Snapchat’s shares plunge after it says Apple’s privacy changes hurt its ad business.

Snapchat’s shares plunge after it says Apple’s privacy changes hurt its ad business.
ImageA demonstration for the Snapchat app at an Apple event in 2017. Apple recently made privacy changes to the iPhone software, which affected apps that rely on advertising.
Credit…Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Shares of Snap, the parent company of the social media app Snapchat, tumbled more than 20 per cent on Friday, a day after the company released quarterly results that fell below its guidance for the quarter by $3 million.

Revenue for Snap’s most recent quarter was $1.067 billion, a 57 per cent increase from the same period last year.

Snap said its business had been affected by recent privacy changes in Apple’s iOS mobile operating system that prevented tracking by some advertisers. The company said that it had expected some disruption from the changes but that the challenges for advertisers had been more severe than expected.

The company said it was building new tooling and measurement solutions for advertisers to adapt to Apple’s privacy changes.

Advertisers were also under pressure from the pandemic and supply chain disruptions, which limited their spending, Snap said.

Shares for other social media companies also fell on Friday, with Facebook sliding more than 5 per cent and Twitter dropping nearly 4 per cent. Facebook is expected to report its financials on Monday, followed by Twitter on Tuesday.

Snap said its daily active users continued to grow. The company reported 306 million active users in the quarter, a 23 per cent increase from the previous year. Snap lost $72 million, in the period, a 64 per cent decrease from the previous year.

“We’re now operating at the scale necessary to navigate significant headwinds, including changes to the iOS platform that impact the way advertising is targeted, measured, and optimized, as well as global supply chain issues and labour shortages impacting our partners,” Snap’s chief executive, Evan Spiegel, said in a statement.

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The Truth Social app was available for “preorder” on Wednesday in Apple’s App Store. Credit…Chris Delmas/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Former President Donald J. Trump declared on Wednesday evening that he would start a “media powerhouse.” Its flagship operation would be Truth Social, a Twitter-like social network that would “stand up to the tyranny of Big Tech,” he said in a statement.

Within two hours, hackers had gained access to a private version of the social network, creating fake accounts for Mr Trump; the far-right personality Stephen K. Bannon; Ron Watkins, the QAnon conspiracy theorist; and Twitter’s chief executive, Jack Dorsey, who barred Mr Trump from Twitter after his supporters stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6.

Using a false “Donald trump” account, hackers posted images of defecating pigs, wrote expletive-laced rants aimed at Mr Dorsey and inquired about the whereabouts of the former first lady Melania Trump. Images of the hackers’ handiwork were circulated on other social media platforms.

In interviews on Thursday, the hackers, who are affiliated with Anonymous, the loose hacking collective, said the effort was part of their “online war against hate.”

After a several-year hiatus, Anonymous has re-emerged as a digital force against the far right. The collective recently took down a Texas Republican website after the passage of an anti-abortion bill, replacing the site with a Planned Parenthood fund-raiser. And last month, Anonymous was behind a breach of Epik, an internet services company popular with the far-right, dumping 220 gigabytes of data, including personal details of its customers.

In exposing the innards of Truth Social ahead of its launch, hackers demonstrated that Mr Trump’s soon-to-be-released social network had lax safeguards and left open the ability to spoof anyone, including the former president.

Mr Trump had revealed the social network in an online presentation on Wednesday as part of Trump Media and Technology Group, which aims to take on big social media platforms.

A representative for the Trump media company did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

“We had a fun time trolling it to high heaven,” Aubrey Cottle, a hacker affiliated with Anonymous who goes by the alias Kirtaner, said in an interview.

A Truth Social app was made available for “preorder” on Apple’s App Store on Wednesday, inviting anyone interested to join a waiting list for its release. The digital crumbs from that post, Mr Cottle said, were enough for him and other Anonymous hackers to gain access to the prerelease version of the app.

Once inside, Mr Cottle said, hackers, posted memes from spoofed accounts for Mr Trump, former Vice President Mike Pence and other prominent figures.

The activity forced the Trump Media & Technology Group’s app developers to bar new accounts and eventually shutter the development platform. (The New York Times viewed screenshots backing up hackers’ claims.)

The breach and its aftermath did not stop shares of Mr Trump’s SPAC company, Digital World Acquisition, from surging as much as 400 per cent to $52 per share on Thursday, after Wednesday’s news of the merger that would launch Mr Trump’s social media platform.

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Credit…Jae C. Hong/Associated Press

Google said it planned to lower the cut it takes on subscription-based apps in its Play Store for devices running its Android software, in the latest concession to regulatory pressure challenging whether the company has overcharged developers.

In a blog post on Thursday, Google said it would reduce its commissions on subscriptions for apps that users pay through its Play Store to 15 per cent. Currently, Google takes a 30 per cent cut for the first year of subscriptions and then lowers the rate to 15 per cent from the second year. Google will eliminate the two-step process starting in January and apply the lower fee from the beginning.

Google also said some eBooks and streaming music services would be eligible for fees as low as 10 per cent. It was not immediately clear which services or books would qualify and how the exact percentage was set.

In March, Google cut its take on the first $1 million a company earned through the Play Store to 15 per cent from 30 per cent, in a move aimed at easing the financial burden for smaller developers. It came on the heels of a similar commission cut from Apple.

The latest Play Store changes reflect the whittling away of fees that Google and Apple have charged developers to push their software through their app stores. When Apple introduced the App Store in 2008, the company set its commission at 30 per cent and Google soon followed with a similar fee structure.

But as companies built businesses based on apps running on smartphones and tablet computers, a growing number of developers began to question whether a 30 per cent take was excessive and a byproduct of the lack of competition in the market for app stores.

Earlier this year, a group of 36 states and the District of Columbia sued Google, claiming that its app store abused its market power. Google is also fighting a lawsuit filed by Epic Games, the creator of the popular video game Fortnite after the search giant removed the game maker’s app for circumventing its payment system and avoiding fees. Last week, Google filed a countersuit against Epic.

 

The panel appointed by Facebook to review its policy decisions sharply criticized the company on Thursday for not being transparent about an internal program that gives prominent users preferential treatment on the social network.

The group, known as the Facebook Oversight Board, said Facebook failed to provide relevant information about a system called cross-check, which was first disclosed by The Wall Street Journal and exempts high-profile users from rules like those prohibiting harassment or incitement to violence that others on the platform must follow.

The board said the lack of transparency had harmed its ability to rule on Facebook’s decisions to remove or keep online content posted by users, including when the company barred former President Donald J. Trump.

