From TradeBriefs CEO Picks <[email protected]>
Subject Bans on Lab-Grown Meat May Keep it From U.S. Stores
Date June 1, 2024 9:34 AM
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Knowledge for Decision-Makers
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CEO Picks - The best that international journalism has to offer!

S1

Bans on Lab-Grown Meat May Keep it From U.S. Stores
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Earlier this month, both Florida and Alabama banned the sale of
cultivated meat and seafood, which is grown from animal cells. In
Iowa, the governor signed a bill prohibiting schools from buying
lab-grown meat. Federal lawmakers are also looking to restrict it.

It's unclear how far these efforts will go. Some cultivated meat
companies say they're considering legal action, and some states--like
Tennessee--shelved proposed bans after lawmakers argued they would
restrict consumers' choices.

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S2

How to imagine a better future for democracy
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US democracy needs repair — and care is the answer, says author
adrienne maree brown in conversation with writer and activist
Baratunde Thurston. In a sweeping discussion on what it means to be an
active citizen, they unpack how to design a future for democracy where
we all belong.Continued here
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S3

12 predictions for the future of technology
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Techno-optimist Vinod Khosla believes in the world-changing power of
"foolish ideas." He offers 12 bold predictions for the future of
technology — from preventative medicine to car-free cities to planes
that get us from New York to London in 90 minutes — and shows why a
world of abundance awaits.Continued here
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S4

My Dad Invented the Robocall But He Made the Classic Inventor's
Mistake [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]    
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It was 1975 and Dad owned a chain of carpet stores, was a great
entrepreneur, and as such, was always looking for new ways to grow his
business. Back then, phone answering machines were fairly new and a
big deal. 

One day he came home from work and was checking the answering machine.
He said, "Wouldn't it be great if, instead of
receiving incoming calls and playing a taped answer, the machine
could, could ... make outbound calls and play a taped
pitch?" 

Continued here [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]









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S5

6 Ways to Win the Battle for Attention and Influence
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Do you now find yourself skimming through headlines, preferring
summaries and requesting soundbites? Guess what? Your customers and
employees are not much different. Inattention is not just a
personality quirk or source of irritation, it's a business epidemic.

In today's fast-paced world, every business competes in the battle to
win customer, employee, subscriber, follower
and investor attention. But attention is not only coveted, it's
heavily compromised. Attention spans are shrinking and attention
fatigue setting in. The result? People concentrate less, miss what
matters -- and make worse decisions. 

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S6

World's Largest Stegosaurus Skeleton Ever Found Heads to Auction, With
Mixed Reactions
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Some scientists are concerned that offering the 150-million-year-old
dinosaur, called “Apex,” to the highest bidder could land the
fossil in private hands, where it is unavailable to researchers

“Apex,” the largest, most complete Stegosaurus fossil ever
recovered, is up for sale. On July 17, it will be auctioned at
Sotheby’s annual Geek Week series, where it could fetch up to $6
million.

Continued here
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S7

This Woman-Led Photography Exhibition Showcases the Diversity of
Middle Eastern Femininity
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The Middle East Institute show, “Louder Than Hearts,” explores
portraits of Arab and Iranian women through the lens of ten celebrated
female artists

The Middle East Institute (MEI) in Washington, D.C. is hosting a new
exhibition, "Louder Than Hearts: Women Photographers from the Arab
World and Iran," highlighting the work of ten different Egyptian,
Iranian, Jordanian, Lebanese, Palestinian, Saudi and Yemeni artists
capturing portraits of women in their regions.

Continued here
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S8

Mathematicians Attempt to Glimpse Past the Big Bang | Quanta Magazine
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About 13.8 billion years ago, the entire cosmos consisted of a tiny,
hot, dense ball of energy that suddenly exploded.

That's how everything began, according to the standard scientific
story of the Big Bang, a theory that first took shape in the 1920s.
The story has been refined over the decades, most notably in the
1980s, when many cosmologists came to believe that in its first
moments, the universe went through a brief period of extraordinarily
fast expansion called inflation before settling into a lower gear.

