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Netflix and grieve: Inside the digital afterlife of streaming profiles

Earlier this week, Reddit user Bloxicorn took to the site with an unusual question: Would you delete the Netflix profile of a family member who has passed away?

Bloxicorn, a college student who talked to Fast Company under the condition that we do not reveal her real name, has some personal experience with that issue: Her dad died in late 2021, and she has been occasionally looking at his profile ever since, just to see what he was watching in the days before his passing. She ultima

This is the battle for your brain at work

We don’t all have the luxury or ability to focus for long stretches at a time, which is something that Oliver Oullier, the president of the bioinformatic company Emotiv, based in San Francisco, California, thinks neurotechnology can address. At the outset of a recent talk he gave at the Fortune Global Tech Forum, Oullier acknowledged that we are “not equal when it comes to focusing. Some people can focus very, very deeply for forty-five minutes. Others for two hours.”

How Tabitha Brown is building an entertainment empire based on joy

Sometimes all you need to find your purpose is to eat a good sandwich.

Back in December 2017, Tabitha Brown had been uploading videos to Facebook charting her journey in going vegan, a decision she made after developing chronic pain and fatigue. While trying to get her acting career off the ground, Brown drove for Uber on the side and was actually between rides when she posted an exuberant review of Whole Foods’s “TTLA” (tempeh bacon, tomato, lettuce, avocado) s

Twitter legacy verification badges are supposedly going away this weekend. Here’s an alternative

Starting this weekend, Twitter says it will begin phasing out its legacy verification program, meaning the only blue checkmarks you’ll see on Twitter will be for users who have opted to pay for them.

Twitter announced, via tweet, its plan to wind down the program and begin “removing legacy verified checkmarks” on April 1, with the only option to keep them coming in the form of a Twitter Blue subscription.

Now T2, a new social network led by former

POV: Why pausing AI development is a bad idea

The gloves are coming off in the fight over the future of AI.

On Tuesday, the Future of Life Institute, a futurist nonprofit backed by the Musk Foundation, published an open letter calling for a six-month pause on training AI systems more powerful than OpenAI’s leading GPT-4 service.

“Powerful AI systems should be developed only once we are confident that their effects will be positive and their risks will be manageable,” declares the letter, which has

POV: How two recent laws are opening the door to bring EVs to rural America

Electric vehicles, including those designed for heavy-duty industrial work, are finally starting to gain traction in the U.S. Each year, the number of EVs sold rises. Nevertheless, adaptation to EVs in smaller communities across the country has lagged behind their urban counterparts. But that could change due to recent legislation.

At the end of 2021, the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act was signed into law. The act’s multiple projects included offering $7.5 billion in

Virgin Orbit collapse: Mass layoffs at Richard Branson’s satellite launch company after failed mission

Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit is letting go of almost its entire work force with the satellite launch company finding it difficult to secure funding three months after a failed mission.

The company, headquartered in Long Beach, California, will cut 675 jobs, about 85% of its workforce, according to a Friday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

Earlier this month Virgin Orbit said that it was pausing all operations amid reports of possi

The $1 billion company behind ‘Dungeons & Dragons’ is coming out of the basement

Behind a faded facade of brick and tinted glass, in an office park tucked away from a busy road in Bellevue, a satellite city of Seattle, a group of travelers gathers. On this dreary morning in March, they’re preparing to set out on a quest.

Among their group is a half-orc fighter, a human wizard, a halfling rogue—and me, a brawny dwarven cleric named Dorbin.

The de facto guide of this little odyssey, the “dungeon master” in Dungeons & Dragons-s

Here’s how the Turkish startup Jotform used its web form tools to help in the aftermath of a deadly earthquake

The magnitude 7.8 earthquake that hit Turkey and Syria in early February killed tens of thousands of people and left a trail of destruction in its wake.

A massive cleanup operation is still underway in both countries. Meanwhile, one Turkish-based tech business has offered its support to help survivors through any means necessary.

Jotform, which automates the process of making web forms, first sprang into action when the aftershocks subsided. “We have three offices i

The ongoing Silicon Valley Bank fiasco is an old story with a social media twist

The failure of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10, 2023, came as a shock to most Americans. Even people like myself, a scholar of the U.S. banking system who has worked at the Federal Reserve, didn’t expect SVB’s collapse.

Usually banks, like all companies, fail after a prolonged period of lackluster performance. But SVB, the nation’s 16th-largest bank, had been stable and highly profitable just a few months before, having earned about


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