The Oversight Board is a court-like body that consists of about 20 former political leaders, human rights activists and journalists picked by Facebook to consider the company’s content decisions.

“The credibility of the Oversight Board, our working relationship with Facebook and our ability to render sound judgments on cases all depend on being able to trust that information provided to us by Facebook is accurate, comprehensive and paints a full picture of the topic at hand,” the group said in a blog post after publishing the report.

On Thursday, the group criticized Facebook for not being open with users about policies that led some content to being deleted. The group said it had received more than half a million appeals from users trying to understand why something was taken off the site Travel Tips.

“We know these cases are just the tip of the iceberg,” the group said. “Right now, it’s clear that by not being transparent with users, Facebook is not treating them fairly.”

Facebook’s chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, has repeatedly referred to the board as the “Facebook Supreme Court,” but in practice, the group has no legal or enforcement authority. It was founded and is funded by Facebook, and critics have questioned whether the board has true autonomy. Others have pointed out that it gives Facebook the ability to punt difficult decisions.

In a statement, Facebook thanked the board for issuing its transparency report.

“We believe the board’s work has been impactful, which is why we asked the board for input into our cross-check system,” the company said, “and we will strive to be clearer in our explanations to them going forward.”

Facebook is under pressure from regulators to explain more clearly its policy decisions and recommendation algorithms. European policymakers are drafting laws that would require the company to make it easier for users to appeal content-related decisions and to share more details about how its system works with outside auditors.

Calls for regulation have increased after disclosures made by Frances Haugen, the former Facebook product manager who shared scores of documents and information about the company’s internal workings with journalists and policymakers.

After Ms Haugen’s documents revealed the existence of the cross-checks program, the Oversight Board said, Facebook asked the group to offer recommendations about how to change the program.

 

A whistle-blower has been awarded nearly $200 million for information that led to direct evidence of wrongdoing in an investigation, a federal regulator said on Thursday. The award is the largest the agency has given.

The evidence led to successful enforcement action in the case, said the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which did not disclose the identity of the whistle-blower, the exact dollar amount or details of the investigation.

The whistle-blower program was created by the Dodd-Frank Act in 2010 and has awarded more than $300 million since its first disbursement in 2014. The money is distributed to whistle-blowers whose claims disclose wrongdoing in the financial sector.

Whistle-blowers are eligible to receive 10 to 30 per cent of the fines collected in awards that are disbursed by the CFTC Customer Protection Fund. No money is withheld from victims to fund the program. The agency said the whistle-blower awards to date were tied to cases with fines totalling more than $3 billion.

A federal regulator has asked giant technology firms like Amazon, Google and Facebook to turn over information about how they run their digital payments systems, including the ways they track and store their customers’ personal information.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau requested six U.S.-based tech companies and said it would also study the practices of the Chinese firms WeChat Pay and Alipay, payments businesses connected with WeChat and Alibaba. The bureau said it wanted to determine whether the companies’ practices harm consumers by limiting their choices over how to pay and exposing too much of their data to outside parties.

The request was a sign that the agency’s new director, Rohit Chopra, intends to look beyond traditional financial services companies — the central focus of the agency since it was created a decade ago — to determine which other kinds of companies may need to be monitored. The C.F.P.B. cited its authority over payments processors in making the requests.

“Big Tech companies are eagerly expanding their empires to gain greater control and insight into our spending habits,” Mr Chopra said in a statement on Thursday. He also listed some of the tech companies to whom he had sent information requests in a post on Twitter.

Banks, which have often complained that they are subjected to rules and oversight that nonbank financial companies don’t have to deal with, cheered the move.

“Since the bureau was founded, a growing share of banking activity has occurred outside of the purview of leading regulators, putting consumers and the resiliency of the financial system at risk,” Richard Hunt, the chief executive of the Consumer Bankers Association, an industry lobbying group, said in a statement. “C.B.A. long has advocated for instituting a level playing field to ensure every American family receives the protections they deserve, regardless of where they go to meet their financial needs.”

A Google spokesman declined to comment. A spokeswoman for WeChat’s owner, Tencent, also declined to comment. Representatives for Amazon, Facebook and Alibaba Group did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday.

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  • U.S. stocks logged their seventh straight day of gains on Thursday, with the S&P 500 marking a record. The benchmark U.S. index closed 0.3 percent higher, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite rose 0.6 percent.
  • The S&P 500 has gained nearly 6 percent in less than three weeks, recovering its losses from September, which was the stock market’s worst month this year.
  • American Airlines and Southwest Airlines both reported profits for the three months ending in September, though both carriers were dependent on pandemic aid for those results. Shares of Americans rose nearly 2 percent, while Southwest was down 1.6 percent.
  • Tesla rose 3.3 percent after it reported on Wednesday a big jump in revenue, to $13.8 billion from $8.8 billion a year ago. Sales of its Model Y continued to rise in the United States, China and Europe, despite a shortage in computer chips that have hobbled much of the rest of the auto industry. It was the carmaker’s second quarter in a row that its profit exceeded the billion-dollar mark.
  • Initial claims for state jobless benefits fell last week, the Labor Department reported on Thursday. The weekly figure was about 290,000, down 6,000 from the previous week, as it heads back to prepandemic margins.

Federal investigators have concluded that two men killed in a Tesla crash in Texas last spring were sitting in the front seats of the car with seatbelts on, contradicting initial statements by local police that no one was driving the vehicle during the accident.

The new information comes from a notice the National Transportation Safety Board posted on its website on Thursday and suggests that the driver of the Tesla, a Model S sedan, had not put the car on the company’s driver-assistance system, known as Autopilot, and gone into the back seat — something other Tesla drivers have done.

A Harris County sheriff’s constable said in April that evidence at the scene of the accident suggested that no one was driving the car when it crashed.

In its notice, the federal safety board also indicated that Tesla’s Autopilot driver-assistance system was likely not in use when the crash occurred. A critical component of Autopilot called Autosteer is not normally active on the unmarked, residential roads where the crash took place in Spring, Texas, a suburb north of Houston, the board said.

Data from the car showed the driver had the accelerator pedal depressed almost all the way and the car was going as fast as 67 miles per hour in the five seconds before the crash. The road has a speed limit of 30 m.p.h.

The car drove off the road at a curve and then hit a drainage culvert, a raised manhole and a tree. The crash damaged the car’s battery pack and it ignited. It took firefighters four hours to douse the high-intensity blaze. The Tesla’s occupants — who were 59 and 69 years old — were fatally injured by the crash and the fire, the safety board said.

