consumer products in the near future — however, quantum computing researchers say it represents a significant breakthrough in the field.

That's because the chip solves a challenge that's existed in quantum computing for nearly 30 years, Google said in its announcement earlier this week.

The challenge is reducing the amount of errors quantum computers generate while operating. Quantum computers aren't your standard laptop or desktop computer.

Unlike your laptop, which uses bits to process information, quantum computers use something called qubits, short for quantum bits. Bits are binary digits, meaning they can only exist in one state at a time, typically as a 0 or 1. Qubits, on the other hand, can exist in multiple states simultaneously.

That's important because it means you can process significantly more information at much faster speeds with qubits. That's the ultimate promise of quantum computers: They can process so much data in such short periods that they'll revolutionize science and medicine, helping us solve problems related to climate change and health, for example, that are far too complex to tackle with today's technology.

However, right now, the best quantum computers can perform around a thousand operations before errors overwhelm the processing system, Steve Brierley, quantum computing researcher and CEO of error correction company Riverlane, told Business Insider.

"If we want to get to this big potential like transformational technology, we need to get to millions and trillions of free operations," Brierley said.

That's where Google's Willow chip has made a significant breakthrough. With the Willow chip, the more qubits Google adds, the fewer errors the system creates. The Willow chip reduces errors exponentially, the company said. The ability to reduce errors while scaling qubits is known in the field as being "below threshold," and it's been an unresolved challenge since 1995.

This plays out via processing speed. Google said its researchers used the Random Circuit Sampling benchmark to compare computing speeds across various technologies. The RCS is a standard in the field and the "classically hardest" benchmark to pass, to compare computing speeds across various technologies.

Google said its Willow chip can perform the standard benchmark computation in under five minutes, which would take one of the fastest supercomputers 10 septillion years to complete — longer than the known age of the universe.

In the field of quantum, error correction is much more difficult and requires more hardware to function properly, which is why Google's advancement is so important, Mark Saffman, professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and director at the Wisconsin Quantum Institute, told BI.

Brierley compared Google's quantum computing advancement to what mobile networks experienced when they shifted from 1G to 2G networks.

When mobile networks shifted from 1G to 2G, "Qualcomm added error correction into the stack and this created a huge uplift in capability," Brierley said. "And this is exactly what's happening right now in quantum computing."

The ability to constantly correct errors is a "key part" of building a quantum computer, he said. Once companies are able to scale qubits and advance quantum computing forward, they will be able to reach the point of real-world applications.

Real-world impact is likely years away

Google said in a press briefing about the development that it has already partnered with companies in the pharmaceutical, material science, and battery space, among others. However, advancements in those fields may not be right around the corner.

Saffman said he would like to see real-world applications in five years, but it's difficult to provide an exact number.

Sebastian Weidt, quantum computer professor at the University of Sussex and co-founder and CEO of quantum computing company Universal Quantum, told BI that "we're still a little while away" from quantum computing impacting the general public.

Weidt said that while there was initially hope that intermediate-scale computers could offer some value to a general consumer, the science shows that qubits need to be scaled by hundreds of thousands and eventually millions to unlock real-world applications.

"There are many major roadblocks on their roadmap that need to be overcome for that technology to get to that scale," Weidt said.

Still, Google's advancement moves quantum computing research to the next stage — and while investors may not be able to reap the benefits in the immediate short term, Brierley said announcements like this help attract capital and talent to the space.

"There's still very very far to go to make it useful relative to conventional computers," Saffman said. "But it's a great step forward."

Read the original article on Business Insider

What we know about Luigi Mangione, the Ivy League grad charged with murder in UnitedHealthcare CEO's killing

A yearbook entry for Luigi Mangione, with a list of achievements, a personal statement from Mangione thanking friends and family, and a collection of photos of him with friends and family.
Luigi Mangioni's entry in the Gilman School class of 2016 yearbook.

Anonymous

  • Luigi Mangione has been charged with murder in UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson's killing.
  • Mangione, an Ivy League graduate from a wealthy family, left an online trail before his arrest.
  • He founded an app, talked about AI on X, and read the Unabomber Manifesto.

Luigi Mangione, the 26-year-old Ivy League graduate charged with murder in the fatal shooting of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, has a vast online trail.

Police arrested Mangione in Pennsylvania on December 9. He initially faced local gun and forgery charges. He's expected to be extradited to New York.

New York court documents show that in addition to one count of murder, he also faces two counts of second-degree criminal possession of a weapon, one count of second-degree possession of a forged document, and one count of third-degree criminal possession of a firearm.

Here's what to know about Mangione.

Mangione attended elite schools

Mangione graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2020.

He achieved a Bachelor of Science in engineering with a major in computer science and a minor in mathematics. He also received a Master of Science in engineering the same year with a major in computer and information science, a university spokesperson told Business Insider.

Before that, he attended Gilman School, an elite all-boys preparatory school in Baltimore. His yearbook entry, obtained by BI, says he was involved in robotics and Model United Nations.

In his valedictorian speech, Mangione praised classmates for "challenging the world" and thanked parents for sending their children to the fee-paying school, which he described as "far from a small financial investment."

He favorably reviewed the Unabomber Manifesto

On Goodreads, Mangione reviewed Ted Kaczynski's "Industrial Society and Its Future" book, also known as The Unabomber Manifesto, in early 2024. He gave it four out of five stars.

"He was a violent individual — rightfully imprisoned — who maimed innocent people," Mangione wrote. "While these actions tend to be characterized as those of a crazy luddite, however, they are more accurately seen as those of an extreme political revolutionary."

Mangione's review of the manifesto also quoted another online comment about the book, which appears to have originated on Reddit, praising the use of violence "when all other forms of communication fail."

"'Violence never solved anything' is a statement uttered by cowards and predators,'" Mangione quoted.

He founded an app and worked in tech

In 2015, while in high school, Mangione founded a company called AppRoar Studios. AppRoar released an iPhone game called "Pivot Plane" that's no longer available, but a reviewer in 2015 said it was "a fun little arcade game brought to you by 3 high school juniors."

He lived in a co-living space in Hawaii as recently as 2023.

He posed for photos indicating he participated in Greek life at the University of Pennsylvania.

The fraternity chapter represented in his photos couldn't be reached for comment.

A blog post on the University of Pennsylvania's website that was removed on December 9 said he cofounded a video game design club there.

Stephen Lane, a professor of video game design at the Ivy League university who didn't advise the club, told BI that "the fact he took the initiative and started something from nothing, that means at least in the context of Penn, that's a pretty good thing." He added, however, that Thompson's shooting was "obviously not a good thing."

Mangione's LinkedIn page says he worked as a data engineer at the vehicle shopping company TrueCar starting in 2020.

A TrueCar spokesperson told BI that Mangione hadn't worked for the company since 2023.

Online breadcrumbs and roommate say he dealt with back pain

At the top of Mangione's profile on X — formerly Twitter — is a triptych of three images: a photo of himself, smiling, shirtless on a mountain ridge; a Pokémon; and an X-ray with four pins or screws visible in the lower back.

The Pokémon featured in his cover image is Breloom, which has special healing abilities in the games.

Some of the books reviewed on Mangione's Goodreads account are related to health and healing back pain, including "Back Mechanic: The Secrets to a Healthy Spine Your Doctor Isn't Telling You" and "Crooked: Outwitting the Back Pain Industry and Getting on the Road to Recovery."

R.J. Martin, the founder of the co-living space in Hawaii, told the Honolulu Civil Beat that Mangione had suffered back pain from a misaligned vertebra that was pinching his spinal cord.

Martin told CNN that after leaving Hawaii, Mangione texted him to say he'd undergone surgery and sent him X-rays.

"It looked heinous, with just, giant screws going into his spine," Martin told the outlet.

It's not immediately clear whether the surgery was related to UnitedHealthcare.

Josiah Ryan, a spokesperson for the co-living space founder, told The Wall Street Journal that Mangione stopped replying to texts about six months ago and "sort of disappeared."

A YouTube spokesperson said that the platform had terminated Mangione's three accounts, adding that they had not been active for about seven months.

A senior police official told NBC New York on December 12 that Magione was never a UnitedHealthcare client and may have targeted Thompson because of the insurer's large size and outsize power. That same day, The Wall Street Journal reported that a company spokesperson said Magione was not a client.

Mangione was interested in AI

On his X account, Mangione posted and amplified posts about technological advances such as artificial intelligence. He also posted about fitness and healthy living.

He frequently reposted posts by the writer Tim Urban and the commentator Jonathan Haidt about the promise and perils of technology.

He also appeared to be a fan of Michael Pollan, known for his writing about food, ethics, and lab-grown meat.

On Goodreads, he praised Urban's book "What's Our Problem?: A Self-Help Book for Societies," describing it as "one of the most important philosophical texts of the early 21st century."

Urban posted to X on December 9: "Very much not the point of the book."

He was previously accused of trespassing

Before his arrest, Mangione had at least one encounter with the legal system. Hawaiian court records indicate that in 2023, he was accused of entering a forbidden area of a state park.

Mangione appears to have paid a $100 fine to resolve the matter.

Mangione comes from a wealthy and influential Baltimore family

Mangione is one of 37 grandchildren of the late Nick Mangione Sr., a prominent multimillionaire real-estate developer in Baltimore who died in 2008, The Baltimore Banner reported. Nick Mangione Sr. had 10 children, including Louis Mangione, Luigi Mangione's father.

Members of the Mangione family own the Turf Valley Resort in Ellicott City, Maryland, and Hayfields Country Club in Hunt Valley, Maryland.

One of Luigi Mangione's cousins is the Republican Maryland state legislator Nino Mangione, the Associated Press reported.

Representatives for Nino Mangione's office, in a statement to BI, declined to comment on the news of Luigi Mangione's arrest.

"Unfortunately, we cannot comment on news reports regarding Luigi Mangione," the statement read. "We only know what we have read in the media. Our family is shocked and devastated by Luigi's arrest. We offer our prayers to the family of Brian Thompson and we ask people to pray for all involved. We are devastated by this news."

