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Oct 12, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN3
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of the m.i.t. s report, was that it was not that women were not interested in science, it was that ng something was happening to them along the career trajectory that was making the drop out. ti >> none of this is really a surprise to me. i was in addition to teaching women's history for 40 years, i was forced more than 20 years ahead of an infinite school for girls. as a part of my job was focusing on raising the expectations for those girls. make sure those girls had ou expertise about their lives, and of course carried over to ea working for equal rights for women. one of the reasons that women got suffrage in the united states prior to 1920, they got suffrage in the west. 12 states gave women, and they were all west of the mississippi river. in western states gave women suffrage because they saw them as economic partners. they were turning raw materials into agricultural products, they gave them equal pay to teach. they gave them voting rights because they wanted to drop in relation to their to
of the m.i.t. s report, was that it was not that women were not interested in science, it was that ng something was happening to them along the career trajectory that was making the drop out. ti >> none of this is really a surprise to me. i was in addition to teaching women's history for 40 years, i was forced more than 20 years ahead of an infinite school for girls. as a part of my job was focusing on raising the expectations for those girls. make sure those girls had ou expertise about...
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12
Oct 12, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN3
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m.i.t. does reports. the ally in the president was a critical step there. >> i once heard nancy hopkins talk in a meeting of academics about how to change women's roles in institutions. the two point she made were the allies among the faculty and you need to institutionalize. put the committee in place. even if the president changes, the committee will still be there doing the work. you have to embed it in the institution or nothing changes. i wanted to talk about work, life, balance. children. long and tragic story. for moments of question and answer. i know we are on a times game tonight, and i want you all to be able to purchase the books and get these authors to sign them. to final short questions. biographers are not supposed to be agyakwa first. they are not writing life saints, its words and all. the first question is did you discover any words about your characters? >> yeah, nancy, the dean spoke to nancy at one point. nancy has an incredibly restless mind. looking for something to fixate on. as m
m.i.t. does reports. the ally in the president was a critical step there. >> i once heard nancy hopkins talk in a meeting of academics about how to change women's roles in institutions. the two point she made were the allies among the faculty and you need to institutionalize. put the committee in place. even if the president changes, the committee will still be there doing the work. you have to embed it in the institution or nothing changes. i wanted to talk about work, life, balance....
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Oct 25, 2023
10/23
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 101
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our next guest faced these chants that erupted at m.i.t.one of our country's most prestigious schools calling for an intifada. we have a student joining us now. you sent a letter to the university saying you don't feel safe and unhappy with how they are handling it. a clear, concrete call for terror acts and a demonstration in front of the student house. a large group of people calling out intifada. i experienced two in my life. the first 87 to 93, the second from 2000 to 2005 and expressing not only my concerns but the concerns of many israelis and jewish people on campus. we are truly afraid for our lives. i'm sorry for what you are going through. it is important for people to raise your hand and take a stand, like you. >> yes. thank you very much. >> dana: what is it like on campus today after you had sent the letter? >> so things have been calming down a bit. people are still rallying for palestinian and for hamas, but the calls for intifada were not said again. i am not sure if it won't repeat. the officials of the university haven't s
our next guest faced these chants that erupted at m.i.t.one of our country's most prestigious schools calling for an intifada. we have a student joining us now. you sent a letter to the university saying you don't feel safe and unhappy with how they are handling it. a clear, concrete call for terror acts and a demonstration in front of the student house. a large group of people calling out intifada. i experienced two in my life. the first 87 to 93, the second from 2000 to 2005 and expressing...
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Oct 16, 2023
10/23
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BLOOMBERG
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ed: julie, you have an academic background at m.i.t. both as an undergrad and harvard m.i.t..losely is an expanded group of partners in new york city in the east coast do you track the academic bases that talent can come from. there is a lot of emphasis on stanford and berkeley. is there the same pool of talent being generationally created each year on the east coast? julie: absolutely. about half of our portfolio is based somewhere on the east coast, whether in the boston ecosystem, and then the majority of my personal portfolio is based in new york. companies sit in the intersection of health care in fintech. the other piece of this is david has mentioned he is a recovering fintech entrepreneur. i'm a recovering health tech entrepreneur. we have all been builders in these domains and that is where more we focus where the pools of talent that have built businesses native to different industries that can come together and see these unique opportunities at those intersections. caroline: you are the early member of a software engineering team acquired by oracle so you know how t
ed: julie, you have an academic background at m.i.t. both as an undergrad and harvard m.i.t..losely is an expanded group of partners in new york city in the east coast do you track the academic bases that talent can come from. there is a lot of emphasis on stanford and berkeley. is there the same pool of talent being generationally created each year on the east coast? julie: absolutely. about half of our portfolio is based somewhere on the east coast, whether in the boston ecosystem, and then...
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Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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BLOOMBERG
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we will speak with an m.i.t. researchers. joy buolamwini. ed: we want to talk about the ai accelerator, but that will come on the call. you want to look at the client service business. that's what we'll be tracking after the market. this is bloomberg intelligence. ♪ ♪ ( ♪ ♪ ) ( ♪ ♪ ) ♪ (when the day that) ♪ ♪ (lies ahead of me) ♪ ♪ ( seems impossible to face) ♪ ♪ (a lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ a bank that knows your business grows your business. bmo. is made for sam who makes, everyday products, designed smarter. genius! like 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more, so sam can make smart ideas, a brilliant reality! chase for business. make more of what's yours. >> one thing is clear to realize the promise of ai and avoid the risk we need to govern this technology. the decisions we make in the near term are going to set the course of the next decade. caroline: president biden after signing an executive order on artificial intelligence. joining us next is joy buo lamwini. it's great to have you here.
we will speak with an m.i.t. researchers. joy buolamwini. ed: we want to talk about the ai accelerator, but that will come on the call. you want to look at the client service business. that's what we'll be tracking after the market. this is bloomberg intelligence. ♪ ♪ ( ♪ ♪ ) ( ♪ ♪ ) ♪ (when the day that) ♪ ♪ (lies ahead of me) ♪ ♪ ( seems impossible to face) ♪ ♪ (a lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ ♪ (lovely day) ♪ a bank that knows your...
