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2025-06-06 14:00:00| Fast Company

As LGBTQ+ job seekers navigate a landscape marked by layoffs, economic uncertainty, and a shifting political climate, one question rises to the top: How can I know if a company is genuinely inclusive before I accept this job offer? While many companies show support for LGBTQ+ employees during Pride Month, the true measure of inclusivity is how a company fosters belonging 365 days a year. And the reality is that while some companies may appear inclusive on the surface, the level of genuine inclusion can vary widely from organization to organization.  As a career expert who exists at the intersection of Black and LGBTQ+ spaces, Ive seen firsthand the challenges queer professionals face in finding workplaces that truly embrace who we are. LinkedIns Belonging Blueprint, an LGBTQ+ job seekers guide, acknowledges a core truth: theres no one way to be LGBTQ+ at work. Our research finds that only 35% of American LGBTQ+ professionals feel safe bringing their full selves to work, and three in four have code-switched in the workplace. These statistics underscore the fact that many workplaces still have significant work to do when it comes to creating truly inclusive environments. For LGBTQ+ professionals, inclusion isnt just about acceptanceits about being able to show up authentically without hiding important parts of who we are. A 2024 survey by EY found that 40% of American LGBTQ+ professionals have left a job because they felt the workplace was not welcoming. Here are some tips to help evaluate whether a company is truly committed to inclusion before you sign the dotted line. Before You Apply, Understand How You Want to Show Up Before you even start looking at companies, take a moment to think about how you want to show up at work. For some of us, being open about being LGBTQ+ at work is nonnegotiable. For others, especially early in their careers, it may not be the top priority. Your journey and what you need from your work environment will evolve. I wasnt fully out at work until my thirties. More than a decade later, Im married to another man and in the process of becoming a working father, so I need to work in a space where I can bring my authentic self to the tableno questions asked.  Ask yourself: What do I need from my workplace to feel supported? This may be the freedom to express your full identity, or the flexibility to focus on other aspects of life, like family planning.  Once youve defined your needs, look for companies that align with them. A good place to start is by reviewing the job description. Look for inclusive language like gender-neutral pronouns and references to queer-inclusive parental leave or family planning or employee resource groups (ERGs). These are signs of a company that has put thought into supporting LGBTQ+ employees. Engage Your Network and Read the Signs Friends wont let their gay friends work at anti-LGBTQ+ companies. Tap into your community, LinkedIn connections, or even your personal contacts to get insider insights about the companys culture. While job descriptions may present the shiny version, hearing directly from current or former employees will give you an unfiltered view of what its really like to work there. Research the company the same ways they will research you. Some things to look for: Are there any out LGBTQ+ leaders at the company? Whats the leadership like when it comes to LGBTQ+ issues? Has the company won any awards for LGBTQ+ inclusion?  You need to assess whether the companys commitment to inclusion is truly embedded in their culture. Follow the companys website and check out executives on LinkedIn.  If you spot executives who are people of color or women, that could signal the companys commitment to inclusive hiring and leadership developmentwhich might indicate opportunities for growth for you as well.  Finally, check trusted LGBTQ+ organizations like Stonewall, Human Rights Campaign, or GLAAD; many publish indexes or awards for LGBTQ+ workplace inclusion based on data and proven allyship. This helps distinguish companies that prioritize parades and logos from those that prioritize benefits and career progression. Most Americans work for small to medium-sized companies, so there might not be ERGs, index awards, or a lot of executives to research. But how employers treat employees from other minority groups can be a canary in the coal mine for queer job seekers. A conversation with a Black woman whos worked at a company may be equally as helpful to understanding a companys commitment to inclusion.  Ask the Right Questions: What Do You Need from Work? The interview process is not just about proving you’re the right fit for the job; its also about ensuring the job is the right fit for you. Its your chance to test whether the companys commitment to LGBTQ+ inclusion is embedded in their culture year-round, or if its just a seasonal initiative. The interview: Dont be afraid to ask questions during your interview. A good question to ask is: What does LGBTQ+ belonging look like at your company, year-round? A company thats committed to inclusion will have a clear, actionable answer. If they can provide specific examples, like gender-neutral bathrooms, use of pronouns, mentorship programs, diverse panels, or active employee engagement around LGBTQ+ issues, thats a good sign theyre truly invested in inclusivity. If theyre vague or shy away from these topics, it might be time to continue your search. The benefits: A benefits package will tell you a lot about how much a company values its LGBTQ+ employees. Does the company offer gender-affirming care, fertility treatments, or queer-inclusive parental leave? If the benefits package includes support for domestic partners or trans health needs, its a strong indicator theyre serious about inclusivity. If the job offer doesnt make some of these benefits clear, LinkedIns company pages can help you dig in. The big picture: Finally, dont just look at the benefits package, look at how the company has responded to broader LGBTQ+ rights issues. Has the company publicly supported the LGBTQ+ community? Not every company will answer these questions in the most affirming ways, but just thinking them through before you say yes can help you build a better strategy for finding the company that helps you thrive. We all deserve a workplace that appreciates our skills and offers the opportunity to be ourselves, drive impact, and grow. Your well-being and career are too important to settle for anything less.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 13:35:32| Fast Company