The Mangione family has donated more than $1 million to the Greater Baltimore Medical Center, where all of Nick Mangione Sr.'s grandkids, including Luigi Mangione, were born, the Banner reported.

A public filing from 2022 for the nonprofit Mangione Family Foundation lists Louis Mangione as vice president.

He was arrested while on his laptop at a McDonald's, the police said

When the police in Altoona, Pennsylvania, responded to a McDonald's after a call about a suspicious person, they found Mangione sitting at a table looking at a silver laptop and wearing a blue medical mask, a criminal complaint said.

The complaint said that when asked for identification, Mangione gave police officers a New Jersey driver's license with the name "Mark Rosario."

When an officer asked Mangione whether he'd been to New York recently, he "became quiet and started to shake," the complaint said.

It added that Mangione correctly identified himself after officers told him he could be arrested for lying about his identity.

When asked why he lied, Mangione replied, "I clearly shouldn't have," the complaint said.

His motive is still not known, but police are analyzing his so-called manifesto

An internal NYPD report obtained by The New York Times said Mangione "likely views himself as a hero of sorts who has finally decided to act upon such injustices."

Mangione "appeared to view the targeted killing of the company's highest-ranking representative as a symbolic takedown and a direct challenge to its alleged corruption and 'power games,' asserting in his note he is the 'first to face it with such brutal honesty,'" according to the NYPD report by the department's Intelligence and Counterterrorism Bureau, the Times reported.

Moments before the December 10 extradition hearing began, Mangione, handcuffed and wearing an orange prison jumpsuit, shouted out to the press as Pennsylvania police escorted him into the courthouse.

Mangione yelled out something partially unintelligible, saying something was "completely out of touch" and "an insult to the American people." He also shouted that something was a "lived experience" as a group of officers led him into the courthouse.

NYPD Chief of Detectives Joseph Kenny told NBC New York that Mangione had prior knowledge that UnitedHealthcare would be having its annual conference in New York City.

Mangione has retained a high-profile New York attorney

Thomas Dickey emerged as Mangione's attorney in Pennsylvania after his arrest in Altoona on December 9.

During a December 10 hearing at Pennsylvania's Blair County Courthouse, Dickey told the judge that Mangione was contesting his extradition to New York City.

Dickey later told reporters that Mangione would plead not guilty to all the charges in Pennsylvania. During an interview with CNN, Dickey said he expected Mangione to plead not guilty to the second-degree murder charge in New York and that he hadn't seen evidence that authorities "have the right guy."

Karen Friedman Agnifilo will represent Mangione in New York, a representative for Agnifilo Intrater LLP confirmed to Business Insider on Sunday.

Friedman Agnifilo worked as the chief assistant district attorney at the Manhattan District Attorney's Office from 2014 to 2021. She pivoted to private practice in 2021.

Do you know Luigi Mangione? Have a tip? Reach out to [email protected].

Read the original article on Business Insider

OpenAI launches AI video generator Sora to the public

9 December 2024 at 11:17
Sora screenshot explore page
OpenAI just launched its AI video generator, Sora, to the public.

screenshot/OpenAI

  • OpenAI publicly launched the AI video generator Sora, offering new creative tools.
  • Sora can create up to 20-second videos from text and modify existing videos by filling frames.
  • It's rolling out in the US and many other countries to paid ChatGPT Plus and Pro users.

As part of Shipmas Day 3, OpenAI just launched its AI video generator, Sora, to the public.

Sora can generate up to 20-second videos from written instructions. The tool can also complete a scene and extend existing videos by filling in missing frames.

Rohan Sahai, Sora's product lead, said a team of about five or six engineers built the video generator in months.

"Sora is a tool," Joey Flynn, Sora's product designer, said. "It allows you to be multiple places at once, try multiple ideas at once, try things that are entirely impossible before."

OpenAI showed off the new product and its various features during a livestream Monday with CEO Sam Altman.

A screenshot of Sora's Explore page for browsing AI videos from the community.
A screenshot of Sora's "explore" page for browsing AI videos from the community.

OpenAI

Sora includes an "explore" page, a browsable feed of videos shared by the community. OpenAI also showed the various style presets available, such as pastel symmetry, film noir, and balloon world.

To customize videos further, there's also Storyboard, which lets users organize and edit sequences on a timeline. The feature helps pull together text prompts that Sora then builds into scenes.

Sora storyboard feature
The company showed off Sora's features, including Storyboard.

screenshot/OpenAI

In February, OpenAI made Sora available to a limited group of creators, including designers and filmmakers, to get feedback on the model.

The company said in a blog post at the time that the product "may struggle to simulate the physics of a complex scene" and may not understand cause and effect. It may also mix up left and right and struggle to depict events that happen over time, it added.

The tool has already made a strong impression on some in Hollywood. Tyler Perry previously put his plans for an $800 million studio expansion on hold after seeing Sora. The billionaire entertainer referred to Sora demonstrations as "shocking" and said AI would likely reduce the need for large sets and traveling to locations for shoots.

However, the tool's product designer said in the demonstration Monday that Sora wasn't going to create feature films at the click of a button. Flynn said the tool was more "an extension of the creator who's behind it."

"If you come into Sora with the expectation that you'll just be able to click a button and generate a feature film, I think you're coming in with the wrong expectation," Flynn added.

The team also briefly touched on safety issues. Sahai said during the presentation that OpenAI had a "big target" on its back and that the team wanted to prevent illegal activity while balancing creative expression with the new product.

"We're starting a little conservative, and so if our moderation doesn't quite get it right, just give us that feedback," Sahai said. "We'll be iterating."

OpenAI said Sora would roll out to the public in the US and many other countries on Monday. But Altman said it would be awhile before the tool became available in the UK and most of Europe.

ChatGPT Plus subscribers, who pay $20 monthly, can get up to 50 generations a month of AI videos that are five seconds long and have a 720p resolution. ChatGPT Pro users, who pay $200 a month, get unlimited generations in the slow-queue mode and 500 faster generations, Altman said in the demo. Pro users can generate up to 20-second-long videos that are 1080p resolution, without watermarks.

While nonpaying users can't create Sora videos, they can browse Sora's explore feed, Altman said.

The prominent YouTuber Marques Brownlee published what he described as the first-ever Sora review on Monday, telling his nearly 20 million subscribers that the results were both "horrifying and inspiring."

After a brief overview of Sora's strengths and weaknesses — the YouTuber said that it could make provocative videos of cosmic events in deep space and other abstractions but that it struggled with realistic depictions of physics in day-to-day life, like a man running with a football — Brownlee was frank about his concerns.

Millions of people can now use Sora for basically whatever they want. And while the program has decent guardrails, one can be circumvented, he said. The little watermark that Sora adds to the bottom-right corner of its videos can be cropped out, Brownlee said.

"And it's still an extremely powerful tool that directly moves us further into the era of not being able to believe anything you see online," he said, adding: "This is a lot for humanity to digest right now."

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Apple's new iPhone update is here — and it brings more impressive AI features

11 December 2024 at 07:23
iPhone showing Apple Intelligence ad
Apple iOS 18.2 update is available for iPhones, with new AI features available to owners of the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 16 lineups.

Cheng Xin/Getty Images

  • Apple's iOS 18.2 update launched on Wednesday with new AI features and improvements.
  • The new Apple Intelligence features include ChatGPT integration, Genmojis, and Image Playground.
  • The new features are available to iPhone 16 models as well as the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max.

If you shrugged at Apple's first AI features, you might find the new batch that launched Wednesday with iOS 18.2 to be more meaningful.

Apple's AI software suite, Apple Intelligence, launched its first set of features on October 28. The upgrade included a revamped Siri, AI writing tools, smart replies, an updated Photos app, and a new focus mode called Reduce Interruptions.

It was a fraction of the flashy AI features Apple showed off at its Worldwide Developer Conference earlier this year, as the company decided to do a staggered rollout.

The second wave of features, which began rolling out to iPhone users today, will be followed by additional ones launching next year.

So what can you expect when you update to iOS 18.2?

Features in the December update include tools like Genmojis and Image Playground, among others. Like the earlier Apple Intelligence features, the newest AI features are available for all iPhone 16 models and most of them also work with the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max.

ChatGPT integration

Apple's iOS 18 introduces ChatGPT integration.
Apple's iOS 18.2 introduces ChatGPT integration.

Apple

Siri received some enhancements in the iOS 18.1 update, but the iOS 18.2 update further improves the voice assistant and allows integrated access to ChatGPT.

With iOS 18.2, users have access to the popular OpenAI chatbot through Siri and Writing Tools, and they'll be able to access the tool by talking to the voice assistant or typing to it.

Visual Intelligence

Apple's visual intelligence feature
Apple's visual intelligence feature is expected in iOS 18.2

Apple

The new update also allows iPhone 16 users to gather information by pointing their device at an object (sorry iPhone 15 Pro owners, you're out of luck).

The tool is similar to Google Lens, which does reverse image searches and helps identify landmarks, plants, and other objects or places.

Genmojis

Apple's Genmoji feature
Create a personalized "Genmoji."

Apple

For those who prefer to communicate with emojis over the written word, Genmojis could be a game changer.

The new update allows users to be more playful and interactive in their messages, creating custom emojis right from the keyboard and animated Genmojis of themselves, similar to Bitmoji.

Image Playground

Apple WWDC 2024
Image Playground was introduced at Apple's WWDC 2024.

Apple

Apple's Image Playground is its answer to popular AI image generators like OpenAI's Dall-E or Midjourney. The tool was first demonstrated at Apple's WWDC conference earlier this year.

Image Playground users can create images based on a specific description or concept and can select different formats like animation. The tool is available as its own app and is also accessible through third-party apps.

You can also use the tool as an extension in messages.

Photo updates

iOS 18.2 introduced several photo updates, including video enhancements like improvements for navigating Collections and the ability to view a video more finely, which can be helpful with editing. Users also have the option to clear their Recently Viewed and Recently Shared album history, and Favorites appear in the Utility and Pinned Collection.

Other updates

Apple's Mail app is getting an AI makeover that categorizes emails based on their priority level. The update gives access to the "digest" view, which organizes all emails from a sender in one place.

