• IPL 2024:MI vs RCB Dream11 Prediction
    Mumbai Indians (MI) will take on Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in match 25 of the 17th edition of the Indian Premier League 2024 on Thursday, April 11, 2024, at the Wankhede, International Cricket Stadium, in Mumbai. In the ongoing tournament, the Indians have started the season slowly as always but come back to winning ways in the previous match as always. They have won the one match and lost the three matches in this tournament. Thus, the Indians would like to continue their winning momentum. On the other hand, RCB also have started the season slowly. They have also won one match and lost four matches in this tournament. Thus, the Challengers would like to come back to their winning momentum in the tournament.
    Wicket keeper For Today’s Dream11 Team
    Ishan Kishan can be taken as wicketkeeper.
    Batter For Today’s Dream11Team
    Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Suryakumar Yadav can be included among the batsmen.
    Allrounder For Today’s Dream11Team
    Cameron Green, Glenn Maxwell, Hardik Pandya and Romario Shepherd be included among all-rounders.
    Bowler For Today’s Dream11Team
    Reece Topley, Gerald Coetzee and Jasprit Bumrah can be included among the bowlers.
    Today Dream11 Team Captain and Vice Captain
    Shubman Gill and Jos Buttler can be made the vice-captain.
    IPL 2024:MI vs RCB Dream11 Prediction Mumbai Indians (MI) will take on Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in match 25 of the 17th edition of the Indian Premier League 2024 on Thursday, April 11, 2024, at the Wankhede, International Cricket Stadium, in Mumbai. In the ongoing tournament, the Indians have started the season slowly as always but come back to winning ways in the previous match as always. They have won the one match and lost the three matches in this tournament. Thus, the Indians would like to continue their winning momentum. On the other hand, RCB also have started the season slowly. They have also won one match and lost four matches in this tournament. Thus, the Challengers would like to come back to their winning momentum in the tournament. Wicket keeper For Today’s Dream11 Team Ishan Kishan can be taken as wicketkeeper. Batter For Today’s Dream11Team Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Suryakumar Yadav can be included among the batsmen. Allrounder For Today’s Dream11Team Cameron Green, Glenn Maxwell, Hardik Pandya and Romario Shepherd be included among all-rounders. Bowler For Today’s Dream11Team Reece Topley, Gerald Coetzee and Jasprit Bumrah can be included among the bowlers. Today Dream11 Team Captain and Vice Captain Shubman Gill and Jos Buttler can be made the vice-captain.
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  • SACRAMENTO -- Kaiser Permanente will pay the state millions of dollars in penalties for illegally dumping hazardous waste, medical supplies, and patient information.

    Attorney General Bonta announced in a press conference Thursday with District Attorney's officials across the state a $49 Million settlement with Kaiser for the illegal disposal. The deal comes after undercover inspections of dumpsters at 16 different Kaiser facilities, including those in San Joaquin County.

    "The illegal disposal of hazardous and medical waste puts the environment, workers, and the public at risk. It also violates numerous federal and state laws," said Attorney General Rob Bonta.

    Investigators found hundreds of medical and hazardous wastes such as aerosols, cleansers, sanitizers, batteries, electronic wastes, syringes, medical tubing with body fluids, and pharmaceuticals) and over 10,000 paper records containing over 7,700 patient information.

    "As a healthcare provider, Kaiser should know that it has specific legal obligations to properly dispose of medical waste and safeguard patients' medical information. I am pleased that Kaiser has been cooperative with my office and the district attorneys' offices, and that it took immediate action to address the alleged violations."

    Kaiser Permanente Statement as of September 8, 2023

    "Kaiser Permanente is committed to the health and well-being of our members, patients, employees, physicians, and the communities we serve, which includes proper waste disposal and protecting the confidentiality of member and patient information. Millions of people receive care and support in our hundreds of medical facilities across California each year, and we have well-established policies and procedures for disposing of the different kinds of resulting waste items.

    About six years ago, we became aware of occasions when, contrary to our rigorous policies and procedures, some facilities' landfill-bound dumpsters included items that should have been disposed of differently. Upon learning of this issue, we immediately completed an extensive auditing effort of the waste stream at our facilities and established mandatory and ongoing training to address the findings. All Kaiser Permanente staff and physicians in California take this required annual training. We also introduced specialized equipment, instructions, and receptacles placed closest to where waste is generated to ensure all types of waste are disposed of properly, and we introduced more environmentally friendly products to enhance our long-standing environmental compliance measures.

    We take this matter extremely seriously and have taken full responsibility to acknowledge and, in cooperation with the California Attorney General and county district attorneys, correct our performance regarding landfill-bound trash where it may have fallen short of our standards. We dedicated many hours to identifying and closing gaps to strengthen our regulated waste disposal program and are confident in our ability not only to meet the monitoring and reporting requirements of this settlement but to comply with the numerous requirements that apply to the different kinds of waste that result from caring for millions of Californians.

    To address this issue, Kaiser Permanente developed a three-step approach that includes:

    1. Assessment of hospitals, medical office buildings, and other facilities to identify the types of waste generated and to provide the right receptacles so that it is as easy and convenient as possible for our staff and physicians to dispose of waste in the appropriate receptacles;

    2. Worksite rounding to observe disposal techniques and to provide just-in-time training to ensure compliance with proper practices and

    3. Training, which every employee and physician in California is required to participate in annually, on proper waste disposal processes.

    We are not aware of any body part being found at any time during this investigation."

    Following this settlement, patients may be concerned about paper records containing patient information. President and CEO of Identity Theft Resource Center Eva Velasquez says patients need to know what information was discarded.

    "We need people to know what data they are talking about. 'Is it my foundational identity information i.e., my name, date of birth, address, and phone number," said Velasquez.

    And encourage those to update their password and digital information as a caution.