About $22 billion of SpaceX’s government contracts are at risk and multiple U.S. space programs could face dramatic changes in the fallout from Elon Musk and President Donald Trump’s explosive feud on Thursday. The disagreement, rooted in Musk’s criticism of Trump’s tax-cut and spending legislation that began last week, quickly spiraled out of control. Trump lashed out at Musk when the president spoke in the Oval Office. Then in a series of X posts, Musk launched barbs at Trump, who threatened to terminate government contracts with Musk’s companies. Taking the threat seriously, Musk said he would begin “decommissioning” SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft used by NASA. Hours later, however, Musk appeared to reverse course. Responding to a follower on X urging him and Trump to “cool off and take a step back for a couple of days,” Musk wrote: “Good advice. Ok, we won’t decommission Dragon.” Still, Musk’s mere threat to abruptly pull its Dragon spacecraft out of service marked an unprecedented outburst from one of NASA’s leading commercial partners. Under a roughly $5 billion contract, the Dragon capsule has been the agency’s only U.S. vessel capable of carrying astronauts to and from the International Space Station, making Musk’s company a critical element of the U.S. space program. The feud raised questions about how far Trump, an often unpredictable force who has intervened in past procurement efforts, would go to punish Musk, who until last week headed Trump’s initiative to downsize the federal government. If the president prioritized political retaliation and canceled billions of dollars of SpaceX contracts with NASA and the Pentagon, it could slow U.S. space progress. NASA press secretary Bethany Stevens declined to comment on SpaceX, but said: “We will continue to work with our industry partners to ensure the president’s objectives in space are met.” Musk and Trump’s tussle ruptured an extraordinary relationship between a U.S. president and industry titan that had yielded some key favors for SpaceX: a proposed overhaul of NASA’s moon program into a Mars program, a planned effort to build a gigantic missile defense shield in space, and the naming of an Air Force leader who favored SpaceX in a contract award. Taking Dragon out of service would likely disrupt the ISS program, which involves dozens of countries under a two-decade-old international agreement. But it was unclear how quickly such a decommissioning would occur. NASA uses Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft as a secondary ride for its astronauts to the ISS. SPACEX’S RISE SpaceX rose to dominance long before Musk’s foray into Republican politics last year, building formidable market share in the rocket launch and satellite communications industries that could shield it somewhat from Musk’s split with Trump, analysts said. “It fortunately wouldn’t be catastrophic, since SpaceX has developed itself into a global powerhouse that dominates most of the space industry, but there’s no question that it would result in significant lost revenue and missed contract opportunities,” said Justus Parmar, CEO of SpaceX investor Fortuna Investments. Under Trump in recent months, the U.S. space industry and NASA’s workforce of 18,000 have been whipsawed by looming layoffs and proposed budget cuts that would cancel dozens of science programs, while the U.S. space agency remains without a confirmed administrator. Trump’s nominee for NASA administrator, Musk ally and billionaire private astronaut Jared Isaacman, appeared to be an early casualty of Musk’s rift with the president when the White House abruptly removed him from consideration over the weekend, denying Musk his pick to lead the space agency. Trump on Thursday explained dumping Isaacman by saying he was “totally Democrat,” in an apparent reference to reports Isaacman had donated to Democrats. Isaacman has donated to some Republican but mostly Democratic candidates for office, according to public records. Musk’s quest to send humans to Mars has been a critical element of Trump’s space agenda. The effort has threatened to take resources away from NASA’s flagship effort to send humans back to the moon. Trump’s budget plan sought to cancel Artemis moon missions beyond its third mission, effectively ending the over-budget Space Launch System rocket used for those missions. But the Senate Commerce Committee version of Trump’s bill released late on Thursday would restore funding for missions four and five, providing at least $1 billion annually for SLS through 2029. Since SpaceX’s rockets are a less expensive alternative to SLS, whether the Trump administration opposes the Senate’s changes in the coming weeks will give an indication of Musk’s remaining political power. SpaceX, founded in 2002, has won $15 billion of contracts from NASA for the company’s Falcon 9 rockets and development of SpaceX’s Starship, a multipurpose rocket system tapped to land NASA astronauts on the moon this decade. The company has also been awarded billions of dollars to launch a majority of the Pentagon’s national security satellites into space while it builds a massive spy satellite constellation in orbit for a U.S. intelligence agency. In addition to not being in U.S. interests, former NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver said canceling SpaceX’s contracts would probably not be legal. But she also added, “A rogue CEO threatening to decommission spacecraft, putting astronauts’ lives at risk, is untenable.” Joey Roulette, Reuters