The board noted that its investigation was ongoing and that it was still looking at Autopilot; the fire that consumed the car after the crash; whether the occupants were able to exit the car; and whether the driver was under the influence of alcohol or drugs.

 

Senator Elizabeth Warren requested that the Federal Reserve release an email sent to officials. Credit…Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times

Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, asked Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, on Thursday to release an email the central bank’s ethics office sent in March 2020 suggesting that officials might want to avoid unnecessary trading as they unrolled a sweeping market rescue.

The email, the existence of which was first reported by The New York Times earlier Thursday, was sent to regional bank ethics officers from the Fed Board of Governor’s ethics office on March 23, as the Fed announced a far-reaching market relief program, according to a person who saw it. It suggested that people with access to sensitive Fed information might want to stop unnecessary trading for a few months.

Officials seem to have heeded the warning and halted active financial activity in late March and April, based on disclosures and statements from central bank press officers. But the fact that some officials resumed trading in and after May 2020 has helped to fuel an ethics dilemma for the central bank.

Two regional Fed presidents ultimately resigned after disclosures of trades of stock and real estate securities from last year spurred criticisms of the central bank’s ethics rules and practices. Questions have also been raised about index fund trades made by Richard H. Clarida, the Fed’s vice chair, in February before the email was sent, and by Mr. Powell in October, long after the Fed’s market interventions had been unveiled and implemented.

Mr. Powell has ordered a revamp of the Fed’s ethics rules and has asked for an investigation by an independent watchdog. Ethics and Fed scholars have suggested his and Mr. Clarida’s trades were less questionable than the ones happening at regional central bank branches. Even so, the fallout has become a potentially potent political weapon for some progressives who would prefer that the White House does not reappoint Mr. Powell when his term expires early next year.

Ms. Warren previously had stated her opposition to keeping Mr. Powell in his role based on his track record with financial regulation, at one point calling him a “dangerous man” to have at the Fed.

“The Fed has not released this email or any other ethics advice given to Fed officials during the period when it was heavily involved in financial markets in response to the Covid-19 pandemic,” Ms. Warren wrote in the letter Thursday.

“I am writing to ask that you release this information immediately so that Congress and the public can evaluate the extent to which Fed officials may have known of the risks from their trading, and if they ignored calls by ethics officials to avoid this scandalous behaviour,” she continued.

 

Google’s European headquarters is in an area in central Dublin known as Silicon Docks, where many major tech companies have their headquarters. Credit…Paulo Nunes dos Santos for The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The United States reached an agreement on Thursday with Austria, France, Italy, Spain and Britain that will terminate the threat of American tariffs on certain goods from those countries in exchange for the eventual removal of digital services taxes that they had imposed on companies like Facebook, Amazon and Google.

The agreement comes as more than 130 countries agreed this month to an overhaul of the international tax system that will prompt nations to adopt a global minimum tax of 15 percent and change taxing rights so that large multinational corporations are taxed based on where their goods and services are sold, rather than where they operate.

The part of the agreement that applies to the large firms was a response to a global tax dispute between the United States and European countries, which in recent years imposed the digital services taxes targeted at American technology giants.

Through the deal reached on Thursday, Austria, France, Italy, Spain and Britain will remove their digital services taxes once that part of the global agreement, known as Pillar 1, is enacted. That is expected to occur sometime in 2023. Taxes that are collected from companies between now and then will be eligible for a credit.

The agreement amounts to a concession from the United States, which wanted the digital services taxes to be removed immediately once the global pact was reached this month. European countries refused, citing concerns about whether the United States could get the new tax changes through Congress to properly comply with the agreement.

The Trump administration initially imposed tariffs on France in 2020 in retaliation for its digital services tax and began the process of imposing tariffs on other countries as well. The Biden administration said this year that it was prepared to impose tariffs on those governments but suspended any action while the global tax talks were underway.

The Office of the United States Trade Representative said Turkey and India, which also have digital services taxes that the United States wants to be rolled back, did not join the agreement that was reached on Thursday.

 

WeWork’s Wall Street location in New York, one of its biggest markets.Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Two years after WeWork’s attempt to become a public company flamed out spectacularly, the co-working giant started trading on the stock market on Thursday, hoping that investors will now believe in its prospects.

The earlier effort collided with concerns about WeWork’s breakneck growth, its huge losses and the alarming management style of its co-founder Adam Neumann. WeWork has new leaders who have pared back its expenses and hope to exploit an office space market that has been upended by the pandemic. But the company still has lofty growth targets, big losses and many empty desks in its 762 locations around the world. And WeWork made it through the last two years only because of huge financial support from SoftBank, the Japanese conglomerate that is WeWork’s largest shareholder.

“We got here on a different road than we anticipated, but we’re here,” Marcelo Claure, WeWork’s executive chairman and a senior SoftBank executive, said in an interview Thursday with CNBC.

Instead of an initial public offering, WeWork entered the public markets by merging with a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, something of a craze these days. It is expected to raise as much as $1.3 billion from the deal, a sum that includes stakes held by the investment firms BlackRock and Fidelity. At Thursday’s stock price, WeWork was worth about $9.5 billion, a fraction of the $47 billion valuations placed on the company before investors soured on it in 2019.

Shares in the SPAC, called BowX, were trading around $10 this month. On Thursday, the new WeWork shares — with the ticker symbol WE — closed at $11.78.

WeWork leases office space and charges membership fees to customers — including freelancers, start-ups and small and large businesses — to use it. Its business rests on the belief that people might prefer the flexibility of such an arrangement over a traditional office lease, which can last for years and have other burdensome conditions.

The pandemic, which emptied office towers around the world, also crushed WeWork’s business. Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times

Though flexible office space was not new, WeWork said its business could not only revolutionize how people worked, but also change how people lived and thought. Mr. Neumann attracted billions of dollars in investments, with the biggest coming from SoftBank, which ended up bailing out WeWork when it withdrew the 2019 I.P.O. and was in danger of bankruptcy.

Investors in WeWork must judge whether SoftBank will use any increase in the stock price to sell some of its 61 percent stake.

SoftBank may be eager to recoup the $16 billion it has sunk into WeWork, a sum that combines nearly $11 billion of equity investments, $5 billion of debt financing and payments to Mr. Neumann.

“I made a wrong decision,” Masayoshi Son, SoftBank’s chief executive, said last year. “I didn’t look at WeWork right.” SoftBank has agreed to cap its voting power in the company below 50 percent. SoftBank and other investors have to wait several months before they can sell their shares.