    "Your email address, or maybe it's even your username and password for your digital portal in your health portal. Then you absolutely want to change the password on those accounts so those can't gain access to them. "

    More from CBS News

    Minnesota meat processing company fined $300K for illegally employing children

    Southern Ute, Ute Mtn. Tribes receive $2+ million from state opioid settlement

    Air district launches tool to search notices of violation around region

    Authorities warn against big "LA to the Bay" sideshow planned for this weekend
    In: Kaiser Permanente
    First published on September 8, 2023 / 6:09 PM


    Minnesota meat processing company fined $300K for illegally employing children

    Southern Ute, Ute Mtn. Tribes receive $2+ million from state opioid settlement

    Air district launches tool to search notices of violation around region

    Authorities warn against big "LA to the Bay" sideshow planned for this weekend
    SACRAMENTO -- Kaiser Permanente will pay the state millions of dollars in penalties for illegally dumping hazardous waste, medical supplies, and patient information. Attorney General Bonta announced in a press conference Thursday with District Attorney's officials across the state a $49 Million settlement with Kaiser for the illegal disposal. The deal comes after undercover inspections of dumpsters at 16 different Kaiser facilities, including those in San Joaquin County. "The illegal disposal of hazardous and medical waste puts the environment, workers, and the public at risk. It also violates numerous federal and state laws," said Attorney General Rob Bonta. Investigators found hundreds of medical and hazardous wastes such as aerosols, cleansers, sanitizers, batteries, electronic wastes, syringes, medical tubing with body fluids, and pharmaceuticals) and over 10,000 paper records containing over 7,700 patient information. "As a healthcare provider, Kaiser should know that it has specific legal obligations to properly dispose of medical waste and safeguard patients' medical information. I am pleased that Kaiser has been cooperative with my office and the district attorneys' offices, and that it took immediate action to address the alleged violations." Kaiser Permanente Statement as of September 8, 2023 "Kaiser Permanente is committed to the health and well-being of our members, patients, employees, physicians, and the communities we serve, which includes proper waste disposal and protecting the confidentiality of member and patient information. Millions of people receive care and support in our hundreds of medical facilities across California each year, and we have well-established policies and procedures for disposing of the different kinds of resulting waste items. About six years ago, we became aware of occasions when, contrary to our rigorous policies and procedures, some facilities' landfill-bound dumpsters included items that should have been disposed of differently. Upon learning of this issue, we immediately completed an extensive auditing effort of the waste stream at our facilities and established mandatory and ongoing training to address the findings. All Kaiser Permanente staff and physicians in California take this required annual training. We also introduced specialized equipment, instructions, and receptacles placed closest to where waste is generated to ensure all types of waste are disposed of properly, and we introduced more environmentally friendly products to enhance our long-standing environmental compliance measures. We take this matter extremely seriously and have taken full responsibility to acknowledge and, in cooperation with the California Attorney General and county district attorneys, correct our performance regarding landfill-bound trash where it may have fallen short of our standards. We dedicated many hours to identifying and closing gaps to strengthen our regulated waste disposal program and are confident in our ability not only to meet the monitoring and reporting requirements of this settlement but to comply with the numerous requirements that apply to the different kinds of waste that result from caring for millions of Californians. To address this issue, Kaiser Permanente developed a three-step approach that includes: 1. Assessment of hospitals, medical office buildings, and other facilities to identify the types of waste generated and to provide the right receptacles so that it is as easy and convenient as possible for our staff and physicians to dispose of waste in the appropriate receptacles; 2. Worksite rounding to observe disposal techniques and to provide just-in-time training to ensure compliance with proper practices and 3. Training, which every employee and physician in California is required to participate in annually, on proper waste disposal processes. We are not aware of any body part being found at any time during this investigation." Following this settlement, patients may be concerned about paper records containing patient information. President and CEO of Identity Theft Resource Center Eva Velasquez says patients need to know what information was discarded. "We need people to know what data they are talking about. 'Is it my foundational identity information i.e., my name, date of birth, address, and phone number," said Velasquez. And encourage those to update their password and digital information as a caution. "Your email address, or maybe it's even your username and password for your digital portal in your health portal. Then you absolutely want to change the password on those accounts so those can't gain access to them. " More from CBS News Minnesota meat processing company fined $300K for illegally employing children Southern Ute, Ute Mtn. Tribes receive $2+ million from state opioid settlement Air district launches tool to search notices of violation around region Authorities warn against big "LA to the Bay" sideshow planned for this weekend In: Kaiser Permanente First published on September 8, 2023 / 6:09 PM Minnesota meat processing company fined $300K for illegally employing children Southern Ute, Ute Mtn. Tribes receive $2+ million from state opioid settlement Air district launches tool to search notices of violation around region Authorities warn against big "LA to the Bay" sideshow planned for this weekend
    0 Comments 0 Shares 0 Reviews
  • Report: Elon Musk plans to cut 75% of Twitter workforce

    Twitter’s workforce is likely to be hit with massive cuts in the coming months, no matter who owns the company, interviews and documents obtained by The Washington Post show, a change likely to have major impact on its ability to control harmful content and prevent data security crises.

    Elon Musk told prospective investors in his deal to buy the company that he planned to get rid of nearly 75 percent of Twitter’s 7,500 workers, whittling the company down to a skeleton staff of just over 2,000.

    Even if Musk’s Twitter deal falls through — and there’s little indication now that it will — big cuts are expected: Twitter’s current management planned to pare the company’s payroll by about $800 million by the end of next year, a number that would mean the departure of nearly a quarter of the workforce, according to corporate documents and interviews with people familiar with the company’s deliberations. The company also planned to make major cuts to its infrastructure, including data centers that keep the site functioning for more than 200 million users that log on each day.

    The extent of the cuts, which have not been previously reported, help explain why Twitter officials were eager to sell to Musk: Musk’s $44 billion bid, though hostile, is a golden ticket for the struggling company — potentially helping its leadership avoid painful announcements that would have demoralized the staff and possibly crippled the service’s ability to combat misinformation, hate speech and spam.

    The impact of such layoffs would likely be immediately felt by millions of users, said Edwin Chen, a data scientist formerly in charge of Twitter’s spam and health metrics and now CEO of the content-moderation start-up Surge AI. He said that while he believed Twitter was overstaffed, the cuts Musk proposed were “unimaginable” and would put Twitter’s users at risk of hacks and exposure to offensive material such as child pornography.

    “It would be a cascading effect,” he said, “where you’d have services going down and the people remaining not having the institutional knowledge to get them back up, and being completely demoralized and wanting to leave themselves.”

    On Thursday evening, Twitter’s top lawyer Sean Edgett sent out a note to all employees saying the company did not have any confirmation from Musk about his plans. Twitter’s own, smaller-scale “cost savings discussions” were put on hold once the merger agreement was signed, Edgett said, according to an email viewed by The Post.

    In internal Slack groups, Twitter employees reacted to the news with anger and resignation, supporting each other and making jokes about the turmoil of the past few months, according to people familiar with the conversations.