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 13:34:00| Fast Company

Amazon famously started as an online bookstore. In the three decades since, it has disrupted how people buy, read, and review books through steps like undercutting local bookstore prices, launching the Kindle, and buying the book-review platform Goodreads.  Now, Amazon has announced new job cuts, including at its Kindle and Goodreads teams, Reuters reports. In total, the company is reportedly cutting fewer than 100 jobs across its book division. Since 2022, Amazon has laid off about 27,000 employees as part of a cost-cutting strategy, according to CNBC.  The online retailer claims its decision should streamline the impacted departments.  As part of our ongoing work to make our teams and programs operate more efficiently, and to better align with our business roadmap, weve made the difficult decision to eliminate a small number of roles within the Books organization, an Amazon spokesperson told Reuters.  Criticism over Goodreads stewardship Amazon bought Goodreads in 2013 and has since been accused by the publishing industry of neglecting the book tracker and having only bought it to prevent competition. Goodreads hasnt been all that well maintained, or updated, or kept up with, Jane Friedman, a publishing industry consultant, told The Washington Post in 2023. It does feel like Amazon bought it and then abandoned it. The online retailer also has a review system and launched a Your Books feature in 2023 for customers to track all their digital and print titles and get reading suggestions (another option available on Goodreads).  Fast Company has reached out to Amazon for comment on how many jobs were cut at Goodreads and whether the online retailer is reducing its investment in the book review platform. Some individuals also dont use Goodreads because of its connection to Amazon, as noted by CBC last year. There are entire Reddit threads devoted to alternatives with comments like, I am doing everything to avoid Jeff Bezos. Thats a bit easier to do these days as far as trackers go. A number of alternatives to Goodreads have emerged over the years, such as The StoryGraph, Bookly, and BookWyrm. 

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 13:28:10| Fast Company

Legend has it that Talking Heads played their first-ever show on June 5, 1975, in New York City, opening for the Ramones at CBGB on the Bowery. Now, 50 years later, stickers, wheatpaste posters, T-shirts, subway buskers, radio takeovers, an airplane banner, and billboards popped up along the Bowery, all with a variation of a single line: “Fa-Fa-Fa-Fa.” The cryptic street campaign is a throwback marketing push to celebrate the anniversary and a first-ever video for the bands hit song Psycho Killer, released this week. Directed by award-winning filmmaker Mike Mills, and starring Saoirse Ronan, the video chronicles the ups, downs, mundanity, absurdity, and joy of an everyday life.  In a world in which CBGB is now a John Varvatos store, and the ability to reach millions of eyeballs is a small matter of algorithmic wizardry, simply seeing the Bowery plastered with less-than-obvious Talking Heads marketing is, frankly, refreshing.  Modern throwback Created by experiential studio De-Yan, working with Warner Music, the goal of the work was to celebrate the iconic song of a legendary band in a way that felt a bit more 77 than social network. Jason Kreher, De-Yans chief creative officer, says this wasnt a project aimed at marketing innovation, instead the goal is to capture a sense of wonder, fun, and curiosity. The brief from Warner was simple: Build buzz around the Talking Heads as a band for people who might not have heard about them, and for people who may have forgot about them. For younger people, a guerrilla marketing music campaign is as novel to them as the song Psycho Killer by the Talking Heads, says Kreher. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel every time to delight people. De-Yan is known for creating mesmerizing, technologically-driven live experiences for artists like Alicia Keys and Lady Gaga, as well as brands like Louis Vuitton and La Mer. Here, though, the means were decidedly lo-fi, but the goal remains the same. I don’t imagine this is going to win awards, because it doesn’t have to, says Kreher. The song says fa-fa-fa a lot. I thought that was funny. So we put it everywhere we possibly could until we ran out of money. I don’t know if that’s innovative but it’s the correct thing to do, and I’m really excited about it. There are bootleg T-shirts in a Chinatown shop, neon signs at indie record stores, local radio takeovers (WFAFA, New Yorks only station that only plays Psycho Killer), an aerial banner that just says FAFAFAFAFA, and iconic subway buskers playing the song all day on the F(A) train line. [Photo: courtesy De-Yan] Limits > Limitless Talking Heads fans may be pissed off that this anniversary brings only a new video and this fun campaign, rather than a full-on reunion tour (the band reportedly declined an $80 million offer from Live Nation last year). Here we have an iconic band and a hit song, but what impresses about this work is actually the restraint of keeping its promotion distinctly street level. Or at least as close as you can in 2025 (see: DudeWithSign). Its part of a growing trend among brands looking to create experiences to go along with their algorithm investments. According to a study from agency Archival, 74% of Gen Zs think IRL experiences are more important than digital ones. [Photo: courtesy De-Yan] Stats like that and work like this remind me of a recent edition of James Kirkhams Inked In & Iconic newsletter about the old Nintendo Game & Watch handheld gaming devices from the 1980s. As we hurtle toward Zuckerberg’s ‘infinite creative’ future, where AI spits out endless variations of soulless content, Game & Watch reminds us what you get from limitations, simplicity and constraint, Kirkham wrote. Sometimes the most valuable thing you can offer isn’t more. It’s enough. Maybe that’s what we’re really searching for in our underground raves and our no-phone policies and our limited edition everything: the Game & Watch promise. A finite universe we can master. Boundaries. Limitations that set us free. Virality may be every brands goal, but the process behind it has become so mechanized that words like authentic and organic have seemingly lost all meaning. Kreher appreciates the limitations and constraints of budget, time, and production to craft something different. Experiences are a marketer’s fastest shortcut to meaningfl attention, he says. This was as gritty as I could get so we can make a moment that feels like a very specific time and place.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 12:33:00| Fast Company