The pandemic, which emptied office towers around the world, also crushed WeWork’s business.

Traditional landlords survived because tenants were legally obliged to keep paying their yearslong leases, most of which remain in effect. But WeWork’s customers were able to cancel their much shorter-term agreements as they expired. WeWork’s revenue in the second quarter of this year was $593 million, well below the $988 million in revenue it reported for the first quarter of 2020, its peak quarter.

And this partly explains why the company is using up cash rather than generating it. In the first half of this year, WeWork consumed $1.31 billion of cash running its operations and purchasing property and equipment, more than the $1.15 billion in the same period of 2020.

Still, WeWork has made strides in cutting its operating expenses — and hopes it will become profitable if its revenue grows. Some of the biggest savings have come from renegotiating leases with landlords or getting out of them.

Sandeep Mathrani, WeWork’s chief executive, said this month that the company had exited more than 150 full leases and done 350 lease amendments so far this year. “What we did through the pandemic was correct the cost structure, right-size the company,” he said in an interview with CNBC on Thursday.

Perhaps the biggest question hanging over WeWork is whether it will suffer in the downturn that is pounding some of the biggest office space markets or find an opening in a work world reshaped by the pandemic.

Occupancy levels in office towers in cities like New York, Chicago and San Francisco, among WeWork’s biggest markets, are still well below pre-pandemic levels — and may never return to what they were, with many companies letting employees work fully or partly from home. In this environment, companies are vacating their spaces when leases expire or subletting them. As a result, record amounts of office space are being dumped onto the market, and rents have plunged.

This could hurt WeWork in a few ways, industry experts say. Fewer workers coming into cities means less business for all office space operators, co-working companies included. Falling office rents could undercut WeWork’s appeal and reduce what it can charge.

John Arenas, chief executive of Serendipity Labs, a flexible-office company, said urban co-working companies are “facing competition from sublet and resistance and uncertainty about going back to work.”

WeWork has plenty of empty desks. In the third quarter, it had 461,000 memberships and 764,000 physical desks, which translates into an occupancy rate of 60 percent. That’s down from 85 percent in mid-2019 but up from 45 percent at the end of last year.

WeWork could benefit if companies that cut back on traditional leases decide they need flexible spaces when they want employees to meet in one place.

And WeWork’s management says companies it interacts with want 20 percent of their total space to be flexible, in theory providing solid demand.

WeWork is projecting that revenue more than doubles by 2024 and that memberships surge by more than 50 percent.

If all this happens, Mr. Neumann, who departed WeWork under a cloud during the attempted 2019 I.P.O., would stand to benefit. His stock in the company is worth nearly $690 million at Thursday’s closing price. He also holds a type of option on WeWork shares that is worth over $230 million at the stock price. Combining those sums with over $800 million he received for exiting and giving up control of the company, Mr. Neumann could one day reap well over $1 billion from WeWork.

“Adam is just another shareholder,” Mr. Claure told CNBC.

 

The Southwest Airlines check-in area at Midway International Airport in Chicago. The airline industry has shown progress despite the spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus. Credit…Tannen Maury/EPA, via Shutterstock

American Airlines and Southwest Airlines reported profits for the three months ended in September, reflecting the industry’s recovery despite the spread of the Delta variant of the coronavirus. But the airlines aren’t entirely out of the woods: Both would have reported losses were it not for federal pandemic aid.

Still, the financial results, released on Thursday, show that the industry is on the mend as travel steadily resumes and both American and Southwest said they expected to do even better in the final three months of the year, lifted by corporate, international and holiday travel.

“We made good progress in our pandemic recovery in third quarter 2021, and I expect more in the fourth quarter,” Gary Kelly, Southwest’s chief executive, said in a statement. “I’m very excited about the demand recovery and our prospects for 2022.”

Southwest reported a profit of $446 million for the third quarter, with revenue of $4.7 billion. The Delta variant robbed the airline of an estimated $300 million in revenue over the summer, but Southwest also suffered from operational challenges, including a three-day stretch of widespread flight delays and cancellations in June that was echoed this month.

“Available staffing fell below plan and, along with other factors, caused us to miss our operational on-time performance targets,” Mr. Kelly acknowledged. As a result, the airline has reined in plans for 2022 as it looks to hire 5,000 people before the end of this year. Mr. Kelly said Southwest was more than halfway toward that goal.

Ticket sales have started to improve in recent weeks, but the Delta variant and the operational challenges will weigh on Southwest’s fourth-quarter results. The airline said the virus had cost it an estimated $40 million this month, while a dayslong stretch of disrupted flights that ended last week would cost it $75 million. The rest of the quarter looks strong, though, with trends in holiday ticket sales in line with 2019.

American, which reported a profit of $169 million bolstered by federal aid, also said it expected strong holiday demand, which the airline expects will help it end the fourth quarter with about 80 percent as much revenue and nearly 90 percent as many seats sold as in the final three months of 2019.

American received nearly $1 billion in federal aid during the third quarter to help pay employee salaries, while Southwest received $763 million.

Both airlines said they were optimistic about the recovery in corporate travel and a rebound in international travel with the United States expected to ease travel restrictions early next month. Delta and United, which both recently reported profits for the same quarter, have also expressed optimism for the months ahead, though rising fuel costs could weigh on those improvements.

 

Customers browse cars at an AutoNation car dealership in Fremont, California, in February.Credit…David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

The global shortage of computer chips has wreaked havoc on auto production, but it is also helping to pump up the bottom lines of auto retailers.

In the latest example, AutoNation, a chain of more than 350 new vehicle franchises, reported on Thursday that its profit doubled to $362 million in the third quarter. The result, the company’s sixth consecutive record quarter on a per-share basis, stemmed mainly from higher prices and rising sales of used cars.

Because of the chip shortage, automakers have had to idle plants for weeks at a time, leaving consumers with fewer new cars to choose from. The lack of inventory has pushed up prices and allowed both manufacturers and dealers to cut back on profit-eating discounts and incentives they once had to offer to move cars off the lot.

“This is a result of the pandemic and then the chip shortage,” Mike Jackson, AutoNation’s chief executive, said. “There’s not enough supply to meet demand. Vehicles come in and they go out right away.”

At the end of September, AutoNation had about 5,000 new vehicles in inventory. At the same point in 2019, it had 56,000.

