
Brad Stone
Editor at Bloomberg Businessweek
Editor, Bloomberg Businessweek. Author of the books Amazon Unbound, The Upstarts, and The Everything Store. Retweets are usually mistaken clicks.
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
bloomberg.com | Brad Stone
AI is improving more quickly than we realize. The economic and societal impact could be massive. When OpenAI introduced ChatGPT in 2022, people could instantly see that the field of artificial intelligence had dramatically advanced. We all speak a language, after all, and could appreciate how the chatbot answered questions in a fluid, close-to-human style. AI has made immense strides since then, but many of us are—and let me put this delicately—too unsophisticated to notice.
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2 weeks ago |
flipboard.com | Brad Stone
4 hours agoGPT-4o, Midjourney, Gemini, and other AI models are yours forever with 1min.AI. Artificial intelligence (AI) has fast become an essential part of modern business. However, these resources have been more difficult to come by for small businesses and individual ventures. Smaller companies just don't …
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3 weeks ago |
bloomberg.com | Kurt Wagner |Leah Nylen |Ellen Huet |Brad Stone
Ahmad Al-Dahle As head of the most important artificial intelligence efforts at Meta, Al-Dahle has one of the tech industry’s most stressful jobs. He works closely with Mark Zuckerberg, and the Facebook founder has made it abundantly clear that he expects Meta’s AI products to lead the industry by the end of the year. That’s no small task considering the competition from the likes of Google, Microsoft and OpenAI.
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Brad Stone
President Donald Trump surprised everyone this afternoon when he pulled back on some of the most severe tariffs announced just a week ago on “Liberation Day.” Businessweek editor Brad Stone provides some quick analysis. Plus: Mass government firings lead to a loss of expertise, and why everyone is still talking about Netflix’s Adolescence. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up .
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1 month ago |
bloomberg.com | Brad Stone |Reyhan Harmanci
(Bloomberg Businessweek) -- If you haven’t watched the Netflix limited series , you’ve probably heard people talking about it. It’s a four-hour-long gut punch of a crime saga from the UK that dissects the complex social and family dynamics behind the murder of a teenage girl, Katie, by her high school classmate, Jamie. The show has been heralded for its spellbinding acting and the bold choice of using a single uninterrupted tracking shot in each episode.
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We've blamed pharma companies for the Opioid crisis - Purdue, J&J and the rest. But what was the FDA's role? And what will weakened health agencies mean for the next public health crisis? Powerful, epic story from @samhornblower in @BW and on this week's @BloombergTV Wall

Forget Elon Musk. The real mastermind of Trump’s imperial presidency has been planning his crusade since well before Project 2025 by @chafkin https://t.co/ChGtE2fvdZ via @BW

RT @BW: Americans with disabilities make as little as 25¢ an hour. It’s legal, and some employers are pushing Trump to keep it that way ht…