The most powerful man in the world and the richest man in the world finally turned on each other. Yesterday, President Donald Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk had a full-scale war of words that seems to have been the final nail in the coffin for their bromance, which had persisted since Musk endorsed Trump for president in the summer of 2024. But it wasnt only their bromance that took a beating yesterday. Teslas stock price (Nasdaq: TSLA) did, too. Shares fell nearly 15% as investors feared that the rift between Trump and Musk could lead to troubles for the electric car maker. How are TSLA shares performing the morning after the dust-up? Heres what you need to know. Trump-Musk feud crashes TSLA stock Yesterday saw the arrival of something that many saw coming from a mile away: the inevitable turn of Donald Trump and Elon Musk against each other. However, few people probably expected the event to unfold as publicly in real-time as it did, with the president and Tesla CEO exchanging accusations, insults, and allegations on the social media platforms that they own, Truth Social and X. The feud spiraled out of Elon Musks increasing vocal opposition in recent days to the president’s proposed One Big Beautiful Bill that would see billions worth of tax cuts go to the richest Americans while adding an estimated $2.4 trillion to the deficit. Yesterday, Musk called the bill a disgusting abomination. Trump then addressed Musks comments with reporters, saying he and Musk had a great relationship and adding, I dont know if we will anymore. From there, things quickly spiraled. While the spectacle provided hours of entertainment and fascination to general audiencesand gave journalists plenty to write aboutTesla investors were probably dying a little inside with each social media volley. Shares in Elon Musks electric car company continued to crash throughout the day as the Trump-Musk feud intensified. By the end of trading yesterday, TSLA shares had fallen 14.26% to $284.70 per sharewiping more than $150 billion from Teslas market capits largest single-day loss in its history. But now it’s the morning afterand both investors and the two men involved in the feud have, hopefully, had time overnight for a breather. Indeed, it seems that at least Tesla investors have, as TSLA shares are moving upward in early-morning trading. TESLA rises in premarket trading As of the time of this writing, TSLA shares are currently trading up about 3.96% to $296 per share in premarket trading. Teslas share price recovery comes after Musk appeared to signal on X that he was open to healing the rift that had emerged between him and Trump, notes Reuters. In a post on X, billionaire investor Bill Ackman wrote that I support @realDonaldTrump and @elonmusk and they should make peace for the benefit of our great country. We are much stronger together than apart. Musk then responded to this post, saying, Youre not wrong. Shortly after, the recovery in Teslas stock price began. However, given that TSLA shares have only regained a fraction of what they lost yesterday, it’s likely that investors are erring more on the side of cautious optimism than absolute certainty that Trump and Musk will make up. Investors are still probably very likely worried about just how bad a continuing feud could be for Musk’s business interests. The president at one point threatened Musk’s companies government contracts. If the president so wished, he could also make life much more difficult for Musks publicly traded company, Tesla, by hindering its upcoming robotaxi rollout through regulations or introducing other measures that would make the car companys business more difficult. TSLA stock has had a horrible 2025 Yesterdays dramatic share price drop in Tesla was nothing less than horrifying for most Tesla investors. The nearly 15% drop was the single worst drop ever in Teslas share price in one day, noted Reuters. At the same time, Teslas shares dropping is something investors are used to this year. While Tesla shares surged to an all-time high in December, after Musk and his donations helped return Trump to the White House, the stock has taken a beating ever since Trump took office in January. Before yesterday, there were two big reasons for TSLA’s 2025 share price trouble: Teslas deteriorating brand image among consumers who found Elon Musks involvement in politics and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) off-putting and President Trumps Liberation Day tariffs, which threatened to raise prices. After yesterday, a third contributing factor to TSLAs price drop in 2025 is now the Trump-Musk feud. Since the beginning of the year, Tesla shares had fallen nearly 30% as of yesterdays close. From a high of over $428 in January, Tesla shares bottomed out in April at below $218. Until yesterday, they had managed to claw back some of that loss, rising to above $360 in late May. Then came yesterdays bromance bust-upand that nearly 15% decline. Where TSLA stock goes from here largely depends on the mood of the two men in the days ahead.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 12:22:43| Fast Company