Apple's internet browser Safari also received some changes, including new customizable background images for the start page

The update also has some non-AI updates, including an AirTag enhancement that allows you to share the location of a lost item with friends or airlines. Users can also now choose their favorite Podcast categories and get relevant recommendations in their library.

To update to iOS 18.2, navigate to your Settings app on your iPhone, then to General, and finally tap on Software Update.

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Fatal Tesla Cybertruck crash that killed 3 students leads to probe from NHTSA

6 December 2024 at 09:56
Cybertruck dark lighting
The NHTSA is probing a Cybertruck crash that killed three college students.

Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

  • The NHTSA is gathering info on a Cybertruck crash that killed three college students in California.
  • The crash is the second fatal Cybertruck incident in the US, following one in Texas.
  • Tesla's Cybertruck has faced multiple recalls and 21 NHTSA complaints since launching.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is probing a Cybertruck crash that killed three college students last month in California.

"NHTSA is aware of the crash and is gathering information from the manufacturer and law enforcement," a spokesperson for the agency told Business Insider, adding that an investigation hasn't been opened yet.

The Piedmont Police Department and the California Highway Patrol are looking into the Tesla crash, Piedmont Police Chief Jeremy Bowers said at a media briefing. CFP did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

The Piedmont Police Department was alerted about the crash at 3:08 a.m. on November 27, according to Bowers. The police arrived at the scene and found the Cybertruck vehicle in flames. Three of the four people in the car were killed, and the fourth sustained serious injuries and was taken to a hospital.

Bowers said at the media briefing that the police officers attempted to extinguish the fire at the crash site, but it was "too intense." The Piedmont Fire Department eventually extinguished the fire, he said.

The cause of the crash still remains unknown, although Bowers said at the briefing that speed was likely a "contributing factor." He also said there was no indication that mechanical issues were the primary cause of the collision, although he said the investigation was still in the early stages.

The Piedmont crash stands as the second fatal Cybertruck crash in the US. The previous fatal crash, which occurred in August, also involved a Cybertruck and a fire after a driver drove off a road in Texas.

Like traditional vehicles with internal combustion engines, electric vehicles can catch fire in crashes. However, EVs have posed challenges with putting out fires in a timely manner because of their large lithium-ion batteries. When an EV battery enters a cycle of overheating and over-pressurizing, it can result in fires or explosions.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has criticized media coverage of Tesla models that have caught fire and maintained that the automaker's vehicles are some of the safest on the road.

"Considering the odds in the absolute, you are more likely to be struck by lightning in your lifetime than experience even a non-injurious fire in a Tesla," Musk wrote in a 2013 blog post addressing recent Tesla fires.

The "'apocalypse-proof' Cybertruck, as Musk has described it, has faced multiple recalls since the first deliveries about a year ago, many of which were addressed through software updates. The most recent was due to a faulty vehicle part that could cause the vehicle's wheels to lose power.

Prior to that, 27,000 Cybertrucks were recalled because of a rearview camera issue that could increase the risk of accidents when driving in reverse. In addition to the recalls, NHTSA has also received 21 complaints about issues ranging from broken windshield wipers to issues with the electrical system.

The NHTSA has investigated other Tesla vehicles, often regarding the company's Autopilot or Full-Self-Driving technology. In October, the agency opened an investigation covering 2.4 million Tesla vehicles. The investigation followed reports of four crashes involving FSD in areas where road visibility had been reduced.

Read the original article on Business Insider

OpenAI unveils the o3 and o3 mini on the last day of its 12 days of 'Shipmas'

Shipmas day 1
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and members of his team as they announced new products on the first day of "Shipmas."

Screenshot

  • OpenAI's marketing campaign "Shipmas" ended Friday.
  • The campaign included 12 days of product releases, demos, and new features.
  • On the final day, OpenAI previewed o3, its most advanced model yet.

OpenAI released new features and products ahead of the holidays, a campaign it called "Shipmas."

The company saved the most exciting news for the final day: a preview of o3, its most advanced model yet, which the company said could be available to the public as soon as the end of January.

Here's everything OpenAI has released so far for "Shipmas."

'Shipmas' Day 1

OpenAI started the promotion with a bang by releasing the full version of its latest reasoning model, o1.

OpenAI previewed o1 in September, describing it as a series of artificial-intelligence models "designed to spend more time thinking before they respond." Until now, only a limited version of these models was available to ChatGPT Plus and Team users.

Now, these users have access to the full capabilities of o1 models, which Altman said are faster, smarter, and easier to use than the preview. They're also multimodal, which means they can process images and texts jointly.

Max Schwarzer, a researcher at OpenAI, said the full version of o1 was updated based on user feedback from the preview version and said it's now more intelligent and accurate.

"We ran a pretty detailed suite of human evaluations for this model, and what we found was that it made major mistakes about 34% less often than o1 preview while thinking fully about 50% faster," he said.

Along with o1, OpenAI unveiled a new tier of ChatGPT called ChatGPT Pro. It's priced at $200 a month and includes unlimited access to the latest version of o1.

'Shipmas' Day 2

On Friday, OpenAI previewed an advancement that allows users to fine-tune o1 on their own datasets. Users can now leverage OpenAI's reinforcement-learning algorithms — which mimic the human trial-and-error learning process — to customize their own models.

The technology will be available to the public next year, allowing anyone from machine-learning engineers to genetic researchers to create domain-specific AI models. OpenAI has already partnered with the Reuters news agency to develop a legal assistant based on o1-mini. It has also partnered with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to develop computational methods for assessing rare genetic diseases.

'Shipmas' Day 3

Sora screenshot explore page
The Explore page of OpenAI's Sora AI tool, which generates AI videos from text prompts.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI announced on December 9 that its AI video generator Sora was launching to the public.

Sora can generate up to 20-second videos from written instructions. The tool can also complete a scene and extend existing videos by filling in missing frames.

"We want our AIs to be able to understand video and generate video and I think it really will deeply change the way that we use computers," the CEO added.

Rohan Sahai, Sora's product lead, said a product team of about five or six engineers built the product in months.

The company showed off the new product and its various features, including the Explore page, which is a feed of videos shared by the community. It also showed various style presets available like pastel symmetry, film noir, and balloon world.

Sora storyboard feature
OpenAI showed off Sora's features, including Storyboard for further customizing AI videos.

screenshot/OpenAI

The team also gave a demo of Sora's Storyboard feature, which lets users organize and edit sequences on a timeline.

Sora is rolling out to the public in the US and many countries around the world. However, Altman said it will be "a while" before the tool rolls out in the UK and most of Europe.

ChatGPT Plus subscribers who pay $20 monthly can get up to 50 generations per month of AI videos that are 5 seconds long with a resolution of 720p. ChatGPT Pro users who pay $200 a month get unlimited generations in the slow queue mode and 500 faster generations, Altman said in the demo. Pro users can generate up to 20-second long videos that are 1080p resolution, without watermarks.

'Shipmas' Day 4

ChatGPT canvas feature editing an essay
ChatGPT can provide more specific edit notes and run code using canvas.

OpenAI

OpenAI announced that it's bringing its collaborative canvas tool to all ChatGPT web users — with some updates.

The company demonstrated the tech in a holiday-themed walkthrough of some of its new capabilities. Canvas is an interface that turns ChatGPT into a writing or coding assistant on a project. OpenAI first launched it to ChatGPT Plus and Team users in October.

Starting Tuesday, canvas will be available to free web users who'll be able to select the tool from a drop-down of options on ChatGPT. The chatbot can load large bodies of text into the separate canvas window that appears next to the ongoing conversation thread.

Canvas can get even more intuitive in its responses with new updates, OpenAI said. To demonstrate, they uploaded an essay about Santa Claus's sleigh and asked ChatGPT to give its editing notes from the perspective of a physics professor.

For writers, it can craft entire bodies of text, make changes based on requests, and add emojis. Coders can run code in canvas to double-check that it's working properly.

'Shipmas' Day 5

Shipmas Day 5
All Apple users need to do is enable ChatGPT on their devices.

OpenAI 'Shipmas' Day 5

OpenAI talked about its integration with Apple for the iPhone, iPad, and macOS.

As part of the iOS 18.2 software update, Apple users can now access ChatGPT directly from Apple's operating systems without an OpenAI account. This new integration allows users to consult ChatGPT through Siri, especially for more complex questions.

They can also use ChatGPT to generate text through Apple's generative AI features, collectively called Apple Intelligence. The first of these features was introduced in October and included tools for proofreading and rewriting text, summarizing messages, and photo-editing features. They can also access ChatGPT through the camera control feature on the iPhone 16 to learn more about objects within the camera's view.

'Shipmas' Day 6

ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode Demo
OpenAI launched video capabilities in ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI launched its highly anticipated video and screensharing capabilities in ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode.

The company originally teased the public with a glimpse of the chatbot's ability to "reason across" vision along with text and audio during OpenAI's Spring Update in May. However, Advanced Voice Mode didn't become available for users until September, and the video capabilities didn't start rolling out until December 12.

In the livestream demonstration on Thursday, ChatGPT helped guide an OpenAI employee through making pour-over coffee. The chatbot gave him feedback on his technique and answered questions about the process. During the Spring Update, OpenAI employees showed off the chatbot's ability to act as a math tutor and interpret emotions based on facial expressions.

Users can access the live video by selecting the Advanced Voice Mode icon in the ChatGPT app and then choosing the video button on the bottom-left of the screen. Users can share their screen with ChatGPT by hitting the drop-down menu and selecting "Share Screen."

'Shipmas' Day 7

OpenAi's projects demo for Day 7 of 'Shipmas'
OpenAI introduced Projects on Day 7 of "Shipmas"

screenshot/OpenAI

For "Shipmas" Day 7, OpenAI introduced Projects, a new way for users to "organize and customize" conversations within ChatGPT. The tool allows users to upload files and notes, store chats, and create custom instructions.

"This has been something we've been hearing from you for a while that you really want to see inside ChatGPT," OpenAI chief product officer Kevin Weil said. "So we can't wait to see what you do with it."