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Oct 28, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN2
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eye 13
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my alma mater, m.i.t. has some of the best research and eventually provides free tech transfer for people to commercialize the technology that already exists. most universities do but going with some of the best institutions, you can actually commercialize existing technology. you don't have to find your own innovation. americans can and you can bring that to bear in other countries by africa, the countries in africa. i think one of the issues for shoring up the partnership's wanting to steer clear of what happened in south africa. it is big supply chain, it is just adding senses and different elements to the supply chain so that are actually producing can get some of the money for the different steps in the supply chain. looking forward to talking more about that and with the federal government is looking to deal with commercialize some of that technology. most of it exists in the block chain space. people are still unclear about the difference between the block chain and the ledger. the ledger is extreme
my alma mater, m.i.t. has some of the best research and eventually provides free tech transfer for people to commercialize the technology that already exists. most universities do but going with some of the best institutions, you can actually commercialize existing technology. you don't have to find your own innovation. americans can and you can bring that to bear in other countries by africa, the countries in africa. i think one of the issues for shoring up the partnership's wanting to steer...
120
120
Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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MSNBCW
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his lawyer walked questions about his biography, m.i.t., he's an already could. his biography. and then, we were waiting for the start of the cross-examination which happened today. >> and -- >> it was a bloodbath. >> how? >> the first half of this trial, the prosecution's case centered on really compelling personal testimony from his ex girlfriend, who ran his crypto trading firm, his close friend from m.i.t. and other -- >>'s biggest lieutenants and the company turning on him. >> all of them. that was very powerful. today was all documentary evidence. and on the stand, he was able to remember he dates, meaning meetings that he had, what you might have said. and it was remarkable to see all of this stuff the elite prosecutor had her back pocket. but every time he couldn't remember something, is that something different than how he testified. she had an expert from the podcasts -- all the receipts. and there's a group who rephrased -- >> we absolutely have some sound. watch this. >> play that sound. >> what are your lawyers telling you right now? [laughter] are t
his lawyer walked questions about his biography, m.i.t., he's an already could. his biography. and then, we were waiting for the start of the cross-examination which happened today. >> and -- >> it was a bloodbath. >> how? >> the first half of this trial, the prosecution's case centered on really compelling personal testimony from his ex girlfriend, who ran his crypto trading firm, his close friend from m.i.t. and other -- >>'s biggest lieutenants and the company...
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Oct 5, 2023
10/23
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CNBC
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we heard from another ftx executive and m.i.t. friend, as well. also a bahamas roommate.estimony ended on a fiery note, struck from the record, but when asked why he lost fate in ftx, he said, ftx defrauded all of its customers. and then, we had a venture capitalist that took the stand. he said that they lost -- invested and lost $278 million in that company. they wrote it down to zero. he said, they never had a board of directors or a cfo. so, key testimony there, guys. back to you. >> crazy stuff. kate, thank you. kate rooney. >> racy. >> wow. >> we are kicking the tires on two auto stocks making headlines today. first up, gm. shares dropping after at least 20 million of the automakers vehicles were built with potentially dangerous air bag parts. auto regulators recommending a recall of 50 million vehicles using the same air bags which are made by arc you a motive. it would effect gm and 12 other automakers. gm's stock hitting a three-year low on the back of this. and shares of rivian plummeting. the ev maker announcing a $1.5 billion convertible bond sale after the bel
we heard from another ftx executive and m.i.t. friend, as well. also a bahamas roommate.estimony ended on a fiery note, struck from the record, but when asked why he lost fate in ftx, he said, ftx defrauded all of its customers. and then, we had a venture capitalist that took the stand. he said that they lost -- invested and lost $278 million in that company. they wrote it down to zero. he said, they never had a board of directors or a cfo. so, key testimony there, guys. back to you. >>...
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Oct 19, 2023
10/23
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KNTV
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m.i.t., number three.mber nine for its financial aid and academic rigor, and that was ahead of yale. >>> and then we check on the protests from the high school campuses as it relates to the middle east. >>> and artifacts from the san francisco area anchor brewing are now in the smithsonian. we talk about how that brewery is so important to our history. >>> and then up next on "nightly news," the remarkable weapon system has rarely been so tested in history since the idf claims to have shot down more than 6,500 projectiles. we look at how the iron dome works. lester holt joins us from israel. >>> tonight, our special coverage from israel as president biden visits the country in a show of solidarity, and protests rage across the middle east after that deadly hospital explosion in gaza. >>> the new images from the moment the blast hit and the deadly aftermath president biden in tel aviv today backing israel's claim that it did not strike the hospital saying, the u.s. believes it was a misfired rocket from ter
m.i.t., number three.mber nine for its financial aid and academic rigor, and that was ahead of yale. >>> and then we check on the protests from the high school campuses as it relates to the middle east. >>> and artifacts from the san francisco area anchor brewing are now in the smithsonian. we talk about how that brewery is so important to our history. >>> and then up next on "nightly news," the remarkable weapon system has rarely been so tested in history...
