š Artists protest OpenAI

Good morning, Quartz readers!
HEREāS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Steve Bannon says Elon Muskās campaigning is why Donald Trump won the presidency. The tech billionaireās $200 million in political spending didnāt hurt, either.
Another industry is worried about Trumpās tariffs. This time itās Constellation Brands, the company behind Americaās favorite brew, Modelo.
Trump has promised to eliminate tax credits for electric vehicles. These models might be harder to purchase come January.
The CEO of easyJet is sure glad his company flies Airbus planes instead of Boeingās. By another stroke of luck, easyJet also avoided Pratt & Whitney engines.
Going to college might be one of the most expensive parts of going to college. Some college towns have sky-high rents and elevated costs of living.
Artists-miffed-al Intelligence
OpenAI gave early access to its Sora text-to-video generator to artists to see what they would do with it. They staged a protest instead.
āWe are not your: free bug testers, PR puppets, training data, validation tokens,ā the artists wrote in an open letter to the āCorporate AI Overlordsā that they said were using art to āgreenwashā the technologyās harms.
Quartzās Britney Nguyen gives the letter a read and breaks down why the artists are so upset with OpenAI.
Appleās peers are biting into its smartphone market share
For years āglobal smartphone marketā and āAppleā were synonymous. But over the years the iPhone maker has faced increasingly stiff competition from electronics companies around the world, and they look set to eat even more of Appleās lunch next year.
A study from the market intelligence firm IDC suggests that all the worldās smartphone producers are expected to sell 6.2% more units, but Appleās iPhone growth is only expected to be 0.4%. The American company is still more profitable than its rivals, but for how much longer remains to be seen.
Quartzās William Gavin downloads the IDC report and lays out what its findings mean for the future of the iPhone.
MORE FROM QUARTZ
š Salesforce, GameStop, Lululemon, and more stocks to watch this week
šŗ Owners for these car brands get the most DUIsĀ
āļø Airfares are falling fastest along these routes
𤳠These are the politicians selling selfies on CameoĀ
šļø Fans of small cities should check out these locales
š¤ The U.S. is far from alone among countries rapidly developing their AI sectors
SURPRISING DISCOVERIES
Congress might not be the only place in D.C. with a bathroom ban next year. A trans-exclusionary restroom policy might extend to other federal buildings in the capital.
āQuiet quittingā has been making way for āstealth sackings.ā Thatās when companies use minor workplace policy infractions to help reduce headcounts instead of doing major layoffs. (paywall)
More than half of all longform LinkedIn posts are using AI. Content about the world of human resources is increasingly being made without humans. (paywall)
An Indian government ban hasnāt stopped Indian government workers from using certain apps. A popular Chinese document-copier called CamScanner still sees plenty of official use despite a crackdown.
Some people take their Thanksgiving turkey trots a little more seriously than others. So-called ābackyard ultrasā are races where competitors run around in a loop for days on end. (paywall)
Did you know we have two premium weekend emails, too? One gives you analysis on the weekās news, and one provides the best reads from Quartz and elsewhere to get your week started right. Become a member or give membership as a gift!
Our best wishes on a safe start to the day. Send any news, comments, your favorite non-Apple smartphones, and Boeing commercial airliner alternatives to [email protected]. Todayās Daily Brief was brought to you by Melvin Backman and Audrey McNamara.