During the live stream demonstration, OpenAI employees showed a number of ways to use the feature, including organizing work presentations, home maintenance tasks, and programming.

The tool started to roll out to Plus, Pro, and Teams users on Friday. The company said in the demonstration it will roll out the tool to free users "as soon as possible."

'Shipmas' Day 8

SearchGPT screenshot during OpenAI demo
OpenAI announced on Monday it is rolling out SearchGPT to all logged-in free users.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI is rolling out ChatGPT search to all logged-in free users on ChatGPT, the company announced during its "Shipmas" livestream on Monday. The company previously launched the feature on October 31 to Plus and Team users, as well as waitlist users.

The new feature is also integrated into Advanced Voice Mode now. On the livestream, OpenAI employees showed off its ability to provide quick search results, search while users talk to ChatGPT, and act as a default search engine.

"What's really unique about ChatGPT search is the conversational nature," OpenAI's search product lead, Adam Fry, said.

The company also said it made Search faster and "better on mobile," including the addition of some new maps experiences. ChatGPT search feature is rolling out globally to all users with an account.

'Shipmas' Day 9

OpenAI "Shipmas" Day 9
OpenAI announced tools geared towards developers.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI launched tools geared toward developers on Tuesday.

It launched o1 out of preview in the API. OpenAI's o1 is its series of AI models designed to reason through complex tasks and solve more challenging problems. Developers have experimented with o1 preview since September to build agentic applications, customer support, and financial analysis, OpenAI employee Michelle Pokrass said.

The company also added some "core features" to o1 that it said developers had been asking for on the API, including function calling, structured outputs, vision inputs, and developer messages.

OpenAI also announced new SDKs and a new flow for getting an API key.

'Shipmas' Day 10

Screenshot of OpenAI 'Shipmas' Day 10
You can access ChatGPT through phone calls or WhatsApp.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI is bringing ChatGPT to your phone through phone calls and WhatsApp messages.

"ChatGPT is great but if you don't have a consistent data connection, you might not have the best connection," OpenAI engineer Amadou Crookes said in the livestream. "And so if you have a phone line you can jump right into that experience."

You can add ChatGPT to your contacts or dial the number at 1-800-ChatGPT or 1-800-242-8478. The calling feature is only available for those living in the US. Those outside the US can message ChatGPT on WhatsApp.

OpenAI employees in the live stream demonstrated the calling feature on a range of devices including an iPhone, flip phone, and even a rotary phone. OpenAI product lead Kevin Weil said the feature came out of a hack-week project and was built just a few weeks ago.

'Shipmas' Day 11

Screenshot: Day 11 of OpenAi's "Shipmas."
Open AI's ChatGPT desktop program has new features.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI focused on features for its desktop apps during Thursday's "Shipmas" reveal. Users can now see and automate their work on MacOS desktops with ChatGPT.

Additionally, users can click the "Works With Apps" button, which allows them to work with more coding apps, such as Textmate, BB Edit, PyCharm, and others. The desktop app will support Notion, Quip, and Apple Notes.

Also, the desktop app will have Advanced Voice Mode support.

The update became available for the MacOS desktop on Thursday. OpenAI CPO Kevin Weil said the Windows version is "coming soon."

'Shipmas' Day 12

Screenshot: Day 12 of OpenAI's "Shipmas."
Sam Altman and Mark Chen introduced the o3 and o3 mini models during a livestream on Friday.

screenshot/OpenAI

OpenAI finished its "12 days of Shipmas" campaign by introducing o3, the successor to the o1 model. The company first launched the o1 model in September and advertised its "enhanced reasoning capabilities."

The rollout includes the o3 and 03-mini models. Although "o2" should be the next model number, an OpenAI spokesperson told Bloomberg that it didn't use that name "out of respect' for the British telecommunications company.

Greg Kamradt of Arc Prize, which measures progress toward artificial general intelligence, appeared during the livestream and said o3 did notably better than o1 during tests by ARC-AGI.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said during the livestream that the models are available for public safety testing. He said OpenAI plans to launch the o3 mini model "around the end of January" and the o3 model "shortly after that."

In a post on X on Friday, Weil said the o3 model is a "massive step up from o1 on every one of our hardest benchmarks."

Read the original article on Business Insider

The Pope goes electric with a Mercedes-made popemobile EV

5 December 2024 at 11:31
Pope Francis with popemobile
Pope Francis received the first fully electric Popemobile.

Mercedes-Benz AG Communications & Marketing // photo by Oliver Schwarz/Mercedes-Benz AG

  • Pope Francis received the first all-electric popemobile from Mercedes-Benz.
  • The G 580 model has a classic white exterior and a swiveling adjustable seat in the rear center.
  • The Vatican recently announced plans to transition to a fully-electric fleet by 2030.

Mercedes-Benz has supplied the Vatican with popemobiles for decades — and for the first time, the Pope will ride an all-electric version.

"The first all-electric G-Class combines sustainability, elegant design and maximum functionality," Mercedes-Benz Group AG's chief design officer, Gorden Wagener, said in a release. "It is a great honor for us to be able to present this special vehicle to Pope Francis today."

Mercedes-Benz said it has been working on the vehicle for about a year and it contains four electric motors for each wheel. The vehicle's electric drivetrain was made to accommodate slow rides at public appearances.

Popemobile interior
The vehicle has a classic white exterior and interior with red flooring.

Mercedes-Benz

The vehicle has a classic white exterior, like former popemobiles. In place of the popemobile's bench seat, the rear now features a swiveling and height-adjustable single seat. Two seats are also on the right and left of the main seat for other passengers.

Mercedes-Benz popemobile rear angle
Popemobiles are specially crafted vehicles to carry the pope through large crowds in St. Peter's Square.

Mercedes-Benz

The company's popemobiles are specially crafted white vehicles used to carry the pope through large crowds in St. Peter's Square while behind bulletproof glass. The new vehicle comes just in time for the 2025 Jubilee, which occurs every 2025 years and is expected to attract millions in Rome.

Mercedes-Benz didn't respond to a request for comment about the vehicle costs, but some estimates have pegged it around $500,000.

While Mercedes-Benz has been the standard manufacturer for years, the Pope ditched his typical popemobile for a Hyundai in 2015. He also previously approved plans for a new electric popemobile made by Fisker, but it's not clear if that was ever delivered and the EV company filed for bankruptcy earlier this year.

The new EV popemobile arrives amid a larger push from the Vatican to go all-electric.

Pope Francis specifically has emphasized the need for sustainable development. In his 2015 encyclical letter Laudato si', he wrote about the dangers of the environmental crisis and cited the need for lifestyle changes. In November, the Vatican also announced plans with Volkswagon to transition to a fully electric fleet by 2030.

Ola Källenius, chairman of the board of management at Mercedes-Benz Group AG, said in a press release that it's sending out a "clear call for electromobility and decarbonization."

"Mercedes-Benz not only stands for the special and individual — but also for consistently creating the conditions for a net-carbon-neutral new car fleet in 2039," Källeniu said.

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Meet Jared Isaacman, the billionaire Trump picked to lead NASA

Jared Isaacman
Billionaire Jared Isaacman is leading SpaceX's Polaris Dawn mission.

The Washington Post/Getty Images

  • Jared Isaacman is President-elect Donald Trump's pick to lead NASA.
  • Isaacman has led and flown on two SpaceX missions, including the first-ever commercial spacewalk.
  • Isaacman is a billionaire CEO who dropped out of high school and founded two companies.

Jared Isaacman isn't just a billionaire CEO. He's also a SpaceX astronaut, and now he's poised to lead NASA under the new Trump administration.

President-elect Donald Trump announced in a Truth Social post on Wednesday that he was nominating Isaacman to be the new NASA Administrator.

Isaacman has flown to space twice aboard SpaceX's Crew Dragon, on flights he commissioned, funded, and commanded — including a mission where he conducted the first-ever commercial spacewalk in September.

So who is Jared Isaacman, and how did the entrepreneur end up as Trump's NASA pick? Read on to learn about his career rise.

Isaacman decided to drop out of high school at the age of 15.
Jared Isaacman in space suit smiling with three people standing next to him
Isaacman chose to drop out of high school at 15.

Jonathan Newton/The Washington Post/Getty

At the age of 15, Isaacman decided to drop out of high school and take the GED, according to the Netflix docuseries "Countdown: Inspiration4 Mission to Space."

"I was a horrible student," Isaacman said in the series. "And I wasn't, like, happy in school, either."

He described his younger self as independent and said he didn't understand things like raising your hand to go to the bathroom.

At 16, he founded a multibillion-dollar payment-processing company in his parents' basement.
Shift 4 logo on phone screen
Isaacman founded Shift4 in 1999.

SOPA Images/Getty

Isaacman founded United Bank Card in 1999.

The company, now called Shift4, offers mobile-payment software, point-of-sale solutions, and online payments for various businesses.

Isaacman said in the Netflix docuseries that when he started the company, he would wake up every day at 7:30 a.m. and fall asleep on the keyboard at 2 or 3 in the morning.

By 2020, he took the company public. Today, Shift4 processes over $260 billion annually and serves over 200,000 customers, according to its website.

Isaacman has a wife and two kids.
Jared Isaacman kissing his wife
Isaacman lives with his wife and two daughters in New Jersey.

Joe Raedle/Getty

Isaacman has known his wife, Monica Isaacman, for most of his life. The two come from the same town and got married in 2012. They now live in New Jersey with their two daughters.

"I want my kids to see humans walking on the moon and Mars," Isaacman told BI.

His wife said in the docuseries that she had good and bad dreams leading up to his first SpaceX mission, Inspiration4, which launched in 2021.

She said while she wouldn't want him to compromise on his dreams of going to space, she worried about what could happen if something went wrong.

Isaacman told BI in the interview that his family and wife were much more enthusiastic about the Polaris Dawn mission this time around, thanks to a successful first mission.

While there are still risks, he told BI his family is aware and accepts them.

He also founded Draken International.
Jared Isaacman smiling through window with American flag behind him
Isaacman sold Draken International to Blackstone in 2019.