Mr. Jackson estimated that 60 percent of the vehicles that AutoNation ordered from manufacturers were earmarked as sold before they even arrived at its dealers. That is a far cry from the past, when cars sometimes sat unsold for six months or more.

The tight supply of new vehicles has caused many consumers to turn to used models. In the third quarter, AutoNation sold more than 77,000 used cars and trucks, a 20 percent rise from a year earlier.

The rush for used cars has also pushed up prices and left dealers rushing to acquire pre-owned cars and trucks. AutoNation has even begun approaching owners who post for-sale notices on eBay, AutoTrader and other websites. “If you put a car up for sale, you’re going to hear from us,” Mr. Jackson said.

Dealer inventories are likely to remain tight well into 2022 even if the chip shortage abates, Mr. Jackson added. “There’s tremendous pent-up demand, so it will take time before the manufacturers can build up dealer inventory,” he said.

Mr. Jackson, 72, won’t be at the helm to see it, however. He is about to retire after serving as AutoNation’s chief executive for most of the last 22 years. He will be succeeded on Nov. 1 by Mike Manley, a former chief executive of Fiat Chrysler.

 

Danielle Miess lost her job at a travel agency in the Philadelphia area. Her unemployment benefits have run out, but she isn’t looking for another office job. Instead, she is cobbling together a living from a variety of gigs. Credit…Kriston Jae Bethel for The New York Times

The labour force shrank in September. Five million fewer people were working than before the pandemic began, and three million fewer were looking for work.

The slow return of workers is causing headaches for the Biden administration, which has been counting on a strong economic rebound to give momentum to its political agenda, and confounding forecasters, Ben Casselman reports for The New York Times.

Conservatives have blamed generous unemployment benefits for keeping people at home, but evidence from states that ended the payments early suggests that any impact was small. Progressives say companies could find workers if they offered higher pay, but the worker shortages aren’t limited to low-wage industries.

Instead, economists point to a complex, overlapping web of factors, many of which could be slow to reverse.

The health crisis is still making it difficult or dangerous for some people to work, while savings that were built up during the pandemic have made it easier for others to turn down jobs they do not want. Psychology may also play a role: Surveys suggest that the pandemic led many people to rethink their priorities. And the glut of open jobs may be motivating some to hold out for better offers.

The net result is that arguably for the first time in decades, workers up and down the income ladder have leverage. And they are using it to demand not just higher pay but also flexible hours, more generous benefits and better working conditions.

“It’s like the whole country is in some kind of union renegotiation,” said Betsey Stevenson, a University of Michigan economist who was an adviser to President Barack Obama. “I don’t know who’s going to win in this bargaining that’s going on right now, but right now it seems like workers have the upper hand.”

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CreditCredit…By Haik Avanian

Today in the On Tech newsletter, Shira Ovide writes that Comcast TVs may never be best sellers, but they’re interesting because of what they represent: the corporate land grab to become the starting point for all things streaming in Americans’ homes.

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NFL schedule Week 7: TV coverage, channels, scores for every football game today

The primetime games often deliver some of the most anticipated matchups of the week, but that might not be the case this Sunday.

The slate of 1 p.m. NFL games features a matchup with major stakes on the line as the 4-2 Bengals take on the 5-1 Ravens in a battle to determine the leader in the AFC North.

The Chiefs will also be tasked with another chance to move back up — or back under — the .500 mark as they will take on the Titans, who are now 4-2 and are coming off a big win against the Bills.

There are still some primetime games slated that will keep NFL viewers excited. The Colts have seen a turnaround over the past few games from QB Carson Wentz as he has thrown six touchdowns and no interceptions in his past three games, during which time Indianapolis is 2-1. They will face the 49ers, who are eyeing the return of Jimmy Garappolo under center.

On Monday, two teams familiar with one another in the NFC playoffs will take center stage, as the Saints will take on the Seahawks in a rematch of the 2013 NFC Divisional Game and the 2010 NFC Wild Card Game.

Sporting News has you covered for everything you need to watch the seventh week of the season.

MORE: Watch NFL games live with fuboTV (7-day free trial)

NFL schedule this week: Week 7 TV coverage

Here’s the full schedule for Week 7 of the NFL season, plus final scores and how to watch every game live. 

Note: national broadcasts are listed in bold

Thursday, Oct. 21

Game Time (ET) TV channel
Broncos at Browns 8:20 p.m. FOX, NFL Network, fuboTV

Sunday, Oct. 24

Game Time (ET) TV channel
Bengals at Ravens 1 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Washington at Packers 1 p.m. FOX, fuboTV
Falcons at Dolphins 1 p.m. FOX, fuboTV
Jets at Patriots 1 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Panthers at Giants 1 p.m. FOX, fuboTV
Chiefs at Titans 1 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Lions at Rams 4:05 p.m. FOX, fuboTV
Eagles at Raiders 4:05 p.m. FOX, fuboTV
Texans at Cardinals 4:25 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Bears at Buccaneers 4:25 p.m. CBS, fuboTV
Colts at 49ers 8:20 p.m. NBC, fuboTV

Monday, Oct. 25

Game Time (ET) TV channel
Saints at Seahawks 8:15 p.m. ESPN, fuboTV

WEEK 7 NFL PICKS: Straight up | Against the spread

How to watch NFL games in Week 7

The NFL will have three prime time games with matchups slated for Thursday, Sunday and Monday. The Browns and Broncos have already played on Thursday, and the next primetime game coming up will be the Colts taking on the 49ers on NBC. Monday will see the Saints take on the Seahawks, which will be carried by ESPN.

The “Monday Night Football” matchup will also see the return of Peyton and Eli Manning calling the game on ESPN2.

The rest of the slate will be aired either on CBS or FOX. Check your local listings to see which games will be on your broadcast.

Canadian viewers can find the games on TSN, CTV and CTV2.

NFL scores Week 7

Thursday, Oct. 21

Game Score
Broncos at Browns

Sunday, Oct. 24

Game Score
Bengals at Ravens
Washington at Packers
Falcons at Dolphins
Jets at Patriots
Panthers at Giants
Chiefs at Titans
Lions at Rams
Eagles at Raiders
Texans at Cardinals
Bears at Buccaneers
Colts at 49ers

Monday, Oct. 25

Game Score
Saints at Seahawks

MS in adulthood linked to viral infections in teenage years

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New investigate indicates that bacterial infections in teenage a long time may raise the risk of finding an MS prognosis as an grownup. jacoblund/Getty Pictures
  • Various sclerosis triggers may well come about decades prior to symptom onset and prognosis.
  • Serious infections in people’s teenage yrs may possibly boost their hazard of an MS prognosis later on in existence.
  • Infection plays a significant purpose no matter of genetic hazard.