Continued here
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S9

It's Time to Acknowledge the Emotional Realities That Impact Buying
Behaviors [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]    
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The best leaders, CEOs and CMOs among them, must be adept at
identifying and processing signals. Not just signals from the
marketplace, but from the culture. Unfortunately, the daily sturm
and drang of running a business today creates a "look down" focus
when what is also required is a "look up" orientation.

That paradox went through my mind when I read the results of
Gallup's recent survey on immigration. The findings are
striking. More than inflation, more than the views of the government
itself, "Immigration remains the most important U.S. problem." And it
has held that position for three straight months. A record.

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S10

U.S tech giants are building dozens of data centers in Chile. Locals
are fighting back
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Earlier this month, as Chilean President Gabriel Boric announced the
arrival of 28 new data centers in the country, Rodrigo Vallejos
watched the livestream with skepticism.

Even as Boric assured that investment in these buildings would be
“environmentally responsible,” Vallejos had his doubts. After all,
he has spent the past two years monitoring data centers in Chile —
including those operated by Amazon, Google, and Microsoft — and
found them to have a significant impact on water supply in the
country. Since 2022, Vallejos has been one of the leading activists
filing citizen observations regarding Microsoft’s new data center in
Santiago’s metropolitan area.

Continued here
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S11

Mutations in a non-coding gene associated with intellectual disability
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Almost 1,500 genes have been implicated in intellectual disabilities;
yet for most people with such disabilities, genetic causes remain
unknown. Perhaps this is in part because geneticists have been
focusing on the wrong stretches of DNA when they go searching. To
rectify this, Ernest Turro—a biostatistician who focuses on
genetics, genomics, and molecular diagnostics—used whole genome
sequencing data from the 100,000 Genomes Project to search for areas
associated with intellectual disabilities.

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S12

Google Chrome's plan to limit ad blocking extensions kicks off next
week [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]    
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Google Chrome will be shutting down its older, more capable extension
system, Manifest V2, in favor of exclusively using the more limited
Manifest V3. The deeply controversial Manifest V3 system was announced
in 2019, and the full switch has been delayed a million times, but now
Google says it's really going to make the transition: As previously
announced, the phase-out of older Chrome extensions is starting next
week.

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S13

TikTok vaguely disputes report that it's making a US-only app
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TikTok is now disputing a Reuters report that claims the short-video
app is cloning its algorithm to potentially offer a different version
of the app, which might degrade over time, just for US users.

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S14

Google's AI Overview is flawed by design, and a new company blog post
hints at why [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]    
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On Thursday, Google capped off a rough week of providing inaccurate
and sometimes dangerous answers through its experimental AI Overview
feature by authoring a follow-up blog post titled, "AI Overviews:
About last week." In the post, attributed to Google VP Liz Reid, head
of Google Search, the firm formally acknowledged issues with the
feature and outlined steps taken to improve a system that appears
flawed by design, even if it doesn't realize it is admitting it.

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S15

Journalists "deeply troubled" by OpenAI's content deals with Vox, The
Atlantic [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]  
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On Wednesday, Axios broke the news that OpenAI had signed deals with
The Atlantic and Vox Media that will allow the ChatGPT maker to
license their editorial content to further train its language models.
But some of the publications' writers—and the unions that represent
them—were surprised by the announcements and aren't happy about it.
Already, two unions have released statements expressing "alarm" and
"concern."

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S16

Boeing's Starliner capsule poised for second try at first astronaut
flight [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]    
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NASA and Boeing officials are ready for a second attempt to launch the
first crew test flight on the Starliner spacecraft Saturday from Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida.

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S17

Harvard's Golden Silence
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The university will no longer make statements about political matters.
Other schools should follow suit.All sorts of events tempt a
university to make a public statement of support or condemnation: a
terrorist attack on New York City and Washington, D.C. A mass shooting
at a nearby elementary school. Faculty and student enthusiasm for
protest movements such as Occupy Wall Street and Black Lives Matter. A
social reckoning like #MeToo. Thugs storming the U.S. Capitol on
January 6, 2021. In the moment, the benefits of making a statement
feel as though they outweigh the costs.

