0.3 C
New York
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Home Blog Page 361

Walmart CEO Aims for Employee Success Amid AI Changes: Headcount to Remain Stable for Now

0

CEOs aren’t shying away from what labor market experts have been saying for months: AI is transforming the workforce.

From bankers to consulting firms, business leaders are restructuring rapidly as AI adoption becomes mission critical. CEOs of global companies expect AI investments to more than double in two years, and 61% are actively adopting AI agents at scale, according to a May IBM study.

“It’s very clear that AI is going to change literally every job,” Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said this week during a workforce conference with other business execs, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday.

And AI has already changed the global retailer, which has developed chat bots to help customers, suppliers, and merchants. The company has also created new roles like an “agent developer,” whose job description is to build AI tools to help automate workflow throughout the company.

Yet as AI automates some tasks for Walmart workers, that won’t translate to mass layoffs.

“Our goal is to create the opportunity for everybody to make it to the other side,” McMillon said. Some jobs and tasks at Walmart will be eliminated, but others will be added, he added.

Walmart plans to maintain a head count of around 2.1 million workers across the world over the next three years, though the mix of these jobs are expected to change, Walmart’s chief people officer Donna Morris said, according to The Journal

To help determine how to train and prepare workers, the company is tracking job types to see which increase, decrease and hold steady.

The headcount retention is a stark distinction from other corporate messaging recently.

Accenture CEO Julie Sweet said Thursday that rapid AI adoption drove layoffs this year and warned that more exits are possible where reskilling employees is not viable.

Earlier this month, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff said the company cut 4,000 customer support jobs this year due to efficiency gains directly linked to AI technology.

And in May, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei said AI could wipe out roughly half of all entry-level white-collar jobs. The cuts could come within five years and cause unemployment to spike as high as 20%, he added.

But OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said last month he’s envious of young people because in 10 years’ time, college graduates will be working “some completely new, exciting, super well-paid” job in space, and current early-career work will look “boring” by comparison.

It’s unclear how AI will change Walmart’s labor force in three years. Chief people officer Morris said company leaders have to do their “homework” to find those answers.

But according to Walmart’s CEO, the company will continue relying on face-to-face interaction even as it leans more on AI.

In January, tech company Symbotic announced Walmart would pay it $520 million to build out an AI-enabled robotics platform to improve shopping convenience via accelerated online pickup and delivery at stores.

Other vendors have also offered robot workers to the company. Yet “until we’re serving humanoid robots and they have the ability to spend money, we’re serving people,” McMillon said. “We are going to put people in front of people.”

Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business. Apply for an invitation.

Troops and ICE forces deployed to Portland by Trump’s order | Political News

0

The city’s Democratic mayor says there is no need for the US president to send federal forces.

United States President Donald Trump has authorised the deployment of troops to the northwestern city of Portland, Oregon, as well as to federal immigration facilities around the country, in his latest controversial use of the military for domestic purposes.

Writing on his Truth Social network on Saturday, the US president said he would be asking his defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, to carry out the order, adding that the soldiers would be permitted to use “full force, if necessary”.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Trump claimed the move was necessary to protect “war-ravaged” Portland and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) facilities from “domestic terrorists”, but the city’s mayor and other Democratic leaders were quick to condemn the decision.

Just days before Trump’s announcement on Saturday, a deadly shooting took place at an ICE facility in Texas. One detainee was killed and two others were severely injured in the attack, which Trump blamed, without providing evidence, on the “radical left”.

Protests against the US government’s anti-immigration policies have taken place outside ICE facilities in cities, including Portland.

It was unclear whether just the National Guard or other military branches, or both – as happened in June in Los Angeles, amid protests against immigration raids, will be deployed to Portland.

The US government has also deployed troops to the US capital, Washington, DC, in what Trump claimed was a bid to stamp out crime.

Portland and state leaders lambasted Trump on Saturday, saying his actions were against their wishes. By law, the National Guard can generally only be deployed at a state governor’s request, and there are ongoing lawsuits in California as well as Washington, DC over the deployment of troops.

“The number of necessary troops is zero, in Portland and any other American city. The president will not find lawlessness or violence here unless he plans to perpetrate it,” said Keith Wilson, the mayor of Portland.

