Business
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Telsa manager says he was fired after speaking up about Elon Musk’s Nazi jokes
A Telsa manager was fired after critiquing Tesla's "deafening" silencing regarding chief executive Elon Musk's social media posts that refer to...
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Disney’s ‘Stitch’ poised to become 2025’s most popular toy as NYC Toy Fair ramps up: sources
“Stitch is popping up all over the place in everything from collectible phone and gaming controller holders and slime,” said Toy Book...
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Bill Ackman calls Warren Buffet’s investment strategy too conservative
The hedge fund manager behind Pershing Square Capital Management is a former investor in Berkshire, and has been called the next Buffett – the...
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Washington Post subscribers cancel in droves after Jeff Bezos overhauls opinion page
A previous mass exodus of subscribers began in late October when Bezos reportedly blocked a planned endorsement of then-Vice President Kamala Harris.
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Millionaire banker Jonathan Kaye agrees to plea deal over slugging anti-Israel protester in face
Kaye initially claimed self-defense after a group of anti-Israel protesters shouted slurs and threw red and white liquid on him.
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Famed ‘Drink Masters’ mixologist Frankie Solarik to open BarChef in NYC — with $43 cocktails
"I'm really excited to be in the city and to show New York what we can do after 16 years of pushing the boundaries of what a cocktail can be,”...
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GrubHub lays off 20% of employees — two months after rival acquires food delivery platform
Wonder acquired GrubHub for just $650 million — a far cry from the $7.3 billion the previous owners paid.
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Sam Altman’s OpenAI launches GPT-4.5 with fewer ‘hallucinations’ as AI race heats up
Sam Altman’s OpenAI released GPT-4.5, an upgraded version of the artificial intelligence model that powers ChatGPT, to select users on Thursday.
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Washington Post spiked media critic Erik Wemple’s column about owner Jeff Bezos’s move to overhaul opinion section: report
Erik Wemple reportedly wrote an unpublished column about the resignation of David Shipley, the opinion page editor of the Washington Post.
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Citi bungle briefly credits client’s account with $81 trillion — instead of $280
The eye-popping error was missed by two employees before being caught by a third.
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U.S. consumers cut spending in January more drastically than at any point in the last four years
U.S. consumers cut back sharply on spending last month, the most since February 2021, even as inflation declined, though stiff tariffs threatened...
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Consumers cut spending by most in four years last month even as inflation fell
A key price gauge declined last month, a sign that inflation may be cooling though stiff tariffs threatened by the White House threaten that progress.