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10.0
Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN
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tuesday morning, the senior tech policy reporter for the m.i.t. technology review discusses president biden's executive order on artificial intelligence. and david wasserman talks about congress and the recent battle for house speaker and the potential impact on campaign 2020 four. and the political investigations reporter for the guardian with the latest on president -- former president donald trump's legal cases. c-span's washington journal, going us live on c-span now, c-span, or online at c-span.org. >> next, house speaker mike johnson at the republican jewish coalition's annual leadership convention in las vegas. the event included representatives max miller and steve scalise to talk about u.s. support of israel and denouncing anti-semitism. ♪ >> are jc, how are you -- rjc, how are you doing? it is an honor to be one of two young individual -- i want to give you a little bit of a different taste. being one of two republican jewish representatives i want to talk about my experience as someone that is jewish in the last few weeks. last week was
tuesday morning, the senior tech policy reporter for the m.i.t. technology review discusses president biden's executive order on artificial intelligence. and david wasserman talks about congress and the recent battle for house speaker and the potential impact on campaign 2020 four. and the political investigations reporter for the guardian with the latest on president -- former president donald trump's legal cases. c-span's washington journal, going us live on c-span now, c-span, or online at...
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Oct 13, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 20
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so in the in the 1990s, there were more women professors at m.i.t. than there were women. the united states senate. but of course, by percentage there were could have worked out either way didn't run the numbers today are 25 women in the united states senate is 25%. i can easily do it. how we doing at women in science? different fields, women in journalism, different fields in the united states, 98% of kindergarten teachers, women, 3% of plumbers are women. percent of pilots. and there's a whole range in between. but women in the sciences follow and there are issues of sexual harassment driving them out of some of those fields. women in journalism. how are they doing? i they're doing exceptionally well. i think it's a great time to be a woman in journalism. i just did a documentary, a 20 part series, where hosted and i interviewed women, covered 911 for the 20th anniversary of the attacks. and as of that project that i did, i talked to them about in this last generation, how has the terrain changed for women and not everyone? clearly there are bumps the road but in a broad
so in the in the 1990s, there were more women professors at m.i.t. than there were women. the united states senate. but of course, by percentage there were could have worked out either way didn't run the numbers today are 25 women in the united states senate is 25%. i can easily do it. how we doing at women in science? different fields, women in journalism, different fields in the united states, 98% of kindergarten teachers, women, 3% of plumbers are women. percent of pilots. and there's a...
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Oct 26, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN3
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i think it is interesting that the title of her dissertation at m.i.t. was change agents. who leads and why in the execution of national security policy? given the swirl of strategic and technological change all around us, i would say a change agent is exactly what our times call for. we are fortunate to have dr. hicks lead off our conference and after her remarks, she has graciously agreed to submit to a rigorous cross-examination by yours truly. please join me in welcoming the deputy secretary of defense, dr. kathleen hicks . dr. hicks: good morning and thank you for the kind introduction. thank you for the invitation. to both of you, thank you for your many years of service and leadership and support for the defense department. before i go on, i want to acknowledge the tragic accident in darwin, australia and express my condolences to the families who lost loved ones. i also want to convey my prayers for those marines who were injured, for their families and caregivers. let me extend my sympathy to the people of hawaii for their deaths of so many in maui for the u.s. de
i think it is interesting that the title of her dissertation at m.i.t. was change agents. who leads and why in the execution of national security policy? given the swirl of strategic and technological change all around us, i would say a change agent is exactly what our times call for. we are fortunate to have dr. hicks lead off our conference and after her remarks, she has graciously agreed to submit to a rigorous cross-examination by yours truly. please join me in welcoming the deputy...
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Oct 30, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN
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received her masters from harvard and was on track to a stellar academic career, including teaching at m.i.t. school of management before deciding to devote herself to public service. so we are genuinely honored and looking forward to the remarks of dr. lael brainard. thank you. >> i think probably i should just leave now because that was so nice. thank you, adam. it's always wonderful to be here, and that was extremely kind. so i am delighted to join you. after this institution has made so many contributions to thinking about the nature of the pem shocks and assessing the recovery and i know that you'll continue to make really important contributions that will inform our thinking. after the pandemic years brought an unprecedented combination of negative shocks, it's especially heartening that today our recovery is strong and that this inflation process is well underway. i think what we have seen so far is a testament to the resilience of american workers and consumers and businesses. it's also an indication that smart policy can make a positive difference. every week that goes by, we learn
received her masters from harvard and was on track to a stellar academic career, including teaching at m.i.t. school of management before deciding to devote herself to public service. so we are genuinely honored and looking forward to the remarks of dr. lael brainard. thank you. >> i think probably i should just leave now because that was so nice. thank you, adam. it's always wonderful to be here, and that was extremely kind. so i am delighted to join you. after this institution has made...
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Oct 7, 2023
10/23
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i changed the intel committee and they just came back from m.i.t. where they had a bipartisan briefing on a.i. and quantum. started doing briefings on a.i. the whole conference with republicans and democrats alike. we're far from solving that problem but i'm proud of what we were able to do there so we'll continue. yes, sir? [indiscernible] kevin: not all those eight but these are the same people that never voted for me, they thought it was big to go to present after we went through 15 rounds. why do i do something for myself that can hurt the country? i'm not quite sure those individuals are looking to be productive. it concerns me as a republican based upon watching what they do. i want to be a republican and conservative that governs. we'll have to find a way to do that. the challenge is we've had so many opportunities -- these are the same people who sat on the floor and criticized me that we didn't get all 12 spending bills done but first had to do a debt ceiling that they didn't support. they held up every appropriations bill in the summer. af
i changed the intel committee and they just came back from m.i.t. where they had a bipartisan briefing on a.i. and quantum. started doing briefings on a.i. the whole conference with republicans and democrats alike. we're far from solving that problem but i'm proud of what we were able to do there so we'll continue. yes, sir? [indiscernible] kevin: not all those eight but these are the same people that never voted for me, they thought it was big to go to present after we went through 15 rounds....