    Twitter and Musk are expected to close the purchase by Oct. 28. Planning for the closing is moving forward in apparent good faith after months of legal battles, say people familiar with the negotiations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. If the deal closes, Musk would immediately become Twitter’s new owner.

    Twitter did not immediately respond to request for comment.

    “The easy part for Musk was buying Twitter and the hard part is fixing it,” said Dan Ives, a financial analyst with Wedbush Securities. “It will be a herculean challenge to turn this around.”

    Nell Minow, a corporate governance expert who is vice chair of ValueEdge Advisors, said Musk was likely shopping ambitious plans to potential investors but will face challenges in implementing his proposals.

    “He’s got to be able to show if he makes those cuts, what happens next?” she said. “What’s he gonna replace it with, AI?”

    Company executives have repeatedly told employees that there are no immediate layoff plans during town hall meetings. In the one town hall that he attended, in June, Musk was pointedly asked a question about layoffs. He answered that he didn’t see a reason low performers should remain employed.

    But the new details, which reflect conversations over the last few months, highlight the extreme nature of Musk’s planned transformation of Twitter amid the challenge of making the long struggling company more profitable. Twitter has never achieved the profit margins or size of other social sites like Meta and Snap. And Musk’s plan to take the company private — freeing it from having to please Wall Street — was a key reason former CEO and co-founder Jack Dorsey got behind Musk’s bid.

    Musk and his representatives did not respond to requests for comment.

    The months-long roller-coaster saga of Musk’s on-again off-again bid for ownership — coupled with a tense legal battle — has left Twitter battered and bruised. It faces significant worker attrition, slowed hiring, stalled projects and a volatile stock price.

    Recently Andrea Walne, a general partner at Manhattan Venture Partners, a firm that has invested in the deal, told Business Insider that she thinks Twitter is worth only $10 billion to $12 billion and that other partners were trying to get out. Musk himself said that he and his investors were “obviously overpaying” for the site during Tesla’s earnings call on Wednesday. Walne did not respond to requests for comment.

    Musk has suggested he’ll loosen content moderation standards and favors restoring former president Donald Trump’s account (on Tuesday he posted a meme of himself, Kanye West and Trump each holding a sword for the social media company he owns or is in the process of purchasing).

    Musk has told investors that he plans to double revenue in three years, and would triple the number of daily users that can view ads in the same period, though he’s offered scant details on how he would accomplish those goals.

    Twitter estimates that its monetizable daily active users (MDAU), defined as the number of users eligible to see ads, is 237.8 million, up 16.6 percent compared with the same quarter last year. But documents that have emerged in Twitter’s court battle with Musk point to far lower numbers, with Musk’s side claiming, using Twitter’s own data, that fewer than 16 million users see the vast majority of ads.

    Moreover, the time those users spend browsing Twitter declined 10 percent over the course of 2021 and only recovered slightly in the first quarter of 2022, according to the interviews.

    Gutting and then reshaping the workforce through rehiring chosen people is a huge part of Musk’s ambitions, according to interviews and documents. Though Musk has previously indicated he would be open to cutting staff — legal filings show that he agreed with a friend over text that the company’s head count wasn’t justified by its revenue when compared with other tech companies — he has not offered specific numbers publicly.

    In presentations prepared for investors and other interested parties, Musk’s optimistic business projections were fueled in part by steep jobs cuts across what was termed a “bloated” organization. One prospective investor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly describe Musk’s proposals, likened them to leveraged buyouts, where companies are made profitable through devastating cuts to labor and operations.

    But Musk has told associates he thinks that dramatically slimming down the company is the first step to executing a turnaround strategy that would then involve bringing in more effective workers and profitable innovations. Those include expanding on new services that he has claimed could bring in more revenue, such as a subscription business where people pay to subscribe to exclusive content from powerful figures and influencers. (Twitter is currently experimenting with such a model, called Twitter Blue).

    But Twitter’s own data has found that subscriptions may not bring in significant new revenue, according to the interviews. That’s because the users who view the most ads — roughly the top 1 percent of users in the United States — are also the ones most likely to join a subscription service. If they began paying a monthly subscription and went ad-free, the program could cannibalize the most lucrative part of Twitter’s current ad business.

    Twitter’s budget for head count — roughly $1.5 billion last year — includes many highly paid ad salespeople and several thousand engineers. The company also spends hundreds of millions on contracting firms that pay people to review reports of hate speech, child sexual abuse, and other ugly and rule-breaking content on the internet. Twitter’s median compensation — the point at which half make more and half make less — is about $240,000 for all employees and $308,000 for engineers.

    Some of the planned cuts were put on hold pending the sale to Musk, which was announced in April.

    The company is instituting a performance review system called stack ranking that requires managers to grade employees on a numerical curve, so that a set percentage of workers will always be marked as low performers, according to one of the company documents obtained by The Post. The move has been protested by staff members, but Twitter says other tech companies have the same practices.

    Human resources staff at Twitter have told employees that they aren’t planning for mass layoffs, but documents show that extensive plans to push out staff and cut down on infrastructure costs were already in place before Musk offered to buy the company. Musk would then have built on those plans by first targeting low performers — people the company’s human resources system designated as “not on track” or receiving below a 3 out of 5 rating — before moving to other phases of downsizing.

    For weeks leading into the acquisition announcement, Musk and his attorney Alex Spiro pitched a who’s who crowd of elite investors in Silicon Valley and Wall Street on a deal that was billed as a chance not only to transform underperforming Twitter, but to work with the celebrated Musk. Not all potential investors received the same details from Musk’s team.

    Some of Musk’s biggest partners in the deal, including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Sequoia partner Doug Leone were also Trump supporters and self-proclaimed believers in the type of free speech ideology Musk promised to bring back to the platform. (Leone is no longer a Trump supporter but is said to take an expansive view of free speech). Hedge fund manager Kenneth Griffin, the second largest GOP donor in the current midterm cycle, also committed a smaller amount — under $20 million compared with $1 billion from Ellison — to the deal, The Post has learned.

    But many potential notable funders passed.

    Private equity giants T. Rowe Price, TPG and Warburg Pincus, who collectively control more than $1.4 trillion, all decided not to invest after being approached by Musk’s representatives, according to people familiar with the process.

    And other prominent Silicon Valley heavyweights said no as well. LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman helped connect Musk with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella as part of the money-raising process, but decided not to invest himself, according to people familiar with the situation. Hoffman is a major Democratic donor, and Musk at the time was already talking about restoring Trump.