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an unpredictable disease of the central anxious system (CNS) that influences the mind and spinal wire. In accordance to the National Various Sclerosis Society, there had been practically 1 million grown ups living with MS in the United States in 2017, which is additional than twice the reported number in 1975.

The initial signs and symptoms of MS are normally vision-linked — these as double vision, blurred eyesight, pink-inexperienced coloration distortion — but the illness can influence practically any section of the overall body, depending on which elements of the CNS are weakened.

In addition to challenges with vision, common signs or symptoms involve issues with:

  • balance and muscle mass weakness
  • memory and contemplating
  • emotion
  • sensations of numbness, prickling, or “pins and needles”

There is now no overcome for MS, but quite a few distinctive treatments and therapies exist to take care of the indications and cut down how generally the indicators return.

A mix of environmental and genetic things appears to be responsible for MS, but the actual trigger of the disease is mysterious.

Researchers feel that it is an autoimmune condition. In individuals with MS, the immune method mistakenly assaults the myelin coating of the CNS.

Myelin protects the nerves and can help messages journey amongst the brain and the rest of the body. When the protecting coating will become harmed, it can gradual, change, or halt these messages.

The overall health file knowledge for various million men and women born in Sweden between 1970 and 1994 recommend that a variety of serious bacterial infections in adolescence may possibly be possibility things for MS prognosis in later on yrs.

The exploration, which features in Brain, observed that activities that lead to swelling of the CNS can raise the danger of MS diagnosis.

Glandular fever, which occurs thanks to the Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) and is also recognised as infectious mononucleosis (IM), showed the greatest association with MS analysis.

Tim Coetzee, Ph.D., who is main advocacy, solutions and investigate officer at the Nationwide MS Modern society and was not associated with the review, instructed Health-related News Right now, “The information […] increase to the growing body of information about the possible of EBV staying a prospective viral cause for MS.”

The study also located an amplified threat linked with other styles of an infection and head trauma in the teenage a long time.

The direct author of the examine is Prof. Scott Montgomery, scientific epidemiologist and director of the Clinical Epidemiology group at Örebro College and Örebro University hospital in Sweden. He instructed MNT that a person of the key challenges with exploring chance variables of the ailment is that they “may come about numerous years ahead of MS is diagnosed, as the disorder has an extended period of time of enhancement in advance of it is adequately symptomatic for a prognosis.”

A next analyze, which seems in JAMA Network Open, provides to the growing fascination in irrespective of whether viral infections in a person’s teenage a long time can result in MS at an more mature age.

For this review, which involved practically 2.5 million persons in Sweden, the scientists seemed at knowledge on medical center-identified IM in little ones aged up to 10 years and adolescents aged 11–19 years. They then as opposed this details towards MS diagnoses later in daily life. To understand the effects of relatives daily life — an environmental element — and genetics, the crew integrated siblings in the research.

Prof. Montgomery points out, “If one particular sibling develops glandular fever and goes on to build MS, when the other does not build glandular fever and does not establish MS, that would suggest that it is the glandular fever rather than any genetic predisposition that led to the MS.”

Through the research period, 5,867 men and women acquired a analysis of MS from the age of 20 yrs. In general, children and adolescents with clinic-diagnosed IM had a higher danger, but young people confirmed the best chance of subsequent MS diagnosis.

According to Prof. Montgomery, the get-household information of the research is that “infectious mononucleosis all through ages 11–15 years was typically affiliated with an MS diagnosis around age 30 a long time […]. The realization that adolescence is these an important time of susceptibility also focuses our perform.”

Dr. Coetzee explained to MNT:

“Understanding the risk elements and triggers for MS is of essential value to the MS community. These scientific studies highlight the relevance of cautiously discovering whether or not viral infections like EBV and other glandular fevers set somebody at higher possibility for acquiring MS.”

He stated, “We need to have experiments like this a person to pinpoint the aspects that add to the possibility of MS so that we can develop procedures to reduce the onset of MS.”

The review was restricted by the exclusion of IM diagnosis in principal care and outpatient options, which means that it integrated only the most extreme bacterial infections. Similarly, the authors observed that it was not attainable to detect the symptomatic onset of MS right before its diagnosis.

In response to a question about the next steps for the study, Prof. Montgomery stated, “We now acknowledge that adolescence seems to represent a period of heightened susceptibility to exposures that may perhaps consequence in MS.” The research crew is now “working to superior characterize the environmental exposures similar to MS chance […], investigating no matter if the various pitfalls are additive or if some modify the outcome of other folks.”

The influence of intense infection on the potential overall health of kids and teenagers is of growing value in gentle of the surge in the degrees of the SARS-CoV-2 virus circulating in youngsters. Could this lead to a wave in MS circumstances in the long term?

Dr. Coetzee thinks that it is too early to say. He said, “At this place, it would be premature to speculate about regardless of whether someone is at increased risk of MS […] — we never have sufficient details about the long-time period effects of SARS-COV-2 infection on individuals to make conclusions about an individual’s possibility of producing MS owing to a SARS-COV-2 infection.”

C.D.C. Recommends Covid Booster Shots for Millions of Americans

In a sweeping victory for the Biden administration, the Centers for Disease Management and Prevention on Thursday endorsed booster pictures of the Moderna and the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccines for tens of tens of millions of Us citizens.

The final decision follows an company endorsement past thirty day period of booster photographs of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and opens the doorway for quite a few Individuals to seek out a booster shot as early as Friday.

The coronavirus vaccines “are all highly efficient in reducing the possibility of extreme disorder, hospitalization, and demise, even in the midst of the widely circulating Delta variant,” Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, director of the C.D.C., said in a assertion.

Her approval of tips produced by a scientific advisory committee provides the country nearer to satisfying President Biden’s guarantee in August to give boosters to all grown ups. The pandemic is now retreating in most elements of the state, but there are nevertheless about 75,000 new situations each individual day, and about 1,500 Covid fatalities.

That pledge angered numerous gurus, like some advising the Foodstuff and Drug Administration and the C.D.C., who said that experts had not nevertheless had a likelihood to establish whether boosters were being in fact needed.

Research showed that the vaccines remained really successful against serious illness and dying, whilst their effectiveness may well have waned from milder bacterial infections, specifically as the Delta variant unfold throughout the country this summertime.

