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Hereās what you need to know
Boeingās banner spacecraft launch faced another delay ā indefinitely. The aerospace giant doesnāt know when it will ever launch the Starliner, and thatās not great news for one of its last hopes for a possible PR win.
The U.S. White House opposed a major cryptocurrency bill. The legislation, which passed yesterday in the House, would create guardrails for digital assets markets.
U.K. regulators are investigating Microsoftās latest AI feature. Announced this week, Recall uses artificial intelligence to build a searchable āphotographic memoryā of a userās laptop activity ā and now watchdogs are looking into whether it violates consumersā privacy.
Red Lobster wants to claw back a comeback from bankruptcy. The seafood chain released a letter saying itās not going out of business yet, despite having filed for Chapter 11 protections.
Buy now, pay later programs are getting treated like credit cards. The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reclassified BNPL lenders as credit card providers, allowing customers to dispute charges and demand refunds when they use them.
Nvidiaās AI party isnāt even close to over
Nvidiaās earnings smashed Wall Streetās expectations again, signaling that the AI boom is still very much booming.
The chipmakerās sales ballooned 262% year over year in its first quarter to $26 billion. Investorsā expectations have been sky-high since March, when Nvidia unveiled its newest chip, Blackwell. Ahead of the earnings, the chipmakerās stock notched a new high this week ā and then soared past $1,000 for the first time ever in after-hours trading yesterday.
Driving the stock gains are excitement around Nvidiaās AI ambitions ā which include AI factories ā and an upcoming 10-to-1 stock split in June. Quartzās Britney Nguyen has everything you need to know from yesterdayās earnings call ā including yet another new chip.
The U.S. hits the brakes on Chinese EV imports
šļø August 1: The official date the United States will start quadrupling tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, along with related products like lithium-ion batteries.
Earlier this month, the White House announced heightened tariffs on Chinese exports ā and on EVs in particular. The goal is to prevent Chinese automakers from flooding the market with cheap cars. Now those tariffs have a start date.
But Beijing is hitting back ā and threatening āresolute measuresā to defend itself against escalating tariffs. Quartzās Will Gavin details how the rest of the world is responding.
More from Quartz
š Biogen is buying up an immune drug developer for $1.8 billion
āļø Citi was fined $79 million over inadequate controls for āfat fingerā trading errors
šø President Biden opposed major crypto bill hours before voting
āļø American Airlinesā starting flight attendant salary qualifies for food stampsĀ
š¤ Mark Zuckerberg has assembled an AI advisory councilĀ
š¾ Gamestopās army of retail investors now includes at least one presidential candidate
Surprising discoveries
Harps are headed to the emoji dictionary. Perfect for when you need to say āBRB, off to strum my lyre.ā
The coronavirus has a doppelganger ā and itās a supernova. It turns out the objects we see in microscopes and telescopes can be strikingly similar.
Cicada cocktails are stirring up some controversy. Well, at least cicada shots are, as three trillion screeching insects descend on the eastern U.S. this summer.
Former (and not-so-former) U.S. presidential candidates are really getting into meme stocks. Vivek, meet BuzzFeed; RFK Jr., meet GameStop.
An emotional support alligator is missing in Georgia. His name is Wally, and his owners would like him home, please.
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Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, lyre strums, and cicada sommeliers to talk@qz.com. Todayās Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner and Gabriela Riccardi.