    Founders Fund, the Silicon Valley venture firm founded by billionaire Republican donor Peter Thiel, also said no. Thiel first worked with Musk in 2000 when the two merged their companies to form PayPal, and Thiel’s associates have said he is a fan of Musk running Twitter.

    It’s unclear whether these parties didn’t buy into Musk’s lofty projection, or didn’t want to be involved politically.

    Some passed after the company’s finances and Musk’s own predicament began to look less attractive.

    One person who lost interest told The Post that he was alarmed after the market downturn and the cost of the deal began taking a toll on Musk’s finances and the crown jewel of his portfolio, Tesla.

    It hasn’t helped that Musk relentlessly attacked Twitter and its leadership after announcing his takeover, pushing down its stock price. Musk’s latest turnabout only added to the sense of chaos.

    “[It’s] like you bought a new car, you decided you didn’t want it, and then you crash it,” the person said. “And then you’re like ‘I’ll keep it.’”
    Report: Elon Musk plans to cut 75% of Twitter workforce Twitter’s workforce is likely to be hit with massive cuts in the coming months, no matter who owns the company, interviews and documents obtained by The Washington Post show, a change likely to have major impact on its ability to control harmful content and prevent data security crises. Elon Musk told prospective investors in his deal to buy the company that he planned to get rid of nearly 75 percent of Twitter’s 7,500 workers, whittling the company down to a skeleton staff of just over 2,000. Even if Musk’s Twitter deal falls through — and there’s little indication now that it will — big cuts are expected: Twitter’s current management planned to pare the company’s payroll by about $800 million by the end of next year, a number that would mean the departure of nearly a quarter of the workforce, according to corporate documents and interviews with people familiar with the company’s deliberations. The company also planned to make major cuts to its infrastructure, including data centers that keep the site functioning for more than 200 million users that log on each day. The extent of the cuts, which have not been previously reported, help explain why Twitter officials were eager to sell to Musk: Musk’s $44 billion bid, though hostile, is a golden ticket for the struggling company — potentially helping its leadership avoid painful announcements that would have demoralized the staff and possibly crippled the service’s ability to combat misinformation, hate speech and spam. The impact of such layoffs would likely be immediately felt by millions of users, said Edwin Chen, a data scientist formerly in charge of Twitter’s spam and health metrics and now CEO of the content-moderation start-up Surge AI. He said that while he believed Twitter was overstaffed, the cuts Musk proposed were “unimaginable” and would put Twitter’s users at risk of hacks and exposure to offensive material such as child pornography. “It would be a cascading effect,” he said, “where you’d have services going down and the people remaining not having the institutional knowledge to get them back up, and being completely demoralized and wanting to leave themselves.” On Thursday evening, Twitter’s top lawyer Sean Edgett sent out a note to all employees saying the company did not have any confirmation from Musk about his plans. Twitter’s own, smaller-scale “cost savings discussions” were put on hold once the merger agreement was signed, Edgett said, according to an email viewed by The Post. In internal Slack groups, Twitter employees reacted to the news with anger and resignation, supporting each other and making jokes about the turmoil of the past few months, according to people familiar with the conversations. Twitter and Musk are expected to close the purchase by Oct. 28. Planning for the closing is moving forward in apparent good faith after months of legal battles, say people familiar with the negotiations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. If the deal closes, Musk would immediately become Twitter’s new owner. Twitter did not immediately respond to request for comment. “The easy part for Musk was buying Twitter and the hard part is fixing it,” said Dan Ives, a financial analyst with Wedbush Securities. “It will be a herculean challenge to turn this around.” Nell Minow, a corporate governance expert who is vice chair of ValueEdge Advisors, said Musk was likely shopping ambitious plans to potential investors but will face challenges in implementing his proposals. “He’s got to be able to show if he makes those cuts, what happens next?” she said. “What’s he gonna replace it with, AI?” Company executives have repeatedly told employees that there are no immediate layoff plans during town hall meetings. In the one town hall that he attended, in June, Musk was pointedly asked a question about layoffs. He answered that he didn’t see a reason low performers should remain employed. But the new details, which reflect conversations over the last few months, highlight the extreme nature of Musk’s planned transformation of Twitter amid the challenge of making the long struggling company more profitable. Twitter has never achieved the profit margins or size of other social sites like Meta and Snap. And Musk’s plan to take the company private — freeing it from having to please Wall Street — was a key reason former CEO and co-founder Jack Dorsey got behind Musk’s bid. Musk and his representatives did not respond to requests for comment. The months-long roller-coaster saga of Musk’s on-again off-again bid for ownership — coupled with a tense legal battle — has left Twitter battered and bruised. It faces significant worker attrition, slowed hiring, stalled projects and a volatile stock price. Recently Andrea Walne, a general partner at Manhattan Venture Partners, a firm that has invested in the deal, told Business Insider that she thinks Twitter is worth only $10 billion to $12 billion and that other partners were trying to get out. Musk himself said that he and his investors were “obviously overpaying” for the site during Tesla’s earnings call on Wednesday. Walne did not respond to requests for comment. Musk has suggested he’ll loosen content moderation standards and favors restoring former president Donald Trump’s account (on Tuesday he posted a meme of himself, Kanye West and Trump each holding a sword for the social media company he owns or is in the process of purchasing). Musk has told investors that he plans to double revenue in three years, and would triple the number of daily users that can view ads in the same period, though he’s offered scant details on how he would accomplish those goals. Twitter estimates that its monetizable daily active users (MDAU), defined as the number of users eligible to see ads, is 237.8 million, up 16.6 percent compared with the same quarter last year. But documents that have emerged in Twitter’s court battle with Musk point to far lower numbers, with Musk’s side claiming, using Twitter’s own data, that fewer than 16 million users see the vast majority of ads. Moreover, the time those users spend browsing Twitter declined 10 percent over the course of 2021 and only recovered slightly in the first quarter of 2022, according to the interviews. Gutting and then reshaping the workforce through rehiring chosen people is a huge part of Musk’s ambitions, according to interviews and documents. Though Musk has previously indicated he would be open to cutting staff — legal filings show that he agreed with a friend over text that the company’s head count wasn’t justified by its revenue when compared with other tech companies — he has not offered specific numbers publicly. In presentations prepared for investors and other interested parties, Musk’s optimistic business projections were fueled in part by steep jobs cuts across what was termed a “bloated” organization. One prospective investor, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to candidly describe Musk’s proposals, likened them to leveraged buyouts, where companies are made profitable through devastating cuts to labor and operations. But Musk has told associates he thinks that dramatically slimming down the company is the first step to executing a turnaround strategy that would then involve bringing in more effective workers and profitable innovations. Those include expanding on new services that he has claimed could bring in more revenue, such as a subscription business where people pay to subscribe to exclusive content from powerful figures and influencers. (Twitter is currently experimenting with such a model, called Twitter Blue). But Twitter’s own data has found that subscriptions may not bring in significant new revenue, according to the interviews. That’s because the users who view the most ads — roughly the top 1 percent of users in the United States — are also the ones most likely to join a subscription service. If they began paying a monthly subscription and went ad-free, the program could cannibalize the most lucrative part of Twitter’s current ad business. Twitter’s budget for head count — roughly $1.5 billion last year — includes many highly paid ad salespeople and several thousand engineers. The company also spends hundreds of millions on contracting firms that pay people to review reports of hate speech, child sexual abuse, and other ugly and rule-breaking content on the internet. Twitter’s median compensation — the point at which half make more and half make less — is about $240,000 for all employees and $308,000 for engineers. Some of the planned cuts were put on hold pending the sale to Musk, which was announced in April. The company is instituting a performance review system called stack ranking that requires managers to grade employees on a numerical curve, so that a set percentage of workers will always be marked as low performers, according to one of the company documents obtained by The Post. The move has been protested by staff members, but Twitter says other tech companies have the same practices. Human resources staff at Twitter have told employees that they aren’t planning for mass layoffs, but documents show that extensive plans to push out staff and cut down on infrastructure costs were already in place before Musk offered to buy the company. Musk would then have built on those plans by first targeting low performers — people the company’s human resources system designated as “not on track” or receiving below a 3 out of 5 rating — before moving to other phases of downsizing. For weeks leading into the acquisition announcement, Musk and his attorney Alex Spiro pitched a who’s who crowd of elite investors in Silicon Valley and Wall Street on a deal that was billed as a chance not only to transform underperforming Twitter, but to work with the celebrated Musk. Not all potential investors received the same details from Musk’s team. Some of Musk’s biggest partners in the deal, including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and Sequoia partner Doug Leone were also Trump supporters and self-proclaimed believers in the type of free speech ideology Musk promised to bring back to the platform. (Leone is no longer a Trump supporter but is said to take an expansive view of free speech). Hedge fund manager Kenneth Griffin, the second largest GOP donor in the current midterm cycle, also committed a smaller amount — under $20 million compared with $1 billion from Ellison — to the deal, The Post has learned. But many potential notable funders passed. Private equity giants T. Rowe Price, TPG and Warburg Pincus, who collectively control more than $1.4 trillion, all decided not to invest after being approached by Musk’s representatives, according to people familiar with the process. And other prominent Silicon Valley heavyweights said no as well. LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman helped connect Musk with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella as part of the money-raising process, but decided not to invest himself, according to people familiar with the situation. Hoffman is a major Democratic donor, and Musk at the time was already talking about restoring Trump. Founders Fund, the Silicon Valley venture firm founded by billionaire Republican donor Peter Thiel, also said no. Thiel first worked with Musk in 2000 when the two merged their companies to form PayPal, and Thiel’s associates have said he is a fan of Musk running Twitter. It’s unclear whether these parties didn’t buy into Musk’s lofty projection, or didn’t want to be involved politically. Some passed after the company’s finances and Musk’s own predicament began to look less attractive. One person who lost interest told The Post that he was alarmed after the market downturn and the cost of the deal began taking a toll on Musk’s finances and the crown jewel of his portfolio, Tesla. It hasn’t helped that Musk relentlessly attacked Twitter and its leadership after announcing his takeover, pushing down its stock price. Musk’s latest turnabout only added to the sense of chaos. “[It’s] like you bought a new car, you decided you didn’t want it, and then you crash it,” the person said. “And then you’re like ‘I’ll keep it.’”
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  • Will India Slip into a Recession?