The Washington Post/Getty

Isaacman founded Draken International in 2012. The company is a private aircraft provider that also trains pilots for the US military, the UK, and NATO countries.

In 2019, Isaacman sold the company to Blackstone.

Isaacman became a billionaire in 2019.
jared isaacman spacex crew dragon
Isaacman at SpaceX in Hawthorne, California.

SpaceX/Business Wire via AP Photo

Isaacman hit billionaire status in 2020 after selling Draken International and taking Shift4 public. His net worth is estimated at $1.7 billion, according to Forbes.

He always had a passion for flying planes.
Jared Isaacman smiling with SpaceX rocket behind him
Isaacman said he took an interest in flying early on in life.

Patrick T. Fallon

Isaacman said in the Netflix docuseries that he took an early interest in flying and went to flight school at a local airport in 2004.

At the time, he was feeling burned out from starting his company and described flying as "therapeutic." Isaacman also set a world speed record for flying around the globe in 2009.

"I do believe you only get one crack at life," Isaacman said in the docuseries. "To the extent you have the means to do so, you have this obligation to live life to the fullest. You never know when it's going to be your last day."

He added in the docuseries that this philosophy had taken him to fly in air shows as part of a seven-ship formation aerobatic team and on mountain-climbing expeditions in Antarctica.

He's involved with philanthropy.
Jared Isaacman holding a mic
Isaacman and his family are involved in a number of philanthropic causes.

Eugene Gologursky/Getty

Isaacman has been involved in several charitable causes and organizations, including the Make-A-Wish Foundation and St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

His first SpaceX mission raised over $240 million for St. Jude and was named Inspiration4 to inspire support and raise awareness for the research hospital.

Isaacman and his wife have also committed to The Giving Pledge, a charitable campaign founded by Bill Gates, Melinda French Gates, and Warren Buffett in 2010.

The Giving Pledge serves as a commitment from wealthy people to donate the majority of their wealth to philanthropy.

Isaacman's first mission to space took place in 2021.
inspiration4 crew members pose in spacesuits in front of grey wall
The Inspiration4 crew members in their SpaceX space suits.

Inspiration4/John Kraus

In 2021, Isaacman funded and led the first civilian mission to space, called Inspiration4. The mission was carried out by SpaceX 's Dragon capsule.

Isaacman previously told Business Insider that the prep for the mission was extensive and involved a lot of studying and physical tests.

"The academics were pretty intense," Isaacman said, adding that there were thousands of pages across a hundred manuals to learn about SpaceX's Falcon and Dragon aircraft.

It also involved crew members drawing blood from each other and learning how to take skin samples to prepare for increased radiation levels on the trip.

Isaacman commanded the first-ever privately funded spacewalk
The Crew of the next SpaceX private astronaut flight called Polaris Dawn, (Left to Right) Anna Menon, who works to develop astronaut operations for SpaceX, Scott Poteet, who served as the mission director of the Inspiration4 mission SpaceX, and Jared Isaacman, who is financing the mission.
The Crew of the next SpaceX private astronaut flight called Polaris Dawn.

The Washington Post/Getty Images

On September 10, Isaacman and three other crew members successfully took off on their way into orbit for the first-ever privately funded spacewalk.

The spacewalk featured SpaceX's new EVA suits.

During the spacewalk, the Polaris Dawn crew will wear the new SpaceX EVA suits → https://t.co/LRl5pPlAC9 pic.twitter.com/MVHzNwiWZU

— SpaceX (@SpaceX) September 10, 2024

Polaris Dawn lifted off from Launch Complex-39A at NASA's KSC, which also saw the launches of other historic missions, such as the Apollo 11 moon landing. Dragon and the Polaris Dawn crew safely arrived back on the coast of Florida on September 15.

Trump nominated Isaacman to lead NASA
Elon Musk and Donald Trump walking together with palm trees behind them. Musk is wearing an all-black outfit with a SpaceX T-shirt, and Trump is wearing a suit and tie and a "Make America Great Again" cap.
SpaceX CEO with President-Elect Donald Trump.

Brandon Bell/Getty Images

In an X post on Wednesday, Isaacman called the nomination "the honor of a lifetime" and suggested that human space exploration would be a top priority.

Space-industry experts told BI that Isaacman is not a traditional pick for NASA Administrator, but his background in commercial spaceflight would benefit the agency.

"They need someone who is not afraid to try something new if the old ways aren't working," George Nield, a former head of the FAA's office of commercial space transportation, told BI.

Michelle Hanlon, executive director of the Center for Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law, called Isaacman "an inspired pick," in part due to his "stellar" managerial skills.

"He has shown a real commitment to increasing access to space, and I think he is going to be a great person to promote space to the general public," she said.

This story was originally published on September 11, 2024, and most recently updated on December 4, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Trump nominates billionaire SpaceX astronaut Jared Isaacman to lead NASA

Donald Trump side by side Jared Isaacman
President-elect Donald Trump nominated billionaire CEO Jared Isaacman to be NASA's administrator.

Jeff Bottari/Patrick T. Fallon/Getty

  • Jared Isaacman has been nominated by Donald Trump to head up NASA.
  • Isaacman has flown two historic, all-civilian SpaceX missions, with more planned in the future.
  • Isaacman vowed on X to advance US space exploration and send Americans to the moon and Mars.

The man who commanded multiple space missions for Elon Musk has been nominated to lead NASA.

President-elect Donald Trump nominated Jared Isaacman, the billionaire and repeat SpaceX astronaut, to be NASA's administrator on Wednesday.

Isaacman, who is also the CEO of the payments company Shift4, recently made history by leading the first private spacewalk with SpaceX's Polaris Dawn mission. The five-day mission took Isaacman and three others further from Earth than anyone has traveled since the Apollo moon missions.

astronaut in white suit and helmet standing at the open hatch of a spaceship in space holding onto a railing looking out over earth
Jared Isaacman stands at the hatch of Crew Dragon during the world's first commercial spacewalk.

SpaceX

"We have to keep going," Isaacman said about space exploration in a November interview with Business Insider. "We just got to proceed with caution and just make sure we get it right. And if we do, we stand to learn so much that can change the course of trajectory of humankind."

Isaacman also previously helped finance and lead the world's first all-civilian private spaceflight. That was also a SpaceX mission, called Inspiration4, which Isaacman commanded.

"Jared will drive NASA's mission of discovery and inspiration, paving the way for groundbreaking achievements in Space science, technology, and exploration," Trump wrote in a Truth Social post announcing his nomination.

Trump pointed to Isaacman's passion for space and "exceptional leadership," demonstrated by his 25 years as the founder and CEO of Shift4. Trump also highlighted Isaacman's work as the cofounder and former CEO of Draken International, a defense aerospace company that supported the US Department of Defense, the UK, and NATO countries.

"I think that's a creative and hopeful recommendation," George Nield, a former head of the FAA's office of commercial space transportation, told Business Insider. "Jared has a lot of vision and enthusiasm."

Jared Isaacman smiling in space suit and waving
Jared Isaacman has flown on two private SpaceX missions.

Polaris Program / AFP

He added that, "I would interpret this as at least an openness, if not strong advocacy, for industry playing an important role for the nation's space programs going forward."

Elon Musk, who is the founder and CEO of SpaceX and whom Trump tapped to lead a new Department of Government Efficiency, said "Congratulations" to Isaacman on X.

This would be Isaacman's first-ever role in government.

"He doesn't have experience as a government insider, and that's probably a good thing," Leroy Chiao, a former NASA astronaut and International Space Station commander who now works in consulting, told BI. "He certainly has the potential to be a disruptor, so I think it's a great pick. It's much better than just status quo."

'An era where humanity becomes a true spacefaring civilization'

Following his nomination, Isaacman wrote in a post on X that it is "the honor of a lifetime to serve in this role" and work alongside NASA.

"With the support of President Trump, I can promise you this: We will never again lose our ability to journey to the stars and never settle for second place," Isaacman said, adding that "Americans will walk on the Moon and Mars."

Isaacman added that space holds potential for advancements in various areas including manufacturing, biotechnology, and possibly new energy sources. He also shared his vision for humanity to become a "spacefaring civilization" and described a "thriving space economy" with opportunities for people to work in space.

"I want my kids to see humans walking on the moon and Mars," Isaacman previously told BI.

Michelle Hanlon, executive director of the Center for Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law, told BI in an email that this was a "perfect direction for NASA."

It's unclear whether his new role would impact his work with SpaceX or any plans he has to fly on future missions. The Polaris Program Isaacman is leading includes two more missions over the next six to nine years, including the first crewed flight of SpaceX's Starship mega-rocket.

The starship rocket launching.
A screengrab from SpaceX's livestream on X shows Starship lifting off for its second attempt at space.

SpaceX

Nield said Isaacman and his team at NASA would likely assess the tradeoffs and the risk of him flying into space during his term as Administrator.

"NASA's got a great team. They've got super smart and experienced and motivated people, but they need a leader. They need a communicator," Nield said. "They need someone who is not afraid to try something new if the old ways aren't working. So I think I'm excited about that choice."

Read the original article on Business Insider

This year's Spotify Wrapped lets you listen to AI hosts break down your music tastes, thanks to Google

4 December 2024 at 05:00
My Wrapped AI Podcast logo
Spotify launched a Wrapped AI podcast on Wednesday powered by NotebookLM.

Spotify/Google

  • Google and Spotify launched a Wrapped AI Podcast with NotebookLM's AI hosts.
  • The podcast talks about users' listening habits of the year.
  • The head of editorial at Google Labs said he sees more NotebookLM integrations in the future.

If you've ever thought that your Spotify Wrapped deserved more attention from your group chat or social media followers — the wait is over.

On Wednesday, Spotify launched new features to accompany its annual round-up of users' most listened-to songs.

This year, users will also now get their Wrapped narrated in podcast form by NotebookLM, Google's AI-powered research and writing assistant that provides tools like summaries or study guides based on materials users upload.

The platform recently went viral after it launched its "deep dive," podcast-like discussion hosted by two conversational AI hosts.