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146
Oct 20, 2023
10/23
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KQED
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he discovered a peculiar gift for wall street trading after he came out of m.i.t.se markets and opportunity to make a bunch of money. >> he said he would give it away to causes that funded affective altruism. what is that? >> rather than extend yourself in a heart full way to something you do lico be a doctor in africa and saving lives, you go to wall street. you make a fortune. you pay 50 doctors to go to africa. the math works. that idea hooked him. >> both of his parents were proponents of utilitarianism. >> he took those lease ideas a push them to extreme. >> he began amassing his fortune. >> in about two years he goes from having zero dollars to having $22.5 billion. >> how exactly? he left wall street and started his own private hedge fund. trading cryptocurrencies and thousands of less famous ones. the prices differed on different markets long enough that they could buy and sell instantly and make a fortune playing in the crypto casino. >> he realizes for a bunch of reasons that there is more money to be made owning the casino then trading in the casino. he
he discovered a peculiar gift for wall street trading after he came out of m.i.t.se markets and opportunity to make a bunch of money. >> he said he would give it away to causes that funded affective altruism. what is that? >> rather than extend yourself in a heart full way to something you do lico be a doctor in africa and saving lives, you go to wall street. you make a fortune. you pay 50 doctors to go to africa. the math works. that idea hooked him. >> both of his parents...
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Oct 19, 2023
10/23
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brought to the discussions that were hosted by johns hopkins center for health security as well as m.i.t. lincoln lab were instrumental in the beginning phases of our bio-posture review , in helping us to shape what were the key urgent issues we needed to get after, as well as providing us insight and perspectives on how to look at these things a different way. when you read the following words in the bpr report, you will hear us repeating them often, not only today, but in the days to come, the department of defense and the nation are at a pivotal moment in biodefense , as we face an unprecedented number of complex threats, as outlined in the national defense strategy and the national biodefense strategy. the secretary of defense charged the department with being prepared to operate in a biological threat environment and to support the national biodefense enterprise , both at home and abroad. dod must implement the significant reforms outlined in the bio-posture review to enable a resilient total force that deters the use of bio weapons, responds rapidly to natural outbreaks, and maximi
brought to the discussions that were hosted by johns hopkins center for health security as well as m.i.t. lincoln lab were instrumental in the beginning phases of our bio-posture review , in helping us to shape what were the key urgent issues we needed to get after, as well as providing us insight and perspectives on how to look at these things a different way. when you read the following words in the bpr report, you will hear us repeating them often, not only today, but in the days to come,...
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Oct 4, 2023
10/23
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MSNBCW
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he has pulled out of m.i.t.aining to identify his mind as exactly the kind of mind that belongs in finance. in almost any other period of history, he is like a high school physics teacher. here, he is kind of imprinting on it, and it is sort of like he becomes his identity, this treating thing. i think he could not let go of it. >> i saw some elon musk -- obviously, >> compare and contrast, they are different. >> they are different, but there is something about a certain kind of mind that works like a key in a lock of a certain set of problem solving, but is not great outside of that domain. [laughter] maybe, to disastrous consequences. >> bankman-fried said that until i hit wall street, i didn't think i was special at anything, that i was good at anything. there was nothing i was suited for. he hits june street and says, this is what i was put on earth to do. then, what he did is in crypto there was a bigger opportunity to do it then in stocks, bonds, and currencies. that's what's gets him going in the first pl
he has pulled out of m.i.t.aining to identify his mind as exactly the kind of mind that belongs in finance. in almost any other period of history, he is like a high school physics teacher. here, he is kind of imprinting on it, and it is sort of like he becomes his identity, this treating thing. i think he could not let go of it. >> i saw some elon musk -- obviously, >> compare and contrast, they are different. >> they are different, but there is something about a certain kind...
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Oct 5, 2023
10/23
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BLOOMBERG
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including a developer at ftx who has been speaking about his long friendship with sam bankman-fried since m.i.tas well as what he was told while he was working at the company. more interesting, you have gary wang, the former technology officer, cofounder of ftx, expected to testify as early as today. he was one of the people who had pled guilty and is a cooperating witness for the trial, one of three important key figures from the innerworof ftx. the prosecution has drawn out that there were only a few people that knew the extent to which this was -- allegedly this fraud was carried out. caroline: one of the key people is caroline ellison who was heading up alameda research which ultimately was attested to be sharing and comingling funds from an early date. sonali: the caroline ellison part of this is becoming more pronounced as this trial goes on. was brought up in prosecution's opening arguments as well as the defense. for the prosecution, remember the in circle i walkig about. they were talking about bringing her to the four for them to explain their interactions with sam bankman-fried. the
including a developer at ftx who has been speaking about his long friendship with sam bankman-fried since m.i.tas well as what he was told while he was working at the company. more interesting, you have gary wang, the former technology officer, cofounder of ftx, expected to testify as early as today. he was one of the people who had pled guilty and is a cooperating witness for the trial, one of three important key figures from the innerworof ftx. the prosecution has drawn out that there were...