    Recently, the United States fell into a technical recession. The technical definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction, which the US government confirmed on Thursday. Their economy shrank by 0.9% last quarter after contracting 1.6% in the first quarter.

    A famous saying is, "when the US sneezes, the world catches a cold."

    But is it different this time?

    According to a survey for Asian countries published on TOI, India has zero probability of slipping into a recession.

    What do you say? Do you agree with this Survey?
    #economy
    Will India Slip into a Recession? Recently, the United States fell into a technical recession. The technical definition of a recession is two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction, which the US government confirmed on Thursday. Their economy shrank by 0.9% last quarter after contracting 1.6% in the first quarter. A famous saying is, "when the US sneezes, the world catches a cold." But is it different this time? According to a survey for Asian countries published on TOI, India has zero probability of slipping into a recession. What do you say? Do you agree with this Survey? #economy
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  • $0 - $0 /
    Location
    Type
    Status
    Open
    La Crosse, WI 54603
    Full-time

    Full Job Description
    For Current Agropur Employees:
    Please apply for this job through the Career application of your
    Workday Home Page.
    Job Type:
    Regular
    Working at Agropur means choosing a committed employer who invests daily to give its employees the means to develop professionally. It is also means being part of a large family where simplicity and honesty are lived on a daily basis and where the management style is based on integrity, openness and autonomy. Invest in yourself and join Agropur to realize your full potential.
    Invest in you, Join Agropur. We dairy you!
    What Agropur invests in YOU:

    Two pay increases within first year of employment!
    Comprehensive benefits package focusing on your physical, financial and emotional health to include the following perks as well as the standard benefit offerings:
    401(k) Retirement Plan with up to a 7% company match
    Paid Time Off (available on day 1)
    Tuition Reimbursement Program
    Employee Discounts
    Bonus Program
    Uniform Program
    Shoe Allowance
    Support and resources to meet everyday challenges
    Wellness resources to help you stay fit and well
    Internal Advancement Opportunities
    Leadership Development and Mentorship Programs
    Opportunities to support our local communities
    Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committees
    Chance to apply best practices in sustainability and environmental initiatives
    Commitment to producing high quality nutritious products and providing nourishment around the world

    What this role is all about:
    We are looking for a Quality Assurance Technician in La Crosse, WI.
    The Quality Assurance Technician I-La Crosse supports Agropur’s commitment to food safety & quality by monitoring and verifying production parameters in accordance with Quality programs. The Quality Assurance Technician I is responsible for ensuring organization standards and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs) are followed to preserve integrity of the products while providing feedback for continuous improvements for the Quality System.