The new Spotify feature enlists the voices of the same two AI hosts from NotebookLM's Audio Overview feature to discuss users' favorite artists, songs, and genres from the year.

"This is the first of its kind integration, and it demonstrates the potential of AI to enhance personalized experiences," said Steven Johnson, Head of Editorial at Google Labs, in a press event for the launch.

Wrapped AI podcast on Spotify
Users can listen to an AI podcast about their music choices of the year.

Spotify/Google

The podcast is unique to each user, reflecting their personal listening habits from the year, Johnson said. He also said it demonstrates the potential of AI to enhance these personalized experiences — and raised the point that most people don't have on-demand hosts to sit around and talk about their music choices from the year.

"There's a wonderful, robust market for podcasts on many topics," Johnson said. "But having customized top podcasts for millions of individual people based on their specific listening habits for the year, is just not something that you can do with actual humans."

Johnson said NotebookLM has been at the forefront of customizable AI.

He told BI that in the initial wave of AI, people conversed with models that knew a lot about the world, but nothing about the user asking the questions. When a reliable model is able to bring out these insights and make it interesting, that's when you see a change in the way computers can work, he said.

So far, the AI podcast feature on Spotify is only available with Wrapped. However, you can customize your own podcasts on NotebookLM's platform. Johnson also said the team is looking forward to "a lot of different partnerships," both in audio and text.

Just over a month after Google's NotebookLM Audio Overview tool went viral, NotebookLM introduced a "Customize" button, enabling users to guide the AI conversation. Its partnership with Spotify takes that customization a step further.

Google has implemented more personalized features across several of its platforms, including Google Shopping. Google Shopping now provides personalized recommendations and informative briefs at the top of your search. Spotify has similarly launched personalized features like AI Playlist, which creates playlists based on premium users' prompts. This year's Spotify Wrapped will also allow premium users to prompt the AI Playlist feature to create a playlist of their top genres or suggest artists similar to their top 5.

Spotify Wrapped will also include commentary from its AI DJ reflecting your year in music and incorporating insight from Spotify editors on the year's top tracks and artists of 2024.

The new Wrapped AI Podcast feature is available to free and premium Spotify users in the US, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Ireland, and Sweden. To find the podcast, you can go to your Wrapped home feed and select your Spotify Wrapped AI podcast.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Elon Musk lost his Tesla pay fight. Here's what he can do next.

3 December 2024 at 14:09
Elon Musk side profile dimmed lighting
Elon Musk's pay package was struck down for the second time on Monday.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

  • A Delaware judge again struck down Elon Musk's $55 billion pay package.
  • Legal experts walked BI through what the appeal process could look like for Tesla.
  • Tesla may also reintroduce the package in Texas, a strategy that could end up costing shareholders more.

Elon Musk's battle over his Tesla pay is entering a new phase.

A Delaware judge ruled on Monday that Tesla's shareholder vote wasn't enough to pass Elon Musk's $55 billion compensation package.

Tesla called the decision "wrong" and said it would appeal.

"This ruling, if not overturned, means that judges and plaintiffs' lawyers run Delaware companies rather than their rightful owners — the shareholders," Tesla wrote in a post on X.

So what happens next?

If Tesla files an appeal, Delaware's Supreme Court will review the decision of Delaware Chancery Court Judge Kathaleen St. J. McCormick, who maintained her earlier ruling that struck down the pay package on the grounds that Musk could have influenced Tesla's board members, to whom he had close ties.

Mathieu Shapiro, Obermayer's managing partner and a member of its litigation department, told Business Insider that appeals processes often take a year or longer.

Shapiro, who focuses on business and commercial litigation, said the case will ultimately have to balance Delaware's freedom for companies to self-govern with concerns about excessive payouts and Musk's status as one of the most successful businessmen.

While appeals are generally difficult to win, Shapiro said Musk's case is "novel" and contains unpredictable elements. One issue that may come up is whether Musk influenced the negotiations over his Tesla pay package, as the trial judge suggested in her initial ruling, he said.

"Little law addresses executive compensation, let alone what seems to be the largest-ever compensation deal at a US public company," Shapiro said.

Given that Musk's pay package was set to be the largest ever for a CEO, there aren't many cases to turn to for direct precedent.

Anat Alon-Beck, a business law professor at Case Western Reserve University, told BI that one case that stands out is the 2015 Delaware Chancery Court decision ruling against Mark Zuckerberg's attempt to ratify board actions related to Facebook's 2010 acquisition of Instagram.

Alon-Beck, who used to work as a merger and acquisition attorney for tech companies and also specializes in Delaware deal law, said Zuckerberg didn't follow the proper procedural requirements mandated by state law. The case demonstrates that even controlling shareholders need to comply with the legal procedures for ratifying board decisions, he added.

"When you know Delaware law, you know that stuff like that is just not going to fly," Alon-Beck said.

Columbia law professor Dorothy Lund used to clerk for a Delaware Supreme Court justice and US Court of Appeals judge. She told BI that Delaware is also "in a weird spot" because Tesla reincorporated from Delaware to Texas in June, and Musk has repeatedly spoken out about Delaware courts (he called the ruling "absolute corruption" on Monday).

While these decisions aren't supposed to be influenced by concerns around public perception, Lund said Musk's behavior hasn't been the most strategic.

"Delaware now has to worry about looking like, well, if we reverse, do we just look like we got cowed by Elon Musk?" Lund said.

Reintroducing the pay package in Texas

Prior to the shareholder vote, Tesla board chair Robyn Denholm said in June that the board had considered introducing a new pay plan if the shareholder vote didn't pass — an option she said would cost shareholders.

If Tesla created a new plan with the same stock grants, it would cost tens of billions in stock-based compensation today. That's because the compensation tied to the original package was worth an estimated $2.3 billion in stock, and it's already been paid out.

Alon-Beck told BI that a new compensation package in Texas would make the most sense.

"I would do a new vote in Texas, under Texas law, and I would authorize a new compensation package," Alon-Beck said, adding that the old package wouldn't be able to be authorized because of a conflict of laws.

Shapiro said he thinks it would be "very difficult" to draft the same package in Texas, noting that the original plan goes back to 2018 and was based on specific targets as well as Tesla's stock price in 2018.

Shapiro said Musk's decision to appeal or reintroduce the package in Texas depends on multiple factors — and underlying motivations.

While it may be all about the money, the case may also signify more about public companies in the US and the way in which shareholders and courts can interfere with management's plans.

"Or is it about his public persona and his reputation and how those things are understood in future business dealings," Shapiro said. "If he were my client, I would have a discussion about all of those things before deciding what path forward was best for him."

Read the original article on Business Insider

I worked in Big Tech for years and now help others get jobs. Don't follow these 4 career advice clichés.

3 December 2024 at 01:51
Alan Stein on stage
Alan Stein worked at major companies, including Google, before starting Kadima Careers, a career accelerator.

Alan Stein

  • 51-year-old Alan Stein worked in the corporate world for 25 years at companies including Google and Meta.
  • Now, as the CEO of Kadima Careers, he advises against following certain career advice clichés.
  • He suggests focusing on referrals rather than creating multiple résumés and posting on LinkedIn.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Alan Stein, CEO of career-accelerating service Kadima Careers. The story has been edited for length and clarity.

After 25 years of working in the corporate world, including at companies like Google, Meta, Salesforce, and American Express, I now help people get jobs at the world's best companies.

My company, Kadima Careers, is a career accelerator. We work for candidates and we help them get better jobs quickly, competently, and with lots more money. We've helped hundreds of people get jobs and negotiate offers.

Last time I checked, there were thousands of career experts on LinkedIn, sometimes, without any verification or certification.

These are some of the pieces of advice that I think you should avoid.

Posting often on LinkedIn

Don't expect that your posting or commenting is going to get you a job. You have to hope that your posts get seen by the right people. It's not easy to do that.

You should definitely keep LinkedIn up to date and make sure you are marketing yourself effectively on there because you will get people to come to your profile. But the way you'll do that is not by posting content but by proactively reaching out to people or people tangential to the people that you want to speak to.

Then, before they meet you, they'll look at your profile and understand that you're a program manager with 12 years of experience or you're a sales executive working at some of the best SaaS companies in the world.

You're wasting your time if the listed salary isn't what you want

You should decline to talk about compensation until after you get the offer.

I've seen so many times that there is flexibility with the compensation, and the best leverage you have as a candidate is after you have the offer. Furthermore, you get more practice. The more practice you get, the better you will become at interviewing — and you might learn things, you might meet people, and there might be other opportunities that pop up along the way.

There are three exceptions, including if you're grossly overpaid.

When I was at Google, sometimes I would just put the number out there to short-circuit things to see if it's not worth my time. Secondly, if they give you a homework assignment to do, you want to make sure it's worth your time.

The third reason is if you have so many interviews that you need to figure out which one to take and which one's going to compensate you if you get to the finish line.

Research the heck out of a company

Some people say you should research the heck out of a company and impress them with all your knowledge and that will lead to an interview. Don't do unsolicited work.

I've interviewed so many people in my time and some people come very well prepared and they've done research. But to put together a project, a presentation, a one-sheeter, a cover letter, or anything that is not asked for doesn't make sense. It might work for small organizations, but the better way is just to connect with the decision-makers at the company.

You should definitely check the company values out, understand the products, and research the role and who you're meeting with. But you don't need to research more than an hour for most interviews about the company. You will be surprised at how little most companies ask about the company itself.

Customize your résumé for every job

There are a couple of times when you want to have two résumés.

If you're going for an individual contributor role and you're going for a manager role, there are some different dynamics you do there. Also, if you have a disparate background and maybe you've done customer success and product management, you might want to have two different résumés.

Also, don't overcomplicate things and think you need to have the right search terms on there for the application tracking software.

Have a strong résumé that reflects your impact and what you've done and uses the right words for your industry — and then keep your résumé.

Your résumé is just table stakes. It's not going to make or break your search. So, focus on getting the referrals. That will get your résumé to the hiring manager.

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Tesla just announced over 25 holiday updates. These are the highlights.