U.S. President Donald Trump often says the 2026 World Cup and 2028 Los Angeles Olympics are among the events he is most excited about in his second term.Yet there is significant uncertainty regarding visa policies for foreign visitors planning trips to the U.S. for the two biggest events in sports.Trump’s latest travel ban on citizens from 12 countries added new questions about the impact on the World Cup and the Summer Olympics, which depend on hosts opening their doors to the world.Here’s a look at the potential effects of the travel ban on those events. What is the travel ban policy? When Sunday ticks over to Monday, citizens of 12 countries should be banned from entering the U.S.They are Afghanistan, Myanmar, Chad, the Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Haiti, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.Tighter restrictions will apply to visitors from seven more: Burundi, Cuba, Laos, Sierra Leone, Togo, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.Trump said some countries had “deficient” screening and vetting processes or have historically refused to take back their own citizens. How does it affect the World Cup and Olympics? Iran, a soccer power in Asia, is the only targeted country to qualify so far for the World Cup being co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico in one year’s time.Cuba, Haiti and Sudan are in contention. Sierra Leone might stay involved through multiple playoff games. Burundi, Equatorial Guinea and Libya have very outside shots.But all should be able to send teams to the World Cup if they qualify because the new policy makes exceptions for “any athlete or member of an athletic team, including coaches, persons performing a necessary support role, and immediate relatives, traveling for the World Cup, Olympics, or other major sporting event as determined by the secretary of state.”About 200 countries could send athletes to the Summer Games, including those targeted by the latest travel restrictions. The exceptions should apply to them as well if the ban is still in place in its current form. What about fans? The travel ban doesn’t mention any exceptions for fans from the targeted countries wishing to travel to the U.S. for the World Cup or Olympics.Even before the travel ban, fans of the Iran soccer team living in that country already had issues about getting a visa for a World Cup visit.Still, national team supporters often profile differently to fans of club teams who go abroad for games in international competitions like the UEFA Champions League.For many countries, fans traveling to the World Cup an expensive travel plan with hiked flight and hotel prices are often from the diaspora, wealthier, and could have different passport options.A World Cup visitor is broadly higher-spending and lower-risk for host nation security planning.Visitors to an Olympics are often even higher-end clients, though tourism for a Summer Games is significantly less than at a World Cup, with fewer still from most of the 19 countries now targeted. How is the U.S. working with FIFA, Olympic officials? FIFA President Gianni Infantino has publicly built close ties since 2018 to Trump too close according to some. He has cited the need to ensure FIFA’s smooth operations at a tournament that will earn a big majority of the soccer body’s expected $13 billion revenue from 2023-26.Infantino sat next to Trump at the White House task force meeting on May 6 which prominently included Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem. FIFA’s top delegate on the task force is Infantino ally Carlos Cordeiro, a former Goldman Sachs partner whose two-year run as U.S. Soccer Federation president ended in controversy in 2020.Any visa and security issues FIFA faces including at the 32-team Club World Cup that kicks off next week in Miami can help LA Olympics organizers finesse their plans.“It was very clear in the directive that the Olympics require special consideration and I actually want to thank the federal government for recognizing that,” LA28 chairman and president Casey Wasserman said Thursday in Los Angeles.“It’s very clear that the federal government understands that that’s an environment that they will be accommodating and provide for,” he said. “We have great confidence that that will only continue. It has been the case to date and it will certainly be the case going forward through the games.”In March, at an IOC meeting in Greece, Wasserman said he had two discreet meetings with Trump and noted the State Department has a “fully staffed desk” to help prepare for short-notice visa processing in the summer of 2028 albeit with a focus on teams rather than fans.IOC member Nicole Hoevertsz, who is chair of the Coordination Commission for LA28, expressed “every confidence” that the U.S. government will cooperate, as it did in hosting previous Olympics.“That is something that we will be definitely looking at and making sure that it is guaranteed as well,” she said. “We are very confident that this is going to be accomplished. I’m sure this is going to be executed well.”FIFA didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment about the new Trump travel ban. What have other host nations done? The 2018 World Cup host Russia let fans enter the country with a game ticket doubling as their visa. So did Qatar four years later.Both governments, however, also performed background checks on all visitors coming to the month-long soccer tournaments.Governments have refused entry to unwelcome visitors. For the 2012 London Olympics, Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko who is still its authoritarian leader today was denied a visa despite also leading its national Olympic body. The IOC also suspended him from the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021. AP Sports Writer Beth Harris in Los Angeles contributed to this report. AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and AP Olympics at https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games Graham Dunbar, AP Sports Writer

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 12:00:00| Fast Company

The self-driving car service Waymo has been active in San Francisco for 20 months and has already captured 27% of the citys rideshare market, according to new research compiled by Mary Meekers Bond venture capital firm. That rapid progress suggests the mainstreaming of self-driving car service could happen faster than once thought. What weve done in San Francisco is prove to ourselvesand to the worldthat not only does autonomy work, but it works at scale in a market and can be a viable commercial product, Waymo Co-CEO Dmitri Dolgov told Fast Company in March.  In my experience as a frequent Waymo user, the service can cost up to a third more than Uber, depending on demand. But in some ways it’s worth it. While Uber was originally meant to make ridesharing a friendlier and more social experience than taxi service, being alone can have its perks, too. A Waymo One ride can be a time of quiet contemplation, or even meditation, slotted in between meetings or other tasks. With Uber or a taxi service, you also get a different experience each time. The quality, condition, and odor of the vehicle varies from ride to ride, as does the drivers level of sociability, attitude, behavior, and language. Waymo service, by contrast, is largely the same every time: same Jaguar SUV, same neutral smell, same mellow, ambient music (which you can shut off if you want to). Note that Waymos Jaguar I-PACE SUVs, after being decked out in computers and sensors, probably cost between $130,000 and $150,000, Motor Trend estimates. So Waymo could adopt less-expensive, and less-posh, vehicles as it scales to drive down costs. Riders may feel more in control in a self-driving car (sounds counterintuitive, I know). In an Uber, my car, my rules governs a number of aspects of the ride. I wouldnt ask an Uber driver to change or turn off the music in his own car, for example. In a Waymo you control the music and dont feel judged by being on a call or whatever you do, Das tells Fast Company.  And while Waymo rides may take a little longer than Uber rides to get to their destination, theres evidence that Waymo rides are safer than human-driven cars. Waymo researchers studied more than 56.7 million miles of driving and found that by removing the human driver Waymo achieves a 92% reduction in crashes involving injuries among pedestrians, an 82% reduction in crashes with cyclists, and an 82% reduction in crashes involving motorcyclists.  Yes, San Francisco may be a special case. Waymo might have captured a quarter of the market because many people here are tech-savvy and tech-curious, and because many of them are affluent.   And dont get me wrong. Ive had my share of problems with Waymo. On at least two occasions, in less-traveled parts of the city, a Waymo car has dropped me off several blocks from my destination. And, at least in San Francisco, you still cant take a Waymo to the airport (the company started servicing its first airport, Phoenix Sky Harbor, in 2022).  Still, the differences that matter between the self-driving and human-driven experiences are becoming clearer to more consumers. And some of the ones that really matter seem to favor Waymo.  Waymo currently offers rides in the San Francisco Bay Area and down the peninsula and Silicon Valley. The state of California just gave it permission to offer rides in San Jose. The company, which spun off from parent Google 10 years ago, also operates in Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Austin. Across these markets, Waymo says its cars have covered more than 33 million miles.  In Austin, Waymo operates through a partnership with Uber. Riders hail a self-driving car through the Uber app. Within its 37-square-mile service area in Austin, Waymo accounts for nearly 20% of Uber rides. Waymo was valued at $45 billion after its most recent funding round of $5.6 billion last October. The company reports its revenue under parent company Alphabets Other Bets category, which showed $450 million in revenue and an operating loss of $1.2 billion for the first quarter of 2025.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 11:30:00| Fast Company