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S18

Trove of 600 Looted Italian Artifacts Worth $65 Million Comes Home
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The collection includes artifacts spanning the ninth century B.C.E. to
the second century C.E.

Some 600 ancient Italian artifacts—once stolen, trafficked and sold
to museums and collectors in the United States—have returned to
their homeland. Italian law enforcement collaborated with their U.S.
counterparts to recover the $65-million trove, which was displayed
earlier this week in Rome.

Continued here
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S19

People Are Spotting Rare, Blue-Eyed Cicadas Around Illinois
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As two broods of periodical cicadas emerge across the U.S. this
spring, people have discovered a few of the bugs that don't have their
trademark red eyes

This spring, two broods of cicadas have been emerging across the
Midwest and the Southeast, with the bugs spotted in locations
stretching from Georgia and Alabama to Iowa and Illinois.

Continued here
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S20

Why New Zealand’s newest Great Walk is so important
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Situated in the country’s isolated south-west region, the Hump Ridge
Track will officially launch in October 2024 and has the potential to
save the tiny town of Tuatapere.

Continued here
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S21

New fronts are opening in the war against malaria - The Economist (No
paywall) [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]  
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After years of stalemate, ground-breaking vaccines and better nets are
raising hopes

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S22

How to pivot like a ballerina in the turbulent age of AI
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Everyone has their own favorite pivot story. Twitter was a podcast
curator that turned to social networking; Flickr was an online
roleplaying game and pivoted to photo-sharing; and Shopify once just
sold snowboards. Heck, even Johannes Gutenberg pivoted from selling
relics to inventing the printing press when he saw an opportunity.
Pivoting is as old as good business — if you want to get rich and
stay rich, you have to sway a little.

Pivots — whether personal career swerves or corporate course changes
— are the natural response to new times and fresh challenges. When
the winds of change blow, a successful company is one that bends like
the willow. And AI is not so much a wind as a category-five typhoon.
One way to learn how to pivot successfully is to take a lesson from
those who’ve already done so. To do just that, Big Think met with
Angie Westbrock, the CEO of Standard AI. We talked about her personal
journey and how her company is looking to adapt to the age of AI.

Continued here
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S23

Ask Ethan: Why didn't the Big Bang become a black hole?
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Here in our Universe, despite how vast it is and how intricately we
can probe it, there are still limits to what we can observe, test, and
measure. We can obtain signals from very far away and infer the
existence of an early, hot, dense, uniform, and rapidly expanding
state: the hot Big Bang. However, even the earliest signals that we
can detect don’t take us all the way back to the start of the Big
Bang itself: just as close to it as we can get. It’s up to us to
infer the rest. Similarly, we can only detect signals from outside of
a black hole’s event horizon, both before and after the formation of
a black hole. And yet, from the properties that we do observe, we can
conclude that black holes exist, including their locations and masses,
despite not being able to probe the interior of the black hole itself.

It’s by putting these two ideas together, the Big Bang and black
holes, that led Rick Mott to ask this week’s Ask Ethan question:

Continued here
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S24

Odd one out: How "schema theory" can help us make better decisions at
work [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]  
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Let’s play a game. From the following lists, identify the odd one
out. In each case, which one is different? I suspect that for each,
you’ll have your own answers and rationale:

When you play the odd-one-out game, you’re applying a mental
framework known as a schema. A schema is a filtering system that helps
you categorize the world you see. It ties things together and labels
your perceptions. It translates a world of incoherent, overwhelming
sensations, into something that makes sense.

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S25

Everyday Philosophy: Should you always call out bad opinions?
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I was wondering: is age really an indication of who deserves respect?
I’ve been taught growing up that you should always respect your
elders, no matter what. But if your elders are incorrect in a belief,
isn’t it your ethical responsibility to call them out on it? Or
would that be morally wrong, since they’re older and apparently
wiser than you?

