Welcome to Friday and Cheers to the weekend. I am Asia Martin.
Let’s start with self-care. Do you know the secret to work-life balance? If yes, keep scrolling.If no, here it is Just right about your work. Kelli Maria Korducki concluded with an article aptly titled How Much Should You Care About Your Job?
Apparently, caring too much can lead to burnout, and caring too much can cause fatigue. Korducky says that setting aside time each day, not caring about the work you’re doing, and making a regular habit of spending time with loved ones outside of work hours is a good lifestyle. It is reported that it is a good way to make
Email us at amartin@insider.com and let us know how you manage your work-life balance. Let’s get started.
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1. According to Reuters, a Tesla employee spun a video from a customer’s car. Not only can Tesla employees see what a customer’s car can see, but they also seem to circulate videos that are humorous, shocking, or invasive.
- According to reports, Tesla employees shared personal videos from customers’ cars on the company’s internal messaging system.
- A former Tesla Autopilot employee confirmed to Insider that not only were employees able to view personal videos, but they were sharing them with each other. A former staff member said it was like having access to “the eyes of God.”
- Reuters reported that Tesla employees shared videos of car crashes, street riots and other embarrassing moments. One of his former employees described to the publication a clip of a naked man walking towards a car.
Please check this out for details.
In other news:
2. A smart ad tech robbery failed spectacularly. Adtech employee Tyler Mancuso exploited a loophole in the payment system to steal $9 million and use it to buy gold bars. read the story.
3. Goldman Sachs fined $3 million for missing line of code. A single line of computer code incorrectly marked 60 million stock orders.
4. ChatGPT reportedly fabricated sexual harassment allegations against lawyers. An AI chatbot falsely accused lawyer Jonathan Turley of sexually harassing a student, citing a nonexistent news article.
5. Hot Job Alert: Rapid Engineering. Many companies hire quick engineers. This is the job of engineers looking for errors and hidden features in AI by figuring out how to ask AI for specific outputs in the most efficient way. Click here for details.
6. Meta’s CTO says Zuckerberg is focused on AI. Meta chief technology officer Andrew Bosworth told Nikkei Asia that Meta executives are focused on the generative AI business.
7. Retail media will be a $130 billion industry by 2025. Adtech companies such as Criteo and The Trade Desk will be the market winners, according to a Morgan Stanley report. Click here for details.
8. A tech company posted a job opening only for white applicants. A job posting from IT firm Arthur Grand Technologies went viral by specifying only white candidates. I was.
Odds and Finishes:
9. AI’s latest challenge: the unicycle. AI has had a hard time creating images of human hands. And now I’m having trouble generating images of unicycles and how people are using them. Read more about it.
10. Apple has been hiding the Bitcoin manifest in every Mac since 2018. A tech blogger found a Bitcoin whitepaper hidden in Macs since the release of macOS Mojave. Here’s how to find it:
Latest tech moves:
- Google’s former Stadia head quietly quits the companyPhil Harrison, who reportedly ran Google’s now-defunct cloud gaming service, left the company in January. Any hints as to where he might go next? Please contact Hugh Langley.
Curated by Asia Martin from New York. (Feedback or tips? Email amartin@insider.com.)
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