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Oct 21, 2023
10/23
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KQED
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stanford, california who discovered a peculiar gift for wall street trading after he comes out of m.i.td sees in the crypto markets and opportunity to make a whole bunch of money which he says he's going to give away. >> to causes that fund effective altruism. what is effective altruism? >> earn to give. rather than extend yourself in a harmful way to something you do like go be a doctor in africa and saving lives, you go to wall street. you make a fortune and you pay 50 doctors to go to africa. it's like the math works. it's that hooked him. >> both of his parents were proponents of utilitarianism. the greatest good for the greatest number. >> think of the sun taking the parents loose ideas and pushing them to an extreme. >> he amassed his fortune. >> goes from having zero dollars to heaven $22.5 million. >> how exactly? the super nerd savant leaves wall street and starts his own hedge fund, alameda, trading cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, but mainly dozens of less famous ones. whose prices supposedly differed on different markets long enough that alameda could buy and sell instantly an
stanford, california who discovered a peculiar gift for wall street trading after he comes out of m.i.td sees in the crypto markets and opportunity to make a whole bunch of money which he says he's going to give away. >> to causes that fund effective altruism. what is effective altruism? >> earn to give. rather than extend yourself in a harmful way to something you do like go be a doctor in africa and saving lives, you go to wall street. you make a fortune and you pay 50 doctors to...
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99
Oct 20, 2023
10/23
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FOXNEWSW
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you can see from harvard to m.i.t. and out in portland. they make many jewish students feel unsafe.r at nyu yesterday talking to jewish students saying they don't feel safe in the classroom or an come pus and want the school to do more. we've talked with other students who said school is not doing enough. watch. >> you have a lot of options, a lot of universities you could have chosen from. do you think you chose the right university? >> i'm not sure. i now attend a university that doesn't support me or who i am, doesn't support my religion. it is hurtful to chose a place that was super inclusive and wanted people from all kinds of backgrounds and now they aren't supporting me. >> some professors at nyu announced they start a group to support palestinian students on campus. the hundreds of nyu staff members. they called on other faculty members to promote pro-palestine speech. >> i ran out of class crying yesterday because of that and because of a girl in my class who gave a presentation saying that israel is conducting a genocide. >> donors at major universities like the university
you can see from harvard to m.i.t. and out in portland. they make many jewish students feel unsafe.r at nyu yesterday talking to jewish students saying they don't feel safe in the classroom or an come pus and want the school to do more. we've talked with other students who said school is not doing enough. watch. >> you have a lot of options, a lot of universities you could have chosen from. do you think you chose the right university? >> i'm not sure. i now attend a university that...
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51
Oct 4, 2023
10/23
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KNTV
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one teaches at m.i.t. on belgium this morning where the world gymnastics championships are taking place. the u.s. men's team took home the bronze, and now we turn to the women. >> simone biles leading the u.s. in her return to the international competition. "today's" meagan fitzgerald has more from antwerp. >> good morning. so good to be with you. there is so much excitement here in antwerp, belgium, last night. the u.s. men's gymnastics team clinching bronze. this is a big deal because we've not seen our men clinch any medal in nearly a decade. i had an opportunity to catch up with them last night. they said this is a dream come true, it feels surreal. a really great group of guys. of course, all eyes tonight on the u.s. women's team. they are expected to clinch the gold. they're led by simone biles. what can you say about simone biles? legendary. doesn't seem like she's real. she takes a two-year break, she comes back, and it's as if she never left. she has been dominating this competition. it has been s
one teaches at m.i.t. on belgium this morning where the world gymnastics championships are taking place. the u.s. men's team took home the bronze, and now we turn to the women. >> simone biles leading the u.s. in her return to the international competition. "today's" meagan fitzgerald has more from antwerp. >> good morning. so good to be with you. there is so much excitement here in antwerp, belgium, last night. the u.s. men's gymnastics team clinching bronze. this is a...
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Oct 30, 2023
10/23
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a crowd screaming at m.i.t.. antisemitic demonstrators demanding "one solution". at the university of washington they jewish students off and begged administrators to do something. they want our people dead, she said. they want is killed. how are you allowing this? the university, the college presidents have spent years having no problem speaking up. but now? now, their own institutions are being used as platforms to call for genocide. now they offer pathetic equivocation, or worse, deafening silence. they seem a more offended by micro-aggressions than mass murder. in the 1990's the late justice scalia delivered a bone chilling speech about the holocaust. he said we will have missed the most frightening aspect of it all if we do not appreciate that it happened in one of the most educated, progressive, cultured countries on the planet the germany of the 1930's proved a society can play all the values they want on education and credentials, and elite institutions. but, if we lose our moral compass, these things do not just become useless, they become dangerous. we n
a crowd screaming at m.i.t.. antisemitic demonstrators demanding "one solution". at the university of washington they jewish students off and begged administrators to do something. they want our people dead, she said. they want is killed. how are you allowing this? the university, the college presidents have spent years having no problem speaking up. but now? now, their own institutions are being used as platforms to call for genocide. now they offer pathetic equivocation, or worse,...