The truth is, I cannot explain exactly where your 1,216 image files went or when they disappeared. I apologize for not being more careful about investigating the root cause before taking any action. The bottom line is that your image files are missing, and I cannot restore them. I dont hold hard drives personally accountable for crashing, or blame vending machines for eating my money. But when the AI-coding service Replit accidentally blew away more than a thousand photographs my grandmother took, my blood boiled. After all, the web-based tool and I had spent an enormous amount of time in recent months talking about the software we were creating together. Id explain what I envisioned an app doing; it would do all the programminga process known as vibecoding. When I noticed the photos were gone, I told Replit it could never act so cavalierly again, prompting the abject apology above. Replits gaffemade by a feature called the Agentwas an annoyance rather than a catastrophe. I had copies of the images and could easily re-upload them. Still, the fact that it didnt occur to the AI to check in with me before the mass deletion was a sobering reminder that I couldnt trust it. Which is a strange way to feel about a service thats easily my favorite tech product of 2025. My Replit app doesnt always correctly identify where photos were taken, but its right far more often than its wrong. The first major project I undertook with Replitwhich I wrote about in an April newsletterwas creating the note-taking app of my dreams. It remains slightly buggy, but has already changed my life for the better. The second one may end up meaning even more to me. In the 1960s and 70s, my grandmother traveled the planet, shooting hundreds of pictures along the way. A few years ago, I boxed up her trays of slides and mailed them to a company that scanned them into digital form. Theyd been sitting in my Dropbox account ever sincedisorganized, largely unidentified, a little overwhelming. When I read about how people were using ChatGPT to identify the locations where photos were taken, it dawned on me that AI might be able to tell whether Grandmother Jacobson snapped a particular shot in Italy, Beijing, or Morocco. A little experimentation proved it couldnot always, but often enough to be of huge help in making sense of her globe-trotting adventures. I started crafting a location-detecting app in Replit. After fiddling with the OpenAI API in Replit, I ended up using Anthropics Claude API instead, since it seemed to process images more swiftly and at least as accurately. Even as a work in progress, the app Im building feels magical. That photo with a windmill turning inconspicuously in the distance? No, it isnt Hollandits Israel, which (Im embarrassed to admit I didnt know) has an iconic 168-year-old windmill of its own. Claude has correctly identified many photos based on architecture, statuary, and even landscape, and when it cant pinpoint a location, it often makes intelligent guesses about the country or city in question. Suddenly, I have a much better sense of where my grandmother went and what she saw, 50 to 60 years after the fact. But as with all things AI, magic only gets you so far when youre trying to accomplish practical tasks. Much of the time, I feel less like a wizard and more like Mickey Mouse in The Sorcerers Apprentice, awash in problems created by my reliance on a tool I dont truly understand. A few lessons Ive learned: Its not like partnering with a human software engineer. At all. In the case of my note-taking app, Replit and I have been working together for months. Every line of code, it wrote. Yet when I ask for changes, it always feels like the service has just seen the app for the first time and is reverse-engineering how it works. When debugging its own work, its also prone to making the same mistakes over and over, as if it never quite realizes its fixes arent helping. The absence of accumulated knowledge is striking. Security might be a crapshoot. When I asked Replit to set up a login system for my notes app, it set a default password ofdrum rollpassword123. Then it put a helpful reminder hint on the home screen: The password is password123. Doh! I started over and gave it painstaking instructions on creating a two-factor authentication system. It seems solid. But as with Replit bulk-erasing my grandmothers photos, its unsupervised first stab at security is proof that AI is capable of making the stupidest imaginable decisions when it comes to data stewardship. The Replit Agent is an overconfident suck-up. I quickly realized that its sometimes exuberant updates on the progress it was making didnt mean the results would be any good. Nor was its nonstop praise for my ideas evidence that Im a vibecoding savant: Like other LLM-based tools, its sycophantic to the point of being a grating twerp. Seriously, Id prefer a zero-personality Replit Agent that just did stuff without yammering about iteven if it no longer apologizes for its missteps. You pay for its errors. I pay $25 monthly for a Replit plan, and burn through the computing credits it provides in short order. Once I do, it charges me 25 cents for each additional change the Agent makes to the code. Ive spent hundreds of dollars on my note-taking app so far, and about $40 on the photo-identifying one in its briefer existence. Id do it all over again, but a sizable percentage of that investment has gone into Replit trying to repair its own buggy code, getting stuck, and going in circles. Counterintuitively, the worse the quality of its work, the more it costs. To reiterate: I love the apps Ive put together in Replit. Since I started using the service in late March, its added handy new features at a clip thats brisk even by AI-company standards. Already, I cant imagine not vibecoding. I just hope that the day isnt too far off when its pleasures arent accompanied by a fair amount of pain. Youve been reading Plugged In, Fast Companys weekly tech newsletter from me, global technology editor Harry McCracken. If a friend or colleague forwarded this edition to youor if you’re reading it on FastCompany.comyou can check out previous issues and sign up to get it yourself every Friday morning. I love hearing from you: Ping me at hmccracken@fastcompany.com with your feedback and ideas for future newsletters. I’m also on Bluesky, Mastodon, and Threads, and you can follow Plugged In on Flipboard. More top tech stories from Fast Company With its Samsung deal, Perplexity could be headed to the big leaguesThe AI answer engine has struggled to compete. A splashy new tech deal could solve that problem. Read More TikTok gives artists new tools to track and boost viral songsThe platform’s global rollout includes insights on views, engagement, and fan data, plus a new pre-save feature for upcoming releases. Read More This viral app lets users upload fake workouts to StravaThe app Fake My Run lets users create fake running routes and stats for Strava and other platformsblurring the line between fitness tracking and social signaling. Read More AI has a resilience problem. Designers and researchers can help fix itWhen technology doesn’t bend to the messy reality of people’s lives, it can lead to catastrophic results. Read More How this new technology could change the way we mine copperIts like CRISPR for rocks. Read More Is that website actually down? This essential web tool will tell youWhen you can’t get the web to work, a simple site called Down for Everyone or Just Me is your best friend. Read More