The function of the vaccines is to protect against sickness significant ample to call for medical focus, not to avoid infection, Dr. Wilbur Chen, an infectious sickness physician at the University of Maryland and a member of the C.D.C. panel, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Methods, mentioned throughout its deliberations on Thursday.

“It may possibly be much too substantially to check with for a vaccine, both a primary sequence or the booster, to avert all kinds of infections,” Dr. Chen stated.

The C.D.C.’s advisers past thirty day period experimented with to narrow the variety of Americans who should really acquire a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, saying that exploration did not assist boosters for people today whose positions uncovered them to the coronavirus, as the F.D.A. experienced indicated.

But in a highly unusual go, Dr. Walensky overturned their decision, aligning the agency’s suggestions with the criteria laid out by the F.D.A.

On Wednesday, the Food items and Drug Administration authorized booster shots for millions of people who obtained the Moderna and the Johnson & Johnson vaccines, just as it did for recipients of Pfizer-BioNTech photographs final month. The F.D.A. also gave the green light-weight for persons suitable for booster photographs to get a dose of a various brand.

But in observe, who will get the shots and when depends greatly on the C.D.C.’s final steering. While the agency’s recommendations do not bind state and regional officers, they hold excellent sway in the healthcare group.

On Thursday, members of the C.D.C.’s panel endorsed the so-identified as blend-and-match method, saying people fully immunized with one company’s vaccine really should be authorized to get a unique vaccine for their booster shot.

Limited evidence strongly implies that booster doses of one particular of the two mRNA vaccines — Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech — extra effectively elevate antibody amounts than a booster dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

The committee encouraged that recipients of the one-dose Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine ought to get a booster shot at minimum two months after their first dose.

Among the Americans to begin with immunized with an mRNA vaccine, adults around 65, older people who are 50 to 65 with specified healthcare conditions, and these who reside in extensive-term treatment configurations need to acquire a one booster dose 6 months or extended right after their 2nd dose, the committee made the decision.

For grown ups ages 18 to 49 with selected medical situations and older people whose employment frequently expose them to the virus, the panel opted for softer language, declaring they may pick out to get a booster soon after contemplating their unique hazard.

The professionals emphasised that people today who have obtained two mRNA vaccine doses or a solitary Johnson & Johnson dose should however consider on their own absolutely vaccinated. Federal health and fitness officers reported they would continue to research irrespective of whether those people who experienced weak immune methods and had presently been given a third dose of a vaccine ought to go on to get a fourth dose.

Some advisers had been worried that young and balanced People who never require a booster could pick to get one anyway. Facet consequences are unusual, but in young Us residents they might outweigh the potential gains of booster doses, the experts explained.

“Those that are not at superior threat need to really be thoughtful about finding that dose,” stated Dr. Helen Talbot, an infectious ailment qualified at Vanderbilt College.

The committee’s ultimate votes contrasted sharply with discussions before in the working day. The panel heard that in grown ups below 65, even people with continual circumstances, the Moderna vaccine remained remarkably protective towards extreme health issues and showed only a little decline in performance over time, if any at all.

What to Know About Covid-19 Booster Photographs

The F.D.A. has authorized booster shots for hundreds of thousands of recipients of the Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines. Pfizer and Moderna recipients who are suitable for a booster include things like people today 65 and more mature, and more youthful older people at significant danger of intense Covid-19 simply because of clinical ailments or in which they work. Suitable Pfizer and Moderna recipients can get a booster at the very least 6 months right after their 2nd dose. All Johnson & Johnson recipients will be qualified for a 2nd shot at the very least two months right after the 1st.

Of course. The F.D.A. has up-to-date its authorizations to permit health-related companies to raise men and women with a different vaccine than the one particular they to begin with gained, a system recognised as “mix and match.” Whether you been given Moderna, Johnson & Johnson or Pfizer-BioNTech, you may get a booster of any other vaccine. Regulators have not advised any a person vaccine in excess of a further as a booster. They have also remained silent on whether it is preferable to adhere with the identical vaccine when possible.

The C.D.C. has stated the disorders that qualify a man or woman for a booster shot involve: hypertension and coronary heart disease diabetic issues or obesity most cancers or blood problems weakened immune method continual lung, kidney or liver sickness dementia and certain disabilities. Pregnant women of all ages and latest and former smokers are also suitable.

The F.D.A. licensed boosters for staff whose careers set them at large danger of exposure to likely infectious folks. The C.D.C. suggests that team involves: unexpected emergency health care staff education employees meals and agriculture staff production personnel corrections employees U.S. Postal Assistance personnel general public transit personnel grocery keep staff.

Of course. The C.D.C. states the Covid vaccine may perhaps be administered without the need of regard to the timing of other vaccines, and a lot of pharmacy websites are making it possible for folks to timetable a flu shot at the very same time as a booster dose.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine showed fewer efficacy than the Moderna vaccine general, but the details ended up way too limited to identify irrespective of whether there may be a drop around time.

Acquiring presently approved the Pfizer-BioNTech booster, on the other hand, some advisers said in interviews that they felt compelled to do the very same for the other two vaccines, introducing that it was only truthful to people today who had been given these vaccines.

Just more than 11 million individuals have opted for an supplemental shot so considerably, and up to a few million make up individuals with weak immune methods who were accredited to get a 3rd dose to prop up their immune reaction. Only 6 percent of men and women who are absolutely vaccinated, and about 15 percent of older people in excess of 65, have acquired a booster dose so far.

Moderna’s booster shot will not be the similar as its first shot. The dose will be 50 micrograms, which is 50 {cfdf3f5372635aeb15fd3e2aecc7cb5d7150695e02bd72e0a44f1581164ad809} the dose offered in the original rounds of immunization. Scientists from Moderna introduced data indicating that the more compact dose is ample to rouse the immune method.

But the smaller sized dose may perhaps will need to be sent from the same vials now applied for preliminary immunization. Some committee users pointed out that this could improve the possibility of contamination and incorrect dosing. (Moderna has been screening vials that supply scaled-down volumes of vaccine to alleviate this trouble, according to a former government formal.)

C.D.C. researchers stated at the meeting that the Pfizer-BioNTech and the Moderna vaccines are normally safe, with the exception of unusual and generally delicate coronary heart problems in young guys. The risk of the problem — known as myocarditis, an irritation of the heart muscle — is better immediately after the 2nd shot of an mRNA vaccine, and greatest in males 18 to 24 decades old.

