The Epstein files just keep prompting more resignations in the academic world, including Harvard's Larry Summers and Columbia's Richard Axel.
The files include email exchanges with Elon Musk, Howard Lutnick and other billionaire associates.
Not all such interactions with customers are tied to complaints. Mike Clem, the CEO of Sweetwater, a leading retailer of musical instruments, says about 80% of the comments he receives are positive.
There may, however, be another motive for CEOs who offer customers a direct line. Earl Stewart, who owns a Toyota dealership in Lake Park, Fla., has red phones scattered throughout his busy operation ...
As the Epstein swamp is drained, more and more high-profile "ignorance" arguments are being exposed for what it is: tacit ...
Schreiner University's TexS Talks speaker series brought back four alumni to share firsthand accounts of career pivots, ...
Gerald E. Gehrmann It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of Gerald Edward Gehrmann (Gehrmo), whose life was marked by strength, kindness, ...
Anthropic's Claude AI chatbot was expertly tricked into stealing millions of pieces of user data, from taxpayer records to ...
Larry Summers joined the growing list of political and business leaders hurt by their links to accused sex trafficker Jeffrey ...
Greg Simpson, founder of Press For Attention PR, dives into the fake expert crisis. This week, the PR industry did something it rarely does publicly. It stopped and said: we’ve got a problem.