2 December 2024 at 12:43
Row of Tesla chargers
Tesla just unveiled over 25 updates ahead of the holidays.

Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto

  • Tesla just announced over 25 holiday updates coming out in an over-the-air update next week.
  • Tesla unveiled an Apple Watch app, allowing drivers to open the frunk and adjust controls remotely.
  • Other highlights include SiriusXM trials, navigation upgrades, and Cybertruck-specific features.

Tesla released a series of end-of-year upgrades on Sunday in a post on X.

The updates are coming to Tesla owners in an over-the-air update next week — and include everything from the long-awaited Apple Watch app to holiday-themed features. The full list is outlined on X with visuals included for a number of the updates.

Here are a few of the highlights.

Tesla is finally giving drivers an Apple Watch app

While third-party apps on the Apple Watch allow owners to monitor their vehicles from their watches, Tesla owners have been eagerly anticipating an Apple Watch app. This holiday season, Tesla finally granted that wish.

The Apple Watch app will allow drivers to use their Apple Watch as a key. They will also be able to view the vehicle's battery charge, adjust the vehicle's climate controls, and open the frunk from the app.

SiriusXM for Model 3, Model Y, and Cybertruck

The new upgrade includes new audio entertainment options with SiriusXM. Once owners install the software, drivers can try out a free one-month trial to SiriusXM, which will show up on the media source menu. Owners who subscribe prior to March 31, 2025 will receive a limited-time offer of $9.99 a month for the first two years, according to an announcement from SiriusXM.

Navigation upgrades

Tesla owners can now set their desired battery charge level at arrival and view precipitation levels at their desired destination.

Drivers will also be able to search options along their route while navigating with estimated detour times. They'll also be able to find nearby parking at any location of interest. And navigation pathways will route around road closures. When finding a Supercharger station, drivers will also be notified about any Supercharger stalls that are out of service.

When driving in reverse, the vehicle will automatically lower volume to help ease distractions and will also alert drivers if it detects a person or vehicle behind it. Tesla will also provide an audible alert if a cross-traffic object is identified.

Cybertruck updates

Tesla also announced several Cybertruck-specific updates, including the option for owners to personalize their avatar or change it into Santa's sleigh with reindeer and elves. Cybertruck passengers will also be able to enjoy a new rear arcade. Additionally, the vehicle's rear camera feed is getting a larger display and owners will be able to pinch the screen to zoom in or out.

What else is new?

Drivers can save Dashcam and Sentry Mode clips directly from the Tesla app and edit or share with others from their phones. Sentry Mode, a security feature, is also receiving an update that will send mobile app notifications if the vehicle's door handle is pulled.

Tesla will also offer some holiday updates — owners can remotely schedule light shows from the Tesla app.

Tesla's light show feature started in 2016 and enables vehicles to perform light shows with moving car doors. Since then, it's become a popular feature with some shows racking up millions of views.

The company didn't miss the opportunity to put its signature sense of humor on display with a playful feature that allows owners to activate a whoopee cushion sound from any seat.

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Elon Musk and Sam Altman cofounded OpenAI, but now they're locked in a legal battle. Here's the history of their working relationship and feud.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Elon Musk
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Elon Musk aimed to create a nonprofit focused on developing AI.

Getty

  • Elon Musk helped found OpenAI, but he has frequently criticized it in recent years.
  • Musk filed a lawsuit against OpenAI in August and just amended it to include Microsoft. 
  • Here's a history of Musk and Altman's working relationship.

Elon Musk and Sam Altman lead rival AI firms and now take public jabs at each other — but it wasn't always like this.

Years ago, the two cofounded OpenAI, which Altman now leads. Musk departed OpenAI, which created ChatGPT, in 2018, and recently announced his own AI venture, xAI.

There is enough bad blood that Musk sued OpenAI and Altman, accusing them in the suit of betraying the firm's founding principles, before dropping the lawsuit. The billionaire then filed a new one a few months later, claiming he was "deceived" into confounding the company. In November, he amended it to include Microsoft as a defendant, and his lawyers accused the two companies of engaging in monopolistic behavior. Microsoft is an investor in OpenAI.

Two weeks later, Musk's lawyers filed a motion requesting a judge to bring an injunction against OpenAI that would block it from dropping its nonprofit status. In the filing, Musk accused OpenAI and Microsoft of exploiting his donations to create a for-profit monopoly.

Here's a look at Musk and Altman's complicated relationship over the years:

Musk and Altman cofounded OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, in 2015, alongside other Silicon Valley figures, including Peter Thiel, LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman, and Y Combinator cofounder Jessica Livingston.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Elon Musk
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Elon Musk aimed to create a nonprofit focused on developing AI.

Getty

The group aimed to create a nonprofit focused on developing artificial intelligence "in the way that is most likely to benefit humanity as a whole," according to a statement on OpenAI's website from December 11, 2015.

At the time, Musk said that AI was the "biggest existential threat" to humanity.
Elon Musk, the owner of Twitter, is pushing for a harder-driving culture at the company.
Musk said AI was the "biggest existential threat" to humanity.

Carina Johansen/Getty Images

"It's hard to fathom how much human-level AI could benefit society, and it's equally hard to imagine how much it could damage society if built or used incorrectly," a statement announcing the founding of OpenAI reads.

Musk stepped down from OpenAI's board of directors in 2018.
Elon Musk greets onlookers with both hands waving, at the 2022 Met Gala
OpenAI said in a blog post that Musk stepping down would "eliminate" a potential conflict with Tesla.

Gilbert Carrasquillo/GC Images

"As Tesla continues to become more focused on AI, this will eliminate a potential future conflict for Elon," OpenAI said in a blog post at the time, adding that Musk would continue to provide guidance and donations.

With his departure, Musk also backed out of a commitment to provide additional funding to OpenAI, a person involved in the matter told The New Yorker.

"It was very tough," Altman told the magazine of the situation. "I had to reorient a lot of my life and time to make sure we had enough funding."

It was reported that Sam Altman and other OpenAI cofounders had rejected Musk's proposal to run the company in 2018.
OpenAI's Sam Altman
Sam Altman and other OpenAI cofounders reportedly rejected Musk's proposal to run the company.

JASON REDMOND/AFP via Getty Images

Semafor reported in 2023 that Musk wanted to run the company on his own in an attempt to beat Google. But when his offer to run the company was rejected, he pulled his funding and left OpenAI's board, the news outlet said.

In 2019, Musk shared some insight on his decision to leave, saying one of the reasons was that he "didn't agree" with where OpenAI was headed.
Elon Musk
Musk said he "didn't agree" with where OpenAI was headed.

Susan Walsh/AP

"I had to focus on solving a painfully large number of engineering & manufacturing problems at Tesla (especially) & SpaceX," he tweeted. "Also, Tesla was competing for some of same people as OpenAI & I didn't agree with some of what OpenAI team wanted to do. Add that all up & it was just better to part ways on good terms."

Musk has taken shots at OpenAI on several occasions since leaving.
Elon Musk making a grimace and pointing a finger.
Musk said he didn't have high confidence in Dario Amodei for safety.

Frederic Brown/Getty Images

Two years after his departure, Musk said, "OpenAI should be more open" in response to an MIT Technology Review article reporting that there was a culture of secrecy there, despite OpenAI frequently proclaiming a commitment to transparency.

Musk also added that his "confidence in Dario for safety is not high," referring to Dario Amodei, who led OpenAI's strategy at the time.

In December 2022, days after OpenAI released ChatGPT, Musk said the company had prior access to the database of Twitter — now owned by Musk — to train the AI chatbot and that he was putting that on hold.
ChatGPT
Musk said OpenAI had had access to Twitter's database.

Getty Images

"Need to understand more about governance structure & revenue plans going forward. OpenAI was started as open-source & non-profit. Neither are still true," he said.

Musk was reportedly furious about ChatGPT's success, Semafor reported in 2023.
Elon Musk
OpenAI launched ChatGPT in November 2022.

Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

In November 2022, the chatbot took off and garnered millions of users for its ability to do everything from write essays to craft basic code. 

In February 2023, Musk doubled down, saying OpenAI as it exists today is "not what I intended at all."
L-R) Tesla Motors CEO and Product Architect Elon Musk and Y Combinator President Sam Altman speak onstage during "What Will They Think of Next? Talking About Innovation" at the Vanity Fair New Establishment Summit at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts on October 6, 2015 in San Francisco, California.
Musk said OpenAI didn't turn out as he intended.

Michael Kovac/Getty Images for Vanity Fair

"OpenAI was created as an open source (which is why I named it "Open" AI), non-profit company to serve as a counterweight to Google, but now it has become a closed source, maximum-profit company effectively controlled by Microsoft. Not what I intended at all," he said in a tweet.

Musk repeated this assertion a month later.

"I'm still confused as to how a non-profit to which I donated ~$100M somehow became a $30B market cap for-profit. If this is legal, why doesn't everyone do it?" he tweeted.

Musk was one of more than 1,000 people who signed an open letter calling for a six-month pause on training advanced AI systems.
Elon Musk attends The 2022 Met Gala.
Musk signed an open letter calling for a six month pause on training advanced AI systems.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

The March 2023 letter, which also received signatures from several AI experts, cited concerns about AI's potential risks to humanity.

"Powerful AI systems should be developed only once we are confident that their effects will be positive and their risks will be manageable," the letter says.

But while he was publicly calling for the pause, Musk was quietly building his own AI competitor, xAI, The New Yorker reported in 2023. He launched the company in March 2023.

Altman has addressed some of Musk's gripes about OpenAI.
Sam Altman speaks at TechCrunch Disrupt NY 2014 - Day 1 on May 5, 2014 in New York City.
Altman has responded to some of the claims Musk has made about OpenAI.

Brian Ach/Getty Images for TechCrunch

"To say a positive thing about Elon, I think he really does care about a good future with AGI," Altman said last year on an episode of the "On With Kara Swisher" podcast, referring to artificial general intelligence.

"I mean, he's a jerk, whatever else you want to say about him — he has a style that is not a style that I'd want to have for myself," Altman told Swisher. "But I think he does really care, and he is feeling very stressed about what the future's going to look like for humanity." 