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 10:49:00| Fast Company

Honestly, I dont even remember the 2014 situation. It just seems like its asking a lot of the employees. Whys it on us? Gen Z Market Basket employee, June 2025 Ten years ago, Market Basketa New England-based grocery chainbecame a national symbol of grassroots worker solidarity. Thousands of nonunion employees staged a dramatic walkout to protest the ousting of their CEO, Arthur T. Demoulas. Customers followed suit, boycotting stores. Shelves emptied. The message was clear: people, not just profits, mattered. And it worked. Demoulas was reinstated, and Market Baskets culture of loyalty was hailed as a case study in bottom-up leadership. Now, in 2025, Demoulas has been placed on administrative leave, and tensions are beginning to stir again. But something feels different. The energy is quieter. The loyalty less certain. And for good reason: the workforce has changed. A different kind of commitment Most of Market Baskets current front-line employees are millennials or Gen Z. Many of them werent even in high school in 2014. And unlike the prior generation, they didnt come up in a workplace culture that promised stability, pensions, or upward mobility. They came of age during mass layoffs, the pandemic, and a decade of seeing essential workers celebrated rhetoricallybut often left unsupported. When I spoke with a Gen Z employee this week, their perspective was both honest and revealing. Theres no way I really care about the long-term health of the company. Im not going to work here for life. However, I do care about the people I work withand the affordable prices. Im torn. The comment wasnt true apathy, but a different kind of commitment. Fairness, clarity, and a voice As a leadership researcher and business school lecturer who focuses on generational dynamics, Ive seen this mindset across industries. Gen Z doesnt reject work ethicbut they do reject blind loyalty. They want to contribute, but they also want fairness, clarity, and a sense that their voice matters. Theyre less likely to organize around a charismatic executive and more likely to organize around shared values or people in their immediate circle. When I asked this employee what empathy looks like to them at a moment like this, their answer wasnt about the companyit was about the customer. We have a lot of people who are elderly and cant afford to go anywhere else. That actually makes it harder, because we can stay open for themor walk out and hope that we can keep MB the way it is long term. That response reflects a major evolution in how younger workers see the workplace. Its not about company man cultureits about whats humane, whats sustainable, and whos affected. Why this matters to leaders In 2014, Market Baskets walkout became iconic because it was so rare: a coordinated labor action without a union, driven by a deep emotional connection to leadership. It represented a kind of institutional loyalty thats becoming less commonnot just at grocery stores, but across industries. Today, were seeing a different dynamic. Gen Z workers are still willing to take a standbut its not always the kind of stand companies expect. Some may walk out. Others may opt for quiet quitting, high turnover, or organizing through digital platforms instead of picket lines. Their actions are no less meaningful, but theyre often less visibleand that can leave organizations flat-footed if theyre not paying attention. In my research and classroom discussions, I see Gen Z define loyalty not as longevity, but as values alignment. They will go to bat for coworkers. Theyll support customers and communities. But they expect the same in return from leadership. And if they dont get it, they wont stick aroundespecially not to fix systems they didnt break. That creates a new challenge for employers: building workplace cultures that dont rely on legacy loyalty, but earn trust in real time. The risk of expecting too much The 2014 Market Basket strike succeeded because workers and customers felt united. But this time around, younger workers are more skepticalnot just of leadership, but of the idea that change depends solely on their willingness to sacrifice. Whys it on us? the employee asked. Thats the generational rift in a single sentence. Many younger employees have watched companies brand themselves as family until times get tough. Theyve seen layoffs announced over email, burnout go unacknowledged, and corporate promises ring hollow. So, when theyre asked to do the right thing for an employer, they askreasonablywhat the company is doing for them. And yet, they still care. They care about fairness. They care about their team. They care about the elderly shopper who relies on affordable produce. That tension is exactly where Gen Z sits: morally aware, emotionally intelligent, and structurally exhausted. What comes next If a walkout happens again at Market Basket, it wont look like 2014. It might not even be a walkout. It might be subtler: shifts in morale, early exits, a lack of buy-in. But it will still matter. Because the real story here isnt about one grocery chainits about a generational shift in how workers define loyalty and leadership. And as companies across industries wrestle with engagement, retention, and trust, this moment is a reminder: culture isnt inherited. Its builtand rebuiltby every generation that shows up to work. Gen Z may not be in it for life. But they are in it for something. And if leaders want to keep them around, they need to stop asking for blind loyaltyand start delivering earned respect.