    Sunday through Thursday 11 pm to 7 am
    Shift Differential- $1.50 for 3rd Shift

    What you need:

    Enforce all aspects of the plant’s quality functions in compliance with plant and corporate level standard operating procedures (SOPs), good manufacturing practices (GMPs), and company safety policies.
    Approve all finished batches and verifies they are prepared using the correct ingredient quantities according to the manufacturing record.
    Review and approve all labels used in production.
    Verify and correct any changes made to production paperwork, components, documentation, and labels used for the production lines.
    Conduct start-up inspections and hourly checks on production lines.
    Approve production lines for operation and individual parts for use based on equipment examination and surface sampling.
    La Crosse, WI 54603 Full-time Full Job Description For Current Agropur Employees: Please apply for this job through the Career application of your Workday Home Page. Job Type: Regular Working at Agropur means choosing a committed employer who invests daily to give its employees the means to develop professionally. It is also means being part of a large family where simplicity and honesty are lived on a daily basis and where the management style is based on integrity, openness and autonomy. Invest in yourself and join Agropur to realize your full potential. Invest in you, Join Agropur. We dairy you! What Agropur invests in YOU: Two pay increases within first year of employment! Comprehensive benefits package focusing on your physical, financial and emotional health to include the following perks as well as the standard benefit offerings: 401(k) Retirement Plan with up to a 7% company match Paid Time Off (available on day 1) Tuition Reimbursement Program Employee Discounts Bonus Program Uniform Program Shoe Allowance Support and resources to meet everyday challenges Wellness resources to help you stay fit and well Internal Advancement Opportunities Leadership Development and Mentorship Programs Opportunities to support our local communities Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Committees Chance to apply best practices in sustainability and environmental initiatives Commitment to producing high quality nutritious products and providing nourishment around the world What this role is all about: We are looking for a Quality Assurance Technician in La Crosse, WI. The Quality Assurance Technician I-La Crosse supports Agropur’s commitment to food safety & quality by monitoring and verifying production parameters in accordance with Quality programs. The Quality Assurance Technician I is responsible for ensuring organization standards and Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs) are followed to preserve integrity of the products while providing feedback for continuous improvements for the Quality System. Sunday through Thursday 11 pm to 7 am Shift Differential- $1.50 for 3rd Shift What you need: Enforce all aspects of the plant’s quality functions in compliance with plant and corporate level standard operating procedures (SOPs), good manufacturing practices (GMPs), and company safety policies. Approve all finished batches and verifies they are prepared using the correct ingredient quantities according to the manufacturing record. Review and approve all labels used in production. Verify and correct any changes made to production paperwork, components, documentation, and labels used for the production lines. Conduct start-up inspections and hourly checks on production lines. Approve production lines for operation and individual parts for use based on equipment examination and surface sampling.
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  • $0 - $0 /
    Location
    Type
    Status
    Open
    Huntsville, AL On-site

    Full-time · Entry level
    11-50 employees · Defense and Space Manufacturing

    Work with stakeholders to understand the dashboard requirements and analyze data from different data sources
    Data preparation/cleansing
    Create data visualizations using Tableau
    Support the design, develop, and document the data analytics dashboard standards
    Automate the reporting metrics and mechanisms for the stakeholders
    Train and transfer the knowledge to junior engineers
    Extract and analyze data from various data sources (e.g. Jira, Jenkins, DOORS, etc.) using vendor specific APIs
    Work includes Full Stack Software Development, including client-side databasesThis position's standard work schedule is a 9/80. The 9/80 schedule allows employees who work a nine-hour day Monday through Thursday to take every other Friday off. This role may offer a competitive relocation assistance package. Job Qualifications: You'll Bring These Qualifications: Software Engineer/Data Scientist:
    Bachelor of Engineering degree plus 2 years of related experience; Master's degree plus 0 years or 4 additional years in lieu of a degree * U.S. Citizenship is required
    Ability to obtain Secret Security Clearance is required
    Experienced in extracting and analyzing data from COTS products
    Experienced in working with Java, MS SQL Server, SQL queries, scripting, and automation
    Experienced in building and maintaining Extraction Transfer Load (ETL) and data migration pipelines
    Experienced in Tableau, including dashboard design and development, and server admin knowledge
    Working knowledge in programming languages such as Python, R
    Previous work experience in an Agile EnvironmentPrincipal Software Engineer/Data Scientist:
    Bachelor of Engineering degree plus 5 years of related experience; Master's degree plus 3 years or 4 additional years in lieu of a degree * U.S. Citizenship is required
    Ability to obtain Secret Security Clearance is required
    Experienced in extracting and analyzing data from COTS products
    Experienced in working with Java, PostgreSQL, SQL queries, scripting, and automation
    Experienced in building and maintaining Extraction Transfer Load (ETL) and data migration pipelines using Talend or Informatica or similar
    Experienced in Tableau, including dashboard design and development, and server admin knowledge
    Working knowledge in programming languages such as Python, Java
    Previous work experience in an Agile EnvironmentThese Qualifications Would be Nice to Have:
    Huntsville, AL On-site Full-time · Entry level 11-50 employees · Defense and Space Manufacturing Work with stakeholders to understand the dashboard requirements and analyze data from different data sources Data preparation/cleansing Create data visualizations using Tableau Support the design, develop, and document the data analytics dashboard standards Automate the reporting metrics and mechanisms for the stakeholders Train and transfer the knowledge to junior engineers Extract and analyze data from various data sources (e.g. Jira, Jenkins, DOORS, etc.) using vendor specific APIs Work includes Full Stack Software Development, including client-side databasesThis position's standard work schedule is a 9/80. The 9/80 schedule allows employees who work a nine-hour day Monday through Thursday to take every other Friday off. This role may offer a competitive relocation assistance package. Job Qualifications: You'll Bring These Qualifications: Software Engineer/Data Scientist: Bachelor of Engineering degree plus 2 years of related experience; Master's degree plus 0 years or 4 additional years in lieu of a degree * U.S. Citizenship is required Ability to obtain Secret Security Clearance is required Experienced in extracting and analyzing data from COTS products Experienced in working with Java, MS SQL Server, SQL queries, scripting, and automation Experienced in building and maintaining Extraction Transfer Load (ETL) and data migration pipelines Experienced in Tableau, including dashboard design and development, and server admin knowledge Working knowledge in programming languages such as Python, R Previous work experience in an Agile EnvironmentPrincipal Software Engineer/Data Scientist: Bachelor of Engineering degree plus 5 years of related experience; Master's degree plus 3 years or 4 additional years in lieu of a degree * U.S. Citizenship is required Ability to obtain Secret Security Clearance is required Experienced in extracting and analyzing data from COTS products Experienced in working with Java, PostgreSQL, SQL queries, scripting, and automation Experienced in building and maintaining Extraction Transfer Load (ETL) and data migration pipelines using Talend or Informatica or similar Experienced in Tableau, including dashboard design and development, and server admin knowledge Working knowledge in programming languages such as Python, Java Previous work experience in an Agile EnvironmentThese Qualifications Would be Nice to Have:
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  • $0 - $0 /
    Location
    Type
    Status
    Open
    Beavercreek, OH