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Oct 2, 2023
10/23
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. >> a graduate of m.i.t., bankman-fried saw the world in numbers framing everything in his life as aty exercise, including philanthropy. he committed to making as much money as possible so he could give it away as efficiently as possible guided by a social move, effective altruism. >> what it means in sam's instance is you can go out have a career you do good, be a doctor in africa or go make as much money as possible and pay people to be doctors in africa. if you're a doctor in africa you end up saving a certain number of lives, but you're only one doctor, but if you can pay 40 people to become doctors in africa, you will save 40 times the number of lives. >> this is like a strategy game. >> you don't understand sam bankman-fried unless you understand he turns everything in a game. everything is game phied. >> he moved to berkeley at age 25 to start his own trading firm, alameda research. en stead of buying and selling stocks or bond, he would traffic in crypto, a digital form of currency not tied to a centralized system. >> the basic idea was to be the smartest person in the crypto
. >> a graduate of m.i.t., bankman-fried saw the world in numbers framing everything in his life as aty exercise, including philanthropy. he committed to making as much money as possible so he could give it away as efficiently as possible guided by a social move, effective altruism. >> what it means in sam's instance is you can go out have a career you do good, be a doctor in africa or go make as much money as possible and pay people to be doctors in africa. if you're a doctor in...
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Oct 25, 2023
10/23
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. >> dana: part of the cool group if you are going to be calling for intifada at m.i.t. >> you are intupid group. you don't understand. no one isn't saying you can't have different opinions but you need to be educated on all sides of the situation. i don't think it's happening today. >> bill: universities foster critical thinking and opening minds of different points of view. you are down with that. for a university to be effective we must use our voices differently than other seeings. there must be more to that statement. i don't know what that means. >> i'm not either. what we've seen throughout. it is -- as i was saying to you guys, wokeism, there was sort of like a hip quality to it, i suppose, across campuses. this is where the rubber is meeting the road. this is where it becomes dangerous not to have a deep understanding of what is going on in these situations. and i think that that's why you are seeing the financial backers back away. they won't support the station. you guys have the quote, great interview yesterday what he is saying. i think you have it. >> dana: this is about
. >> dana: part of the cool group if you are going to be calling for intifada at m.i.t. >> you are intupid group. you don't understand. no one isn't saying you can't have different opinions but you need to be educated on all sides of the situation. i don't think it's happening today. >> bill: universities foster critical thinking and opening minds of different points of view. you are down with that. for a university to be effective we must use our voices differently than other...
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Oct 4, 2023
10/23
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but he's pulled out of m.i.t.fy his mind as exactly the kind of mind that belongs in finance. and, you know, almost any other period of history, is like a high school physics teacher. here, he's imprinted by this. he becomes its identity, this trading thing. i think he couldn't let go of it. >> i saw some, there's some elon musk, obviously, -- >> if you do compare and contrast, they're different. >> they are different. there's something about a certain kind of mind that works like a key in a lock of a certain kind of sort of problem solving. the but is not great outside of that domain. >> right. >> maybe to just disastrous consequences. >> sam bankman-fried said, he said, until i made it to wall street, i don't think is really special at anything. i wasn't good at anything. nothing anything out suited for. he hits jane street, this is what i was put on earth to do. and then what he did, he saw that in crypto, there's an even bigger opportunity to do it in stocks and bonds and currencies. so, that's what gets him g
but he's pulled out of m.i.t.fy his mind as exactly the kind of mind that belongs in finance. and, you know, almost any other period of history, is like a high school physics teacher. here, he's imprinted by this. he becomes its identity, this trading thing. i think he couldn't let go of it. >> i saw some, there's some elon musk, obviously, -- >> if you do compare and contrast, they're different. >> they are different. there's something about a certain kind of mind that works...
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Oct 5, 2023
10/23
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inside this gentleman went to m.i.t. with sam bankman-fried, it is one of his inner circle.re expecting to hear from more of those types of executives. we're expecting to hear from one top executive, a cofounder of ftx, as well as caroline ellison, sam bankman-fried's former girlfriend. she ran this hedge fund. they said it's partially her fault that she wasn't protecting to the downside in some cases with the investment decisions. they're trying to paint him as a hard working start up, who made mistakes. >>> a deadly car crash from 2018 is at the center of the bribery charges against senator bob menendez and his wife nadine. nbc's tom winter is following this for us. what happened and how do the pieces all fit together? >> reporter: sure, chris, so this accident happened in late 2018 in new jersey, and the accident involved an individual pedestrian that according to police records obtained by wnbc and nbc news, the vehicle was driven by nadine menendez. at the time they were not married but it's our understand they were dating. apparently she hit the individual, striking hi
inside this gentleman went to m.i.t. with sam bankman-fried, it is one of his inner circle.re expecting to hear from more of those types of executives. we're expecting to hear from one top executive, a cofounder of ftx, as well as caroline ellison, sam bankman-fried's former girlfriend. she ran this hedge fund. they said it's partially her fault that she wasn't protecting to the downside in some cases with the investment decisions. they're trying to paint him as a hard working start up, who...
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Oct 3, 2023
10/23
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CNNW
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they just came back from m.i.t. where they all had bipartisan briefing on ai and quantum. republicans and democrats alike. we're far from solving that problem, but i'm proud of what we were able to do there. so we'll continue. yes, sir? [ inaudible question ] >> you know, not all thosing a, but these are the same people that never voted for me. they thought it was big they went to present after we went through 15 rounds. why do i do something for myself that can hurt the country? why create -- i'm not quite sure those individuals are looking to be productive. it concerns me as a republican based upon watching what they do. i want to be a republican and a conservative that governs. and we're going to have to find a way to do that. the challenge is we had so many opportunities. these are the same people that sat on the floor and criticized me that we didn't get all 12 spending bills done. but we first had to do a debt ceiling that they didn't support. they held up every appropriation bill in the summer because they wouldn't let it come through. they stopped us from doing any
they just came back from m.i.t. where they all had bipartisan briefing on ai and quantum. republicans and democrats alike. we're far from solving that problem, but i'm proud of what we were able to do there. so we'll continue. yes, sir? [ inaudible question ] >> you know, not all thosing a, but these are the same people that never voted for me. they thought it was big they went to present after we went through 15 rounds. why do i do something for myself that can hurt the country? why...