Category: E-Commerce
 

2025-06-06 10:48:00| Fast Company

I was at a conference on, of all things, male allyship when the notice popped up on my phone. Taylor Swift had successfully purchased back all her early masters and related material. For an alleged cost of around $360 million, the artist now fully owned everything she had ever created including her first six albums, their videos, and all their related art and album covers.  Her community of friends and fans, the Swifties, erupted with elated joy and messages of encouragement online. News outlets rushed to cover the story. Within 24 hours, her early albums hit the top ten on streaming charts with Reputation, the album most anticipated as a rerelease, coming in at No. 1 as fans exercised their economic might. It seemed the universe was celebrating. Even savvy businesses got on the celebratory train. Delta Airlines posted, Fly like a jet stream, high above the whole scene. Keep Climbing Taylor . Starbucks said, and in a cafe on a Friday, we watched it begin again . . . congrats Taylor . And, to no surprise to anyone, the crafty social media gurus at the Empire State Building sent out a message, We love you Taylor, above a picture of Taylor from the top overlooking New York. Mesmerizing Taylor has mesmerized us. Antagonists might argue she has aligned all her hex cruces. It reminded me of the Hulu series The Handmaids Tale. I had recently watched seasons four and five to catch up for the season six release. These later seasons have been criticized. The audience seemed bored of the mistreatment of fertile women and then confused when these same women sought plots for angry hot revenge. Is this what Taylor has metaphorically done, used the allies around her and her anger to fuel a strategic masterminding of a long game just like June, the protagonist of The Handmaids Tale? As if sending a signal, Taylors song, Look What You Made Me Do (Taylors Version), became the anthem for season six days before she announced buying back her early art. Piles of money Taylor has acquired piles of money, enhanced by the success of the Eras Tour. She had become financially powerful enough to buy back her name and reputation, leaving those who crossed her in some metaphorical no-mans-land. She didn’t do it alone, and she isn’t the first. For decades, centuries, and, perhaps, even since the beginning of time, underdogs have fought to be seen, heard, accurately estimated, and risen from the ashes to reclaim that which was theirs. For example, half a century ago, Dolly Parton moved past he entertainment industry dominance that minimized womens empowerment and claimed her own space driven by her talents. In 1974, Parton walked into Porter Wagoners office and told him she was leaving the show bearing his namesake that had given her a rise to stardom. She sang him a goodbye song titled, I Will Always Love You, as a sign of respect to Porter for being her mentor.  Dolly had outgrown her sidekick role alongside Porter, but it took effort, strategy, and bravery for her to break free. Porter sued her, a tactic commonly employed by those in power, but through discussions, compassion, and a large sum of money (reportedly around $1 million), Dolly settled the case.  Independence How have a select set of women throughout history acquired enough resources to buy their independence? Some look all the way back to the early 20th century and the suffrage movement. Even that, however, involved womens collaboration with men.  In August 1920, a conservative Tennessee legislator, Harry T. Burn, cast the deciding vote for the suffrage movements proposed 19th Amendment, giving women the right to vote. In his pocket, Harry carried a letter from his mother, Febb E. Burn, in which she asked him to be a good boy and vote for the amendment. This legislation, decided by Harry’s unexpected vote, has driven women’s economic agency and freedom over the past century. Throughout history, women and underdogs have been harnessing their positions to mastermind their way into influence, power, and self-determination. At a moment in time where human rights are being challenged, whether through challenges to the right to due process, reproductive freedoms, or just the right of children to not be separated from their parents, Taylor has once again shown us a way, that by harnessing our best talents deep within our souls, we can move mountains. We can speak deep into the souls of others, nudging them into a movementa desire to be a part of something bigger than themselves. Something with meaning and grit and soul. And, just as I learned from the conference I was attending at John Hopkins University, working with unexpected partners forging allyships has real and meaningful benefits. Hope and power We root for Taylor Swift because we see ourselves in her. And, just like underdogs in any fight, through her, we see hope, and that hope is seeded in harnessing our talents and masterminding it into economic powera power that can move mountains and, apparently, also shamrocks.

Category: E-Commerce
 

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