    Full-time · Entry level
    11-50 employees · Defense and Space Manufacturing

    Basic Qualifications:

    2 years of relevant experience with a Bachelor's degree (0 years with a Masters' degree) in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, or similar technical STEM field
    US citizenship and the ability to obtain and maintain a DoD Secret Security Clearance to start
    Experience with C, C++, Python or other high-order languages in real-time embedded applications
    Solid understanding of software development processes for real-time embedded applicationsPreferred Qualifications include experience with any of the following:
    Micro-controllers and HW modeling
    Developing multi-threaded applications in RTOS environment
    Linux kernel and user space development
    Hardware (how low/high speed I/O works, QSPI, DMA) working with hardware from a test and debug perspective.
    UEFI cryptography or cryptography basics (familiarity using openSSL)
    Designing and implementing complex algorithms requiring strict timing, systems resource managed, and interface constraints
    Collaboration tools like Jira and Confluence
    Modernized software development processes (e.g. Agile, DevOps, DevSecOps)
    Leading small software development teams and ensuring work is completed in accordance with design and development processesThis position offers the option of a 9/80 work schedule. The 9/80 schedule allows employees who work nine-hour days Monday through Thursday to take every other Friday off. NGFeaturedJobs
    Beavercreek, OH Full-time · Entry level 11-50 employees · Defense and Space Manufacturing Basic Qualifications: 2 years of relevant experience with a Bachelor's degree (0 years with a Masters' degree) in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, or similar technical STEM field US citizenship and the ability to obtain and maintain a DoD Secret Security Clearance to start Experience with C, C++, Python or other high-order languages in real-time embedded applications Solid understanding of software development processes for real-time embedded applicationsPreferred Qualifications include experience with any of the following: Micro-controllers and HW modeling Developing multi-threaded applications in RTOS environment Linux kernel and user space development Hardware (how low/high speed I/O works, QSPI, DMA) working with hardware from a test and debug perspective. UEFI cryptography or cryptography basics (familiarity using openSSL) Designing and implementing complex algorithms requiring strict timing, systems resource managed, and interface constraints Collaboration tools like Jira and Confluence Modernized software development processes (e.g. Agile, DevOps, DevSecOps) Leading small software development teams and ensuring work is completed in accordance with design and development processesThis position offers the option of a 9/80 work schedule. The 9/80 schedule allows employees who work nine-hour days Monday through Thursday to take every other Friday off. NGFeaturedJobs
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  • $0 - $0 /
    Location
    Type
    Status
    Open
    Grapevine, TX On-site

    Full-time · Entry level
    201-500 employees · Staffing and Recruiting

    Virtual Game Tester Needed!:
    Virtual Game Tester Needed … Looking for Virtual Game Testers to start ASAP for a stable Electronics Company in Grapevine. The Virtual Game Tester positions are long term permanent positions with opportunity for advancement and growth.

    Virtual Game Tester Job Duties:
    Electronics dis-assembly and re-assembly
    Troubleshoot skills of common problems with the gaming devices
    Capable of testing, repairing and assembly the products
    Perform other duties as needed
    Make sure you document any issues with management

    Virtual Game Tester Requirements:
    Excellent organizational and time-management skills
    Must be good with small tools
    Be flexible for weekends and OT if needed
    First Shift is 7am to 3:30pm Monday thru Friday and Second Shift is 4pm to 2:30am Mon-Thursday
    Good communication skills.
    Grapevine, TX On-site Full-time · Entry level 201-500 employees · Staffing and Recruiting Virtual Game Tester Needed!: Virtual Game Tester Needed … Looking for Virtual Game Testers to start ASAP for a stable Electronics Company in Grapevine. The Virtual Game Tester positions are long term permanent positions with opportunity for advancement and growth. Virtual Game Tester Job Duties: Electronics dis-assembly and re-assembly Troubleshoot skills of common problems with the gaming devices Capable of testing, repairing and assembly the products Perform other duties as needed Make sure you document any issues with management Virtual Game Tester Requirements: Excellent organizational and time-management skills Must be good with small tools Be flexible for weekends and OT if needed First Shift is 7am to 3:30pm Monday thru Friday and Second Shift is 4pm to 2:30am Mon-Thursday Good communication skills.
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  • Elon Musk says he’s worried about keeping Tesla out of bankruptcy



    Tesla faces billions of dollars in losses from its new plants, supply chain problems and Covid lockdowns — enough for CEO Elon Musk to mention the possibility of bankruptcy in a recent interview.

    “The past two years have been an absolute nightmare of supply chain interruptions, one thing after another,” Musk said in an interview with a Tesla owners group. “We’re not out of it yet. That’s overwhelmingly our concern is how do we keep the factories operating so we can pay people and not go bankrupt.”

    Musk engaged in hyperbole elsewhere in the interview, and he may have been doing so when mentioning the risk of bankruptcy. For example, he said that automakers in general “desperately want to go bankrupt,” which falls in the category of colorful language rather than strict financial analysis.

    But the company is coming to the end of its most difficult quarter, financially speaking, in more than two years.

    Tesla’s factory in Shanghai was shut for weeks due to Covid related lockdowns in the city. And Musk disclosed in the interview that the two factories Tesla opened in the quarter, in Germany and Texas, are costing the company billions of dollars in losses because supply chain issues have left them with “puny” output so far.

