đ Justice v Justice

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The US debt ceiling deal passed a House vote. More Democrats than Republicans approved the Biden-McCarthy agreement, which now heads to the Senate.Â
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) slapped two fines on Amazon. The company has to pay $30 million for privacy violations via its Ring and Alexa devices.
The US Department of Justice is suing the son of West Virginia governor Jim Justice. Coal companies linked to Jay Justice owe $5 million in fines racked up for more than 130 breaches of environmental regulations.
The âGreat Resignationâ has ended. The quits rate among American workers is back down to pre-pandemic levels.
Pride Month is forcing a reckoning for companies courting the âpink dollar.âAppealing to LGBTQ customers requires a consistent commitme nt.
What makes Nvidiaâs chips so special anyways?
Nvidiaâs microprocessors are tiny big deals. OpenAIâs ChatGPT, for instance, reportedly runs on thousands of Nvidia A100 chips.
Nvidiaâs journey to the top is partly about the capability of its underlying technology, and partly about being at the right place at the right time. Quartzâs Michelle Cheng explains what led ââJensen Huangâs company to this particular moment, and how its boom is affecting chip peers. Read the full report.

Pop quiz: Will the one with the AI speech please stand up?
Which sentenceâfrom the recent address made by Denmark prime minister Mette Frederiksenâwasnât written by ChatGPT?
đ âIt has been an honor and a challenge to lead a broad government in the last parliamentary year.â
đ«±âđ«Č âWe have worked hard to co-operate across parties and ensure a strong and sustainable future for Denmark.â
đȘ âWe have taken steps to combat climate change and ensure a fairer and more inclusive society where all citizens have equal opportunities.â
đ€ âWhat I have just read here is not from me. Or any other human for that matter.â
The answer may be clear, but the chatbotâs full power sure isnât.
Googleâs algorithm isnât making a news echo chamber
âItâs quite plausible that Google could just say, we know what kind of news websites you frequent, and so weâre going to prioritize them in our search results; and people might be happier that way. But they donât. They tend to show diverse content, diverse choices.â
âDavid Lazer, a Northeastern University professor who co-authored a study that found Google doesnât disproportionately lead people to click on partisan and unreliable news. Read our story on the study.
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Surprising discoveries
Perfume is back, baby! Sales are way up because the number of sprays are way upâprobably because most people donât know where ambergris comes from.
But liquefied natural gas-carrying ships are only back temporarily, baby! Analysts optimistic about a global transition from fossil fuels say weâll soon be left with a glut of useless, specialized, just-built cargo ships.
Hugging Face is machine learningâs very own GitHub. Itâs named after the đ€ emoji, and Microsoft has already made it a key part of its overall AI strategy.
The worldâs deadliest spider can adjust the deadliness of its venom. You wouldnât like the Australian funnel-web spider when itâs angry.Â
The URL on nearly 800,000 Maryland license plates will take you to an online casino. Authorities are trying to wrest the address back from a site that is decidedly not the Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail.
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