Meanwhile, US Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, noted Trump’s decision to send federal forces to the city in 2020, after protests broke out there following the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis.

Wyden said on X that Trump “may be replaying the 2020 playbook and surging into Portland with the goal of provoking conflict and violence”.

Despite Trump’s claims about Portland, overall violent crime in the city was down by 17 percent from January to June, when compared with the first six months of 2024, according to a recent report from the Major Cities Chiefs Association.

Virgin Music Group partners with The Metub Company to expand into Vietnam

0

Virgin Music Group is expanding into Vietnam by forming a partnership with The Metub Company (Metub), a digital entertainment and creator company, to establish a new joint venture in the country.

Founded in 2014, The Metub Company is described as “Vietnam’s leading creator economy platform”. It works with over 5,000 content creators and artists across music, entertainment, gaming, live commerce, and merchandise.

The new entity, Virgin Music Group Vietnam (VMG Vietnam), will be focused on signing and servicing local talent and independent labels “to help them grow their music both domestically and internationally.,” according to a statement.

Nam Nhu Nguyen, who will be based in Ho Chi Minh City, will lead the new venture.

The expansion follows Cindy Gu’s appointment earlier this month to oversee Virgin Music Group’s operations in Southeast Asia.

As General Manager, Gu is responsible for Singapore, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and Vietnam.

“Establishing this innovative joint venture with Metub to identify and develop local talent and leverage their vast platform to help promote artists within Vietnam and grow their fan bases globally is truly groundbreaking.”

Cindy Gu, Virgin Music Group

“We have had a relationship with Metub via our parent company Universal Music Group since 2022,” said Cindy Gu, of the JV with METUB.

“Establishing this innovative joint venture with Metub to identify and develop local talent and leverage their vast platform to help promote artists within Vietnam and grow their fan bases globally is truly groundbreaking.”

Phuong Ha, CEO of The Metub Company, said: “We are very excited to launch VMG Vietnam, in partnership with Virgin Music Group, to continue supporting Vietnamese artists and labels. We value Virgin because of its advanced technology and our shared belief in using it to give independence and transparency to our partners, enabling their creativity to flourish.

“Together, we will combine Virgin’s global expertise with Metub’s deep local insight and network to empower the next generation of artists, labels, and music entrepreneurs to create without limits.”

“BY PROVIDING ARTISTS AND LABELS WITH THE TOOLS, RESOURCES, AND CREATIVE INDEPENDENCE THEY NEED TO SUCCEED, THIS JOINT VENTURE IS NOT ONLY SUPPORTING LOCAL TALENT — WE’RE AMPLIFYING IT.”

NAM NHU NGUYEN, VMG VIETNAM

Nam Nhu Nguyen, Director of VMG Vietnam, said:  “By providing artists and labels with the tools, resources, and creative independence they need to succeed, this joint venture is not only supporting local talent — we’re amplifying it.

“With Thuan Tran as VMG Vietnam Label Manager, and with the support of Metub’s ecosystem, we are building a strong foundation to connect Vietnamese talent with the world.”


Elsewhere at VMG globally, the company recently signed a global partnership with Mom+Pop Music, adding the independent label and its roster of artists, including MGMT, to its distribution network.


Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, in January, IFPI unveiled The Official Southeast Asia Charts, a regional hub featuring weekly music charts from six ASEAN nations.

The move brought official weekly charts to Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam, with the Philippines and Vietnam receiving their first-ever industry-backed music rankings.

Music Business Worldwide

US media report: FBI terminates agents who were photographed kneeling at George Floyd protest

0

Yasin Ozturk/Anadolu via Getty Images File image of the back of two FBI agents, wearing bullet-proof vests with the writing 'FBI' in yellowYasin Ozturk/Anadolu via Getty Images

(File image) The number of agents fired by the bureau is unclear

The FBI has fired a group of agents who were pictured kneeling at a racial justice protest over the death of George Floyd, US media report.

The termination letter cited alleged “lack of judgement” in their actions, according to a source cited by CBS News, the BBC’s US partner. Between 15 to 20 agents have reportedly been sacked.

The agents reportedly took the knee alongside others during a demonstration in 2020. Floyd, a black man, had been killed by a police officer who knelt on his neck in May that year, sparking global outcry.

The FBI Agents Association condemned the dismissals, stating that the agents’ rights had been