    “This is all going to get fixed real fast,” he said in comments recorded on May 31, but not released until late Wednesday. “Both Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now. There’s a giant roaring sound which is the sound of money on fire. Bigger than a dumpster [fire]. A dumpster is too small. Berlin and Austin are losing billions of dollars right now. There’s a ton of expense and hardly any output.”

    One of Tesla’s harshest critics thinks that the company is facing greater financial problems than most analysts realize.

    “Bankruptcy is a real risk for these guys,” Gordon Johnson of GLJ Research told CNN Business Thursday. “Why? A lot of their cash is locked up in China. They weren’t profitable until they were in China; and, given China does not allow companies to repatriate dollars made there out of the country, and Tesla has a real problem.”

    Johnson pointed to Tesla’s decision to cut about 10% of its salaried staff — even as it continues to hire hourly production workers — as another sign of trouble.

    “Why do you think they are cutting people? That’s a key tell-tell signal,” he said.

    But most companies that cut staff never come close to filing for bankruptcy. And virtually all other analysts forecast that Tesla will remain profitable, despite the supply chain issues dogging it and most other manufacturers around the globe.

    Tesla has been profitable since late 2018, after years of reporting almost nothing but losses. The company has been reporting increased quarterly profits compared to the previous period for the last two years.

    That string of sequentially rising profits is apparently about to come to an end.

    HANGZHOU, CHINA - JUNE 19: Customers purchase Tesla vehicles at a Tesla store on June 19, 2022 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. (Photo by Long Wei/VCG via Getty Images)
    Tesla is still battling spying suspicions in China
    Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv forecast that adjusted earnings in the second quarter will fall to $2.5 billion in the second quarter, down from the record $3.7 billion Tesla made in the first quarter. That would still be up from the adjusted income of $1.6 billion in the second quarter of 2021.

    Tesla did have a 0.1% dip in production of new vehicles in the first quarter compared to the fourth quarter. But its year-over-year production was still up 69%, and most other automakers worldwide scaled back production in the quarter from year-ago levels due to supply chain issues.

    Automakers, including Tesla, are due to report second quarter sales figure early next month.

    Shares of Tesla (TSLA), which are down nearly a third since the start of the year, were down roughly 2% in midday trading Thursday.
    Elon Musk says he’s worried about keeping Tesla out of bankruptcy Tesla faces billions of dollars in losses from its new plants, supply chain problems and Covid lockdowns — enough for CEO Elon Musk to mention the possibility of bankruptcy in a recent interview. “The past two years have been an absolute nightmare of supply chain interruptions, one thing after another,” Musk said in an interview with a Tesla owners group. “We’re not out of it yet. That’s overwhelmingly our concern is how do we keep the factories operating so we can pay people and not go bankrupt.” Musk engaged in hyperbole elsewhere in the interview, and he may have been doing so when mentioning the risk of bankruptcy. For example, he said that automakers in general “desperately want to go bankrupt,” which falls in the category of colorful language rather than strict financial analysis. But the company is coming to the end of its most difficult quarter, financially speaking, in more than two years. Tesla’s factory in Shanghai was shut for weeks due to Covid related lockdowns in the city. And Musk disclosed in the interview that the two factories Tesla opened in the quarter, in Germany and Texas, are costing the company billions of dollars in losses because supply chain issues have left them with “puny” output so far. “This is all going to get fixed real fast,” he said in comments recorded on May 31, but not released until late Wednesday. “Both Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now. There’s a giant roaring sound which is the sound of money on fire. Bigger than a dumpster [fire]. A dumpster is too small. Berlin and Austin are losing billions of dollars right now. There’s a ton of expense and hardly any output.” One of Tesla’s harshest critics thinks that the company is facing greater financial problems than most analysts realize. “Bankruptcy is a real risk for these guys,” Gordon Johnson of GLJ Research told CNN Business Thursday. “Why? A lot of their cash is locked up in China. They weren’t profitable until they were in China; and, given China does not allow companies to repatriate dollars made there out of the country, and Tesla has a real problem.” Johnson pointed to Tesla’s decision to cut about 10% of its salaried staff — even as it continues to hire hourly production workers — as another sign of trouble. “Why do you think they are cutting people? That’s a key tell-tell signal,” he said. But most companies that cut staff never come close to filing for bankruptcy. And virtually all other analysts forecast that Tesla will remain profitable, despite the supply chain issues dogging it and most other manufacturers around the globe. Tesla has been profitable since late 2018, after years of reporting almost nothing but losses. The company has been reporting increased quarterly profits compared to the previous period for the last two years. That string of sequentially rising profits is apparently about to come to an end. HANGZHOU, CHINA - JUNE 19: Customers purchase Tesla vehicles at a Tesla store on June 19, 2022 in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province of China. (Photo by Long Wei/VCG via Getty Images) Tesla is still battling spying suspicions in China Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv forecast that adjusted earnings in the second quarter will fall to $2.5 billion in the second quarter, down from the record $3.7 billion Tesla made in the first quarter. That would still be up from the adjusted income of $1.6 billion in the second quarter of 2021. Tesla did have a 0.1% dip in production of new vehicles in the first quarter compared to the fourth quarter. But its year-over-year production was still up 69%, and most other automakers worldwide scaled back production in the quarter from year-ago levels due to supply chain issues. Automakers, including Tesla, are due to report second quarter sales figure early next month. Shares of Tesla (TSLA), which are down nearly a third since the start of the year, were down roughly 2% in midday trading Thursday.
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  • Plans to raise legal smoking age in UK to 21 could be unveiled by government:

    Radical plans to raise the legal smoking age in the UK to 21 as part of a review backed by the health secretary could be unveiled before the end of this week, reports say.

    The review is expected to arrive on Thursday in a bid to slash the number of smokers in Britain to 5 per cent by 2030.

    Led by former Barnardo’s CEO Javed Khan, the report is expected to recommend that the legal age to purchase cigarettes be raised and that new taxes be levied on profits made by tobacco companies.

    But The Guardian reported there is resisitance from within government regarding the changes.
    Plans to raise legal smoking age in UK to 21 could be unveiled by government: Radical plans to raise the legal smoking age in the UK to 21 as part of a review backed by the health secretary could be unveiled before the end of this week, reports say. The review is expected to arrive on Thursday in a bid to slash the number of smokers in Britain to 5 per cent by 2030. Led by former Barnardo’s CEO Javed Khan, the report is expected to recommend that the legal age to purchase cigarettes be raised and that new taxes be levied on profits made by tobacco companies. But The Guardian reported there is resisitance from within government regarding the changes.
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