When you tell people that you write about philosophy for a living,
they tend to do one of two things. Usually, they nod politely,
possibly making some reference to a philosophy book they read at
school, and then we all move on to other, easier topics. Occasionally,
though, they see it as a challenge. This is their time to have that
debate they’ve been agitating for. And so they bring out the debate.
They raise some philosophical conundrum — usually to do with ethics
or religion — and hope for a good tête-à-tête. I almost always
disappoint. The truth is, I find debating quite exhausting. Like any
kind of exercise, I find I need to be in the right mood and warm up
thoroughly beforehand. Which means I will usually just nod along,
acquiesce to the most ridiculous of suppositions, and try to talk
about the weather.

Continued here
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S26

We're not doomed. Here's how to revive Planet Earth
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“If given a chance, nature can rebound, and nature can rebound
dramatically.” Biologist Sean B. Carroll discusses the resilience of
nature and how humans can help it thrive.

Humans litter, start wars, hunt, and poach, but history has also shown
we are capable of undoing our damage. Carroll highlights Gorongosa
National Park in Mozambique, where a brutal civil war decimated 98% of
the large animal population. Yet, through dedicated conservation
efforts, the park has seen a remarkable recovery – and this is not
the only example. 

Continued here
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S27

Hyundai and Suppliers Sued for Alleged Child Labor Violations in
Alabama [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]  
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The complaint filed Thursday follows an investigation by the
department's Wage and Hour Division that found a 13-year-old worked
between 50 and 60 hours a week operating machines on an assembly line
that formed sheet metal into auto body parts.

The defendants include Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Alabama LLC, SMART
Alabama LLC and Best Practice Service, LLC. The lawsuit said it seeks
to end the use of child labor and require that the companies give up
profits linked to the alleged practice.

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S28

Google Explains What Went Wrong With Those Wacky AI Overviews
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The internet giant released a lengthy statement on May 30 outlining
exactly what went wrong with the release of AI Overviews, a feature in
which a language model generates answers to Google searches using data
from the web. After Google rolled out the feature at its I/O developer
conference earlier this month, social media platforms were flooded
with screenshots of nonsensical answers created by the AI, like
recommending that people put glue on pizza. The company says there's
one major contributing factor to these wacky answers: The AI's lack of
a sense of humor. In other words, it has trouble determining what's
the truth and what's satire or sarcasm. 

In the statement, Google vice president Liz Reid, who leads to
company's search division, wrote that it would be inaccurate to say
that the more off-kilter answers generated by AI Overviews are
"hallucinations" such as the ones displayed by other language models
like ChatGPT. That's because nearly all of the AI Overview answers
are pulled from somewhere on the internet. The problem identified by
the Google search team, according to Reid, lies in the AI's "ability
to interpret nonsensical queries and satirical content." 

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S29

From Customers to Superfans: The Secret Sauce of Unstoppable Business
Growth [[link removed]}&lead=419599&emailid=8738&nl=daily]  
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Have you ever wondered why some businesses seem to have raving fans
that can't stop talking about them, and others fizzle out? I had the
same question, so I turned to my friend, customer experience speaker
and author of Creating Superfans (Page Two, 2023) Brittany Hodak, who
has spent years mastering the art of turning customers into lifelong
advocates. Our chat was eye-opening, filled with insights and
practical advice on how you can transform your customers into
passionate advocates. 

Hodak remembers a quote from Shiv Singh, the former Global Head of
Digital at PepsiCo.,  that ignited her curiosity around
superfandom: "The purpose of a business is to create a customer who
creates customers." The idea serves as a powerful reminder of
what--or more accurately, who--drives your business success: your
customer. 

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S30

Altman Dodges Some Tough Questions While Talking Up AI's Promise
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was a star speaker at the annual AI for Good
conference Thursday, addressing the U.N. telecommunications agency's
annual gathering about how to tap the societal promise of artificial
intelligence technology.

But Altman spent part of his virtual appearance fending off thorny
questions about governance, an AI voice controversy and criticism from
ousted board members.Altman's appearance to talk about AI's benefits
comes as his company has been battling a rising tide of concern about
its business practices and how it handles AI safety.

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