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Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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tuesday morning, the senior tech policy reporter for the m.i.t. discusses president biden's executive order on artificial intelligence. and david wasserman talks about congress and the recent battle for house speaker and the potential impact on campaign 2020 four. and the political investigations reporter for the guardian with the latest on president -- former president donald trump's legal cases. c-span's washington journal, going us live on c-span
tuesday morning, the senior tech policy reporter for the m.i.t. discusses president biden's executive order on artificial intelligence. and david wasserman talks about congress and the recent battle for house speaker and the potential impact on campaign 2020 four. and the political investigations reporter for the guardian with the latest on president -- former president donald trump's legal cases. c-span's washington journal, going us live on c-span
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Oct 15, 2023
10/23
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CSPAN2
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the m.i.t. science fiction. so every weekend go out and hang out with him. and i discovered the misfits library and there were i found copies of the narnia. i'm 18 years old. i discovered for the first time i'm concentrating on the author's technique more than the content. but i discovered that this had a remarkable effect. me it wasn't the fact that they were christian. you know, obviously were christian. you can tell that if you're 18 years old, it might be snuck when you're 12 or eight. but i was still a practicing back in those days. so, you know being christian didn't bother me. i wasn't surprised to find myself up in the adventures because that's what they were written for to make them adventure. but confluence of those two things made me realize for the first time that, you know, being a christian, a great adventure, it was as exciting as any fantasy story and that sense it finally got me to realize that fantasy is based on truth truth. fantasies only work if they're true, not in the details, but if they're true to the human spirit, if they're true to
the m.i.t. science fiction. so every weekend go out and hang out with him. and i discovered the misfits library and there were i found copies of the narnia. i'm 18 years old. i discovered for the first time i'm concentrating on the author's technique more than the content. but i discovered that this had a remarkable effect. me it wasn't the fact that they were christian. you know, obviously were christian. you can tell that if you're 18 years old, it might be snuck when you're 12 or eight. but...
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Oct 4, 2023
10/23
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let's discuss this with a senior lecturer at the school of urban social studies at m.i.t.has been a batter here for modi. he. -- is an expert -- he is an expert at using these events for diplomacy. what will the cup play in the broader issue and in his place but? >> the broader issue is how quickly it will be used to advance the agenda -- his agenda and the agenda of his party. it's been said the course of the next six weeks is going to be a pre-electoral bonanza. it's going to show up his political positioning. he's had a fairly good year in terms of publicity, at the g20 for example, his thoughts of the ukraine war and so forth. i think that is significant. cricket is of course the fundamental important sport in india. modi has made no secret of the fact he would like to use that as a platform. he was also a part of the gujarat association. from punjab. >> do you know how long this honeymoon will last? we have seen global nations leaning into india obviously as a counterbalance to china in this part of the world. do you think the elements coming to the fore, like the dis
let's discuss this with a senior lecturer at the school of urban social studies at m.i.t.has been a batter here for modi. he. -- is an expert -- he is an expert at using these events for diplomacy. what will the cup play in the broader issue and in his place but? >> the broader issue is how quickly it will be used to advance the agenda -- his agenda and the agenda of his party. it's been said the course of the next six weeks is going to be a pre-electoral bonanza. it's going to show up...
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Oct 6, 2023
10/23
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may battleship that m.i.t. shannonit to speak a little bito what you're observing on the ground. so much of your work as you mention focuses on the formal housing and experience of people post-disaster with displacement and of issues. i'm wondering if you can invite us in to the work. what are entering from committee about these issues and the connection to financial health. >> i really appreciate what he heard from her other speakers and what ofe the things natalie said that really struck me as renters as a less attended to population. renters make up almost 40% of our population and in some come in urban areas it may be even more than 50%. houston for example, has a 50 come is 50% owners owners, 50% renters. .. sing out on one of our most vulnerable populations and it's a large vulnerable population and it's not -- it's not marginalized, it's actually quite mainstreamed and may seem very little attention to renters in particular and one of the things that we saw particularly after hurricane harvey was the renters and even, you know, renters >> renters even of single family home
may battleship that m.i.t. shannonit to speak a little bito what you're observing on the ground. so much of your work as you mention focuses on the formal housing and experience of people post-disaster with displacement and of issues. i'm wondering if you can invite us in to the work. what are entering from committee about these issues and the connection to financial health. >> i really appreciate what he heard from her other speakers and what ofe the things natalie said that really...
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Oct 6, 2023
10/23
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BLOOMBERG
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co-founder has taken a stand at a trial, saying immediately that he and his former childhood friend and m.i.t he's cooperating with prosecutors. his testimony promises to be among the most powerful in the government case against bankman-fried who has pleaded not guilty. also watching the state of these asian markets as we head into the rest of the friday session. broadly flat. a little downside when it comes to the nikkei. we are seeing value shares for japan flashing some of those warning signs. the strong rally that we've seen this year has run past its peak. we will see from -- some stagnation from here. we are also watching the boj, set to change guidance this month. elsewhere, upside. coming up next, china's golden week comes to a close. we take a look at what kind of boost travel and consumer spending may have delivered for the struggling economy. this is bloomberg. ♪ >> we are seeing more emerging from the chinese economy. certainly the golden week data adding more to that story of growth stabilization and initial recovery. a very low status in the second quarter. haidi: the initial da
co-founder has taken a stand at a trial, saying immediately that he and his former childhood friend and m.i.t he's cooperating with prosecutors. his testimony promises to be among the most powerful in the government case against bankman-fried who has pleaded not guilty. also watching the state of these asian markets as we head into the rest of the friday session. broadly flat. a little downside when it comes to the nikkei. we are seeing value shares for japan flashing some of those warning...