In these under 20, the issue could affect extra than 100 males in every single million immunized with an mRNA vaccine. Reports have proven that the chance of heart issues right after a bout of Covid-19 is considerably greater.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine carries a compact risk of blood clots in youthful gals. The company’s representatives mentioned they experienced believed the price of blood clots at 15.1 conditions for every million immediately after the initially dose and 1.9 scenarios for each million immediately after the 2nd.

Some panelists explained they fearful about the possibility of blood clots in younger ladies who get a second booster dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, and the risk of myocarditis in young guys after a 3rd dose of an mRNA vaccine.

Potentially youthful women of all ages should be directed to mRNA vaccines and youthful men to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, Dr. Talbot reported.

“We’re in a diverse spot in the pandemic than we were being earlier,” she claimed. The opportunities to combine and match vaccines “are priceless.”

Tory Burch Announces Empowering Future Fashion Leaders Partnership with Parsons

Tory Burch, Ben Barry, Rachel Schreiber, Pierre-Yves Roussel
Tory Burch, Ben Barry, Rachel Schreiber, Pierre-Yves Roussel

Tory Burch Announces Empowering Foreseeable future Fashion Leaders Partnership with Parsons

As one particular of the most celebrated and effective American designers doing work nowadays, Tory Burch has designed a world-wide luxurious brand name, which is guided by the basic principle to empower gals. Now, the manufacturer has introduced a new five-yr multi-disciplinary partnership in the Faculty of Manner at Parsons that will market and celebrate creative imagination, innovation, and entrepreneurship throughout numerous diploma applications.

The partnership also involves the formation of the Tory Burch Empowering Foreseeable future Fashion Leaders Endowed Scholarship Fund with a reward that will be matched to establish a $1,000,000 fund that will give ongoing financial help to learners every calendar year.

“I am thrilled to be partnering with Parsons to enable give the future generation of inventive expertise with the sources, steerage and chances they need to have to improve and thrive in an market that I am passionate about,” said Tory Burch, Executive Chairman and Chief Artistic Officer of Tory Burch LLC. “We are honored to get the job done with these students—their power, dedication, and impressive spirit are unbelievably inspiring.”

The Empowering Potential Vogue Leaders collaboration will span educational disciplines in the University of Fashion at Parsons, the place pupils in the BFA Fashion Design, MFA Textiles, and AAS Marketing and Communications packages will have interaction with the Tory Burch brand name to take a look at impressive remedies to design and style, item advancement and internet marketing troubles facing the style field.

“Parsons is pretty very pleased to lover with Tory Burch to provide higher access to manner schooling and business-centered curricular ordeals,” said Ben Barry, Dean of the School of Manner at Parsons. “Tory’s reason-pushed strategy to trend enterprise has made a new product for the field and her styles, pushed by deep investigation, have come to be legendary in narratives of American style. Tory is an inspiration to our college students, and I am so keen for them to learn from her and her group.”

During the multi-yr partnership, pupils will have the option to go to the Tory Burch ateliers, get mentorship from the Tory Burch team, lover on particular projects with the manufacturer, and much more. The scholarship fund will also enable decrease the fiscal burden for learners attending Parsons, and engage in a critical part in supporting educational accessibility and fostering a much more diverse industry.

Parsons and Tory Burch share numerous of the ideals and principles underpinning the partnership—a shared passion for and motivation to advancing vogue via creative imagination and innovation, as properly as a determination to mentoring the future era of small business leaders and designers. The two companies are aligned in their support of ladies and marginalized communities by way of improved academic possibilities, scholarships, and actual-planet studying activities. The Tory Burch Foundation, started in 2009, developments women’s empowerment and entrepreneurship in the United States by providing accessibility to cash, training, and electronic resources.

Tory Burch and customers of her brand will also share their abilities and advice with college students all through in-class speaking engagements, public lectures and actual-everyday living do the job ordeals. Students will study about a broad vary of subject areas like style and design, inventive campaigns, entrepreneurship and innovation.

New Facebook whistleblower claims execs downplayed Russian interference, hate speech: report

A new whistleblower has arrive forward with allegations that Fb officials prioritized earnings above their efforts to include the unfold of hate speech and misinformation on the social media platform, according to a report Friday.

The whistleblower, determined as a former Fb employee and associates of the company’s Integrity division, built the allegations in an affidavit to the Securities and Trade Fee, the Washington Submit documented.

The statements purportedly corroborated many the latest allegations by Frances Haugen, yet another former Fb personnel who delivered damning testimony about the company’s methods on Capitol Hill previously this month. 

WHISTLEBLOWER FRANCES HAUGEN, Facebook OVERSIGHT BOARD TO Satisfy IN ‘COMING WEEKS’

WASHINGTON, DC – APRIL 10: Fb co-founder, Chairman and CEO Mark Zuckerberg comes to testify prior to a merged Senate Judiciary and Commerce committee listening to in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill April 10, 2018 in Washington, DC. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Visuals / Getty Visuals)

The new whistleblower mentioned Facebook officials were usually indifferent about public concerns relating to problematic information or undercut efforts to react owing to concerns about political blowback from then-President Donald Trump and destruction to the company’s base line. 

The affidavit, dated Oct. 13 in-depth just one incident in 2017 in which a Fb communications govt purportedly dismissed considerations about community backlash concerning Russian interference in the 2016 election.

“It will be a flash in the pan. Some legislators will get pissy,” Facebook communications formal Tucker Bounds stated, according to the whistleblower. “And then in a several weeks they will go onto a little something else. Meanwhile, we are printing cash in the basement, and we are good.”

Previous Fb info scientist Frances Haugen speaks through a listening to of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Subcommittee on Buyer Defense, Products Security, and Details Safety, on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2021, in Washington. ( ( (AP Image/Alex Brandon))

The new whistleblower’s identification has not been publicly disclosed. 

A Facebook consultant slammed the report in a statement attained by the Put up.

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“This is beneath the Washington Write-up, which throughout the very last 5 yrs competed ferociously with the New York Times in excess of the quantity of corroborating sources its reporters could uncover for one anecdotes in deeply reported, intricate tales,” Facebook spokeswoman Erin McPike reported. “It sets a perilous precedent to hang an total story on a single supply creating a extensive range of statements without having any clear corroboration.”

The hottest allegations surfaced as Fb contends with unprecedented criticism from lawmakers about its organization procedures. Damning media experiences published by the Wall Road Journal and other outlets comprehensive interior Facebook documents indicating executives ended up knowledgeable the system was producing community damage.

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The Journal’s collection was based on files furnished by Haugen, who has termed on Congress to regulate Facebook.