Looks like billionaires looooove to copy each other. It started with Mark Zuckerberg giving his
Yes, Twitter
The layoffs aren't a one-off isolated event in the tech space and are similar to the ones Zuck is
While employees are being let go, the billionaires still only have vague ideas as to how to turn their companies around — Musk specifically. The latest round of layoffs suggests that Musk is now relying on the one tried and tested method of protecting his
And while selling the
And to not be overshadowed by the
Anyway, enough about Musk and Zuck. If it's rankings you want, it's rankings you'll get.
Twitter was trending on the #81 spot in this week's
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Canada's Trudeau Tells Google to BTFO 🍁
Imagine being a company so large that you have a near-monopoly over sections of the internet, make billions of dollars every year, and are one of the few businesses in the world that is valued at over a trillion dollars. And then imagine using that power to influence decisions in your favor.
That, in a nutshell, is Google. And Canada has decided it's gonna have none of it — at least when it comes to being more equitable to its publishers.
ICYMI: Canada is trying to pass laws that would force Facebook and Google to share the money they make via news shared on their platforms with the actual publishers who report on the news i.e. the journalists and the organizations they work for. The law would be pretty similar to the one passed by Australia, which, for the record, the companies agreed to after a series of amendments.
Well, looks like neither company has learned their lesson because, just like in Australia, they're threatening to block news sharing on their platforms — though Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has told the company to BTFO. "I think that's a terrible mistake and I know Canadians expect journalists to be well paid for the work they do," the Canadian premier was
Google ranked #5 this week.
The European Commission (which represents member states in the EU region) has
China's TikTok, which is popular like heck with young audiences, has been __accused__of siphoning off users' data to the Chinese government, though the company vehemently denies the charge. Unfortunately for the company, it is already banned from being used by lawmakers in the U.S. and India, and it looks like the EU is next.
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See y'all next week. PEACE! ☮️