đ Two more years

Good morning, Quartz readers!
Hereâs what you need to know
The best person for Bob Igerâs job is still Bob Iger. Disneyâs boomerang CEO got a two-year extension on what was meant to be a two-year stint.
Elon Musk hired only men to lead his new AI company. The little thatâs known about xAI indicated that a lack of gender diversity will be an issue.
Prime Energyâs caffeine content is too high for Canada. The country issued a recall of the beverages, which are also facing regulatory scrutiny in the US.
Amazon Prime Day customers are buying now and paying later. The BNPL option saw a 20% surge in use compared to last yearâs sale event.
Americaâs oldest craft brewer has poured its last drink. Anchor Brewing employees suspect the blame lies with J apanese owner Sapporoâs mismanagement.
Quotable: Time for a moratorium on deep-sea mining
âIt is both logical and responsible to implement the precautionary approach vis-a-vis this new extractive industry that could drastically alter the marine environment we depend on with unknown and unintended consequences.â âA letter penned by the Global Tuna Alliance (GTA) and the Sustainable Seafood Coalition (SSC) on July 11.
Major players in the seafood industry have added their voices to a growing chorus demanding a halt in deep-sea mining. Julia Malleck looks at whatâs at stake as the International Seabed Authority (ISA) convenes this week to discuss regulation of the practice.
Slow down AI
The authors of a new model about how to regulate technologies like AI sketch out a few assumptions about what they call transformative technology:
- It can increase productivity in any sector in which it is usedâŚ
- ⌠But it can also be misused (intentionally or otherwise) to create a disaster. Think of the internal combustion engine, or transistors.
Their tentative conclusion: slow it all way down. Tim Fernholz explains why and how.
Pop quiz: How is Shopify making meetings more meaningful?
- A cost calculator that puts a meetingâs dollar value directly onto the invite
- A âskip introâ button for the throat-clearing at the start of a meeting
- A punctuality score that predicts who will show up late
Letâs not waste your valuable non-meeting timeâitâs A., a cost calculator thatâs less about the actual dollars than it is a reminder that perhaps your meeting might not be necessary.
We rounded up our own ideas for software developers out there who are as annoyed as the rest of us about excessive meeting culture. But weâd love to hear your suggestions for how youâd throw technology at the problem, if you could.
Quartzâs most popular
đŹ US airplane tickets got a little cheaper in JuneÂ
đ Threads isnât just growing fastâits users are also more engaged than on Twitter
đ Amazon is denying that it is a âvery large online platformâ
đ¤ 5 ways AI could automate management tasks
đ˛ Everything on Janet Yellenâs âGod of Moneyâ restaurant menu in Beijing
đ For maximum recharge, take a Wednesday off
Surprising discoveries
France is subsidizing clothing repairs. Down with fast fashion, up with creative mending.
Ex-OpenAI engineers have created a âsaferâ AI. Claude 2 involves humans, feels more human, and constantly reminds you it should not be mistaken for a human.
Johannesburg saw snow for the first time since 2012. Donât think it means climate change is solved, though.
Burger Kingâs new burger has no burgerâjust 20 pieces of cheese. Itâs only available in Thailand, and reviews arenât mixed.
The North Atlantic ocean is the warmest itâs ever been. A combination of factors pushed water temperatures way above average.
Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, best mending attempts, and a burger thatâs all bun to [email protected]. Reader support makes Quartz available to allâbecome a member. Todayâs Daily Brief was brought to you by Sofia Lotto Persio and Susan Howson.