In response to Musk's claim that OpenAI has turned into "a closed source, maximum-profit company effectively controlled by Microsoft," Altman said on the podcast, "Most of that is not true, and I think Elon knows that."

Altman has also referred to Musk as one of his heroes.
Sam Altman, president of Y Combinator and co-chairman of OpenAI, attends the annual Allen & Company Sun Valley Conference, July 8, 2016 in Sun Valley, Idaho. Every July, some of the world's most wealthy and powerful businesspeople from the media, finance, technology and political spheres converge at the Sun Valley Resort for the exclusive weeklong conference.
Altman has referred to Musk as one of his heroes.

Drew Angerer/Getty

In a March 2023 episode of Lex Fridman's podcast, Altman also said, "Elon is obviously attacking us some on Twitter right now on a few different vectors."

Nonetheless, he called Musk one of his heroes, adding, "I believe he is, understandably so, really stressed about AGI safety."

In a May 2023 talk at University College London, Altman was asked what he's learned from various mentors, Fortune reported. He answered by speaking about Musk.

"Certainly learning from Elon about what is just, like, possible to do and that you don't need to accept that, like, hard R&D and hard technology is not something you ignore, that's been super valuable," he said.

Musk has since briefly unfollowed Altman on Twitter before following him again; separately, Altman later poked fun at Musk's claim to be a "free speech absolutist."
sam altman wearing a black t shirt, black jacket, grey pants and sunglasses
Musk briefly unfollowed Altman on Twitter before following him again.

Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Twitter took aim at posts linking to rival Substack in 2023, forbidding users from retweeting or replying to tweets containing such links, before reversing course. In response to a tweet about the situation, Altman tweeted, "Free speech absolutism on STEROIDS."

Musk has called himself a "free speech absolutist" before and said it's one of the reasons he bought Twitter, now X.

Altman joked that he'd watch Musk and Mark Zuckerberg's rumored cage fight.
Sam Altman
Altman joked about watching Musk and Mark Zuckerberg's cage fight.

Issei Kato/Reuters

"I would go watch if he and Zuck actually did that," he said at the Bloomberg Technology Summit in June 2023, though he said he doesn't think he would ever challenge Musk in a physical fight.

Altman also repeated several of his previous remarks about Musk's position on AI.

"He really cares about AI safety a lot," Altman said at Bloomberg's summit. "We have differences of opinion on some parts, but we both care about that and he wants to make sure we, the world, have the maximal chance at a good outcome."

Separately, Altman told The New Yorker in August 2023 that Musk has a my-way-or-the highway approach to issues more broadly.

"Elon desperately wants the world to be saved. But only if he can be the one to save it," Altman said.

 

Musk first sued Altman and OpenAI in March 2024.
Elon Musk Sam Altman
Musk has since dropped the original lawsuit against OpenAI.

Slaven Vlasic, Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Getty Images

He first sued OpenAI, Altman, and cofounder Greg Brockman in March, alleging the company's direction in recent years has violated its founding principles.

His lawyers alleged OpenAI "has been transformed into a closed-source de facto subsidiary of the largest technology company in the world" and is "refining an AGI to maximize profits for Microsoft, rather than for the benefit of humanity."

In response, OpenAI called the lawsuit "incoherent" and "contradictory," suggesting Musk was jealous of the company's success without him.

A few months later, Musk withdrew the lawsuit, a day before a judge was set to consider the future of the case in a hearing.

Musk sued OpenAI again in August 2024, this time claiming he was "deceived" into cofounding the company.
side by side of Elons Musk and Sam Altman
Elon Musk appeared to take aim at Sam Altman after the departure of one of OpenAI's most-prominent executives.

Marc Piasecki; Justin Sullivan/ Getty Images

Musk filed a new lawsuit in August against Altman and cofounder Greg Brockman, who recently left the company for three months and returned a couple of days ago.

The lawsuit alleges that OpenAI executives played on Musk's concerns about the existential risks of AI and "assiduously manipulated" him into cofounding the company as a nonprofit. The intent of the company was to focus on building AI safely in an open approach to benefit humanity, the lawsuit says.

The company has since decided to take a for-profit approach.

OpenAI responded to the lawsuit by stating that "Elon's prior emails continue to speak for themselves."

The emails, which were published by OpenAI in March, show correspondence between Musk and OpenAI executives that indicated he supported a pivot to a for-profit model and was open to merging the AI startup with Tesla. 

Musk expanded his beef with OpenAI to include Microsoft, accusing the two of constituting a monopoly
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella wearing a suit and tie against an orange background.
Musk added Microsoft as a defendant in the lawsuit against OpenAI.

Getty Images

Musk amended the lawsuit against OpenAI in November to include Microsoft as a defendant. He also named Reid Hoffman, who serves as a Microsoft board member and former OpenAI board member, as a defendant.

The billionaire called OpenAI's partnership with Microsoft a "de facto merger" and accused the two of anti-competitive practices, such as engaging in "lavish compensation." Musk's lawyers said the two companies "possess a nearly 70% share of the generative AI market."

"OpenAI has attempted to starve competitors of AI talent by aggressively recruiting employees with offers of lavish compensation, and is on track to spend $1.5 billion on personnel for just 1,500 employees," lawyers for Musk said in the complaint. 

Two weeks later, Musk filed a motion asking a judge to prevent OpenAI from dropping its nonprofit status.
Sam Altman on the left, OpenAI logo displayed on a phone screen and Elon Musk on the right
Elon Musk sued OpenAI in March but dropped the lawsuit in June.

Anadolu

Musk filed a complaint to Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the US District Court for the Northern District of California, arguing that OpenAI and Microsoft exploited his donations to OpenAI as a nonprofit to build a monopoly "specifically targeting xAI." In the filing, Musk's lawyers said OpenAI engaged in anticompetitive behaviors and wrongfully shared information with Microsoft.

If granted by the judge, the injunction could cause issues with OpenAI's partnership with Microsoft and prevent it from becoming a for-profit company.

As Musk's influence on US policy grows, his feud with Altman hangs in the balance.
Donald Trump and Elon Musk stand
Donald Trump and Elon Musk grew close during the presidential race.

Getty Images

As President-elect Donald Trump's self-proclaimed "First Buddy," Musk's power and influence on the US economy could increase even further over the next four years. In addition to being a right-hand-man to Trump, he'll lead the new Department of Government Efficiency with biotech billionaire Vivek Ramaswamy.

Musk hasn't been quiet about his disdain for Altman post-election. He dubbed the OpenAI cofounder "Swindly Sam" in an X post on November 15. The Wall Street Journal reported that Musk "despises" Altman, according to people familiar.

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Tesla cofounder says humanity is underperforming and could stand to 'crank up the intensity' like Elon Musk

2 December 2024 at 09:47
JB Straubel, Redwood Materials founder
JB Straubel founded Redwood Materials in 2017.

Redwood Materials

  • JB Straubel told The Wall Street Journal he learned a "huge amount" from Elon Musk.
  • He said Musk could serve as an example for business leaders to bring more intensity to their work.
  • Straubel's company, Redwood Materials, is on track to make $200 million in revenue this year.

Tesla's cofounder JB Straubel said he learned "a huge amount" from Elon Musk — and we could all benefit from the billionaire's work ethic.

"He has an incredible tolerance for working incredibly hard and for putting in immense focus and hours into all these different projects," Straubel, the CEO of the electric-vehicle-battery startup Redwood Materials, said on Saturday's episode of The Wall Street Journal's "Tech News Briefing" podcast.

Straubel said he learned "incredibly important lessons" at Tesla, including the value of aligning a team around a clear mission and instilling passion within a company — areas in which he said Musk excels.

However, he added that he didn't want Musk to burn out.

"With my personal hat on, I do want to make sure he tries to balance that and doesn't burn himself out and takes at least a moment out here and there so that he can stay at a peak productivity and peak value creation for himself and all the various companies," he said.

Straubel said that, on average, "most leaders and business folks could probably work harder than they do without burning out" and that "humanity is probably underperforming a little bit versus its potential."

"Maybe Elon is beyond the optimum at times, but I think it could be probably a positive example to really crank up the intensity for a lot of other folks," he added.

Straubel said that humans often work harder when they're faced with stressful situations and that part of the decline in performance might stem from people becoming more comfortable as society has developed. He shared concerns about the US in comparison with other nations.

"In my travels and working with groups in different countries, I can definitely see a difference in the level of intensity and work ethic and just the hunger to go and improve themselves and improve their families and improve their next generation's law in life," Straubel said.

When it comes to leadership style and performance, Straubel aligns more closely with Musk's workflow. He favors "aggressive goals," he said, and occasionally is overly optimistic about what can be achieved.

Straubel said he anticipated making hundreds of millions in revenue this year. The CEO disclosed Redwood Materials' estimated revenue to the Journal, saying his company was poised to bring in about $200 million.

He launched Redwood Materials in 2017 to create a "remanufacturing economy," which refers to extracting raw materials from used batteries and returning them to production after processing them. The company, based in Northern Nevada, hopes this can prompt a shift away from mining minerals and bolster the electric-vehicle industry's sustainability.

Redwood Materials has extracted enough nickel and lithium from recycled batteries to "supply 20 gigawatt hours of lithium-ion batteries, or roughly equivalent to 250,000 electric vehicles," the Journal reported.

The company aims to produce enough battery materials for 1 million EVs annually. Representatives for Redwood Materials did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

Tesla Cybertruck in street
Tesla produces electric vehicles in the US, but Americans have been slow to adopt them.

Tristar Media/Getty Images

Straubel's efforts come at a time when EVs are struggling in the US despite Tesla's presence and popularity in overseas markets.

EVs have gained traction in countries like China. The advisory firm Automobility found in an analysis that about 27% of new-vehicle sales there in 2022 were electric.

Americans have been slower to warm up to EVs. In a June study by McKinsey & Co., 46% of surveyed EV owners in the US said they would likely return to gas-powered vehicles. Globally, two reasons consumers cited for leaning away from EVs were charging options and high costs.

While President Joe Biden provided a $7,500 EV tax credit, Donald Trump's incoming administration is considering revoking it.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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