🌏 A looming OpenAI exodus

Plus: PlayStation may need some consoling.

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Photo: Dado Ruvic (Reuters)

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Nearly all of OpenAI’s employees are threatening to follow ex-CEO Sam Altman to Microsoft. They’re demanding that the current board resign or face an exodus. Meanwhile, Salesforce’s Marc Benioff is welcoming employees who want to leave OpenAI with open arms—and matching pay.

Investors responded really well to Microsoft’s new OpenAI hires. Its stock briefly reached an all-time high yesterday, with all of Wall Street’s three indexes closing higher.

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Businesses and schools reopened in Delhi yesterday as air pollution improved. But levels are still hazardous, and there’s a toxic white foam on the city’s Yamuna River.

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Germany pledged €4 billion ($4.4 billion) for green projects in Africa. Chancellor Olaf Scholz said the investment, set to run through 2030, aims to ensure countries on the continent benefit from the very materials they source for green projects.

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PlayStation may need some consoling

Back in 2001, a Sony executive claimed that the Xbox was “finished.” Two decades later, that prediction hasn’t aged well for the PlayStation maker, especially as Xbox’s Microsoft takes gaming giant Activision Blizzard under its wing.

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When combined, Microsoft and Activision’s gaming revenue was $10.4 billion in the first half of this year—comfortably more than Sony’s $8 billion.

Image for article titled 🌏 A looming OpenAI exodus
Graphic: Ananya Bhattacharya
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Microsoft now has a stronger roster of mobile games, including new addition Candy Crush Saga, which, we were honestly surprised to learn, is the third-highest grossing mobile title worldwide. Still, even a combined Microsoft-Activision and Sony can’t dethrone gaming’s king: China’s Tencent and its Fortnite supremacy.


Javier Milei’s dollarization isn’t a silver bullet

Argentina’s incoming president, Javier Milei, has radical plans to turn the country’s ailing economy around.

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Top of the agenda for the self-described anarcho-capitalist is “dolarización”—substituting the local currency, the peso, with the US dollar, to tame runaway inflation. That comes with abolishing the central bank and slashing public spending—cuts that Milei symbolized by wielding a chainsaw in the early days of his campaign.

But the policy changes might be DOA. Argentina doesn’t have enough dollars to finance the switch, and the plan isn’t sustainable in the long run. The country already tried pegging its peso to the US dollar from 1991 to 2002, and it worked—until it didn’t.

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The US Department of Defense just failed its sixth consecutive audit. And it doesn’t have a timeline for passing one.

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There’s only enough special clay left to make one more Wallace & Gromit movie. The future of claymation hangs in the balance.

Rare photos of Salvador Dalí’s home were captured. A sofa modeled after American actress Mae West’s lips is just one part of the surrealist’s collection.

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A mysterious respiratory illness is being found in dogs. It has symptoms similar to kennel cough but can last much longer.

Back in 1974, an Australian scientist traveled the world with six flasks of air, trying to show that carbon dioxide was rising in the atmosphere. “Where did I go wrong?” he’s now asking. 

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