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Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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researcher from m.i.t. back in two minutes. gold to us. start your free trial today.get one 50% off in the subway app today. now that's a deal worth celebrating. man, what are you doing?! get it before it's gone on the subway app. ♪♪ >>> president biden signed an executive order on artificial intelligence yesterday, that will attempt to put in place new checks and balances on the emerging technology. the order requires a.i. companies to share safety st results with the federal government, that includes risks that their systems could aid adversaries in hurting the u.s. joining us now, groundbreaking m.i.t. researcher, the founder of the algorhymic justice league. her new book is entitled, "unmasking a.i.: my mission to protect what is human in a world of machines." what humanity is left. really. thank you for joining us. talk about the unintended consequences of a.i. that you are addressing in this book? >> think about an ism and it's going with a.i. if you have a.i. tools that systematically take out the resumes if it has a woman's college listed on it. you might get
researcher from m.i.t. back in two minutes. gold to us. start your free trial today.get one 50% off in the subway app today. now that's a deal worth celebrating. man, what are you doing?! get it before it's gone on the subway app. ♪♪ >>> president biden signed an executive order on artificial intelligence yesterday, that will attempt to put in place new checks and balances on the emerging technology. the order requires a.i. companies to share safety st results with the federal...
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Oct 6, 2023
10/23
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it's something about it that captured his imagination and he often spoke about his uncle at m.i.t., nuclear physicist. he would lecture his own top military advisers and tell them, i know more about nuclear than you do. i know more about nuclear than anybody. there's another scene that i've described in a previous book of trump having -- getting a briefing from the -- from his pentagon leadership about the pentagon budget. and he just gets off on a tangent about nukes. and at one point starts yelling at, you know, i think dunford was chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, mattis was secretary of defense. he's yelling at them, saying i know more about nuclear than you do. i know more than you do. you know what, it is one thing he really did pay attention to. not just that first briefing on the nuclear football, but he had a fascination about that, which may explain, in part, why he brought those documents to mar-a-lago. >> andrew weissmann, there are a million things to say. while i peel my jaw off the table, tell me what you think jack smith's interest is in mr. pratt. >> sure. so, it's use
it's something about it that captured his imagination and he often spoke about his uncle at m.i.t., nuclear physicist. he would lecture his own top military advisers and tell them, i know more about nuclear than you do. i know more about nuclear than anybody. there's another scene that i've described in a previous book of trump having -- getting a briefing from the -- from his pentagon leadership about the pentagon budget. and he just gets off on a tangent about nukes. and at one point starts...
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Oct 31, 2023
10/23
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if you go to the m.i.t. review, a story posted about yesterday kate ryan mostly joins us on zoom to talk to us about the story. host: we will talk about the specifics but overall arching goals what are they trying to do in this space? guest: this is a big executive order, it's very long and a lot of different components to it. the white house says their goal is to increase ai safety and security. the main tenants are increased standards on best practices for how ai products are used, and tested. there is a general empowerment agencies across sectors for regulating ai. host: one of the points you make is the executive order has teeth. guest: one thing that is interesting with ai that we've seen so far is a lot of the action the government has taken to create stronger mechanisms for safeties has been voluntary and there is a history of self-regulation in the tech industry. what has continued in this executive order is that most of the standards and best practices are voluntary. there's not these robust enforce
if you go to the m.i.t. review, a story posted about yesterday kate ryan mostly joins us on zoom to talk to us about the story. host: we will talk about the specifics but overall arching goals what are they trying to do in this space? guest: this is a big executive order, it's very long and a lot of different components to it. the white house says their goal is to increase ai safety and security. the main tenants are increased standards on best practices for how ai products are used, and...
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Oct 3, 2023
10/23
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those on radio, the research capabilities of m.i.t..ion with howard marks today. also at 10:00 a.m., david westin. i guess formerly of bridgewater, can't believe i'm saying that. and more subdued market. lisa: it is less of a moonshot, less of a steady line up. 4.72 percent on that 10 year yield. still a stunning to to stick reaching intraday highs. at a time when people are looking at growth that was pretty good, looking at a fed that is normally on hold for longer, they are not seeing the financial accidents some people thought would be the case. tom: how do you measure the tension in the commercial real estate market? is there just an easy spread you go to every morning to see the agony of commercial real estate? lisa: there was a story that i thought was really telling about how there is a tower on 50th street in new york and there is a law firm that just decided to terminate its contract. tom: going over to hudson yards. lisa: 50% of all of the office space in this building was owned . this property has a $1.2 billion mortgage. at
those on radio, the research capabilities of m.i.t..ion with howard marks today. also at 10:00 a.m., david westin. i guess formerly of bridgewater, can't believe i'm saying that. and more subdued market. lisa: it is less of a moonshot, less of a steady line up. 4.72 percent on that 10 year yield. still a stunning to to stick reaching intraday highs. at a time when people are looking at growth that was pretty good, looking at a fed that is normally on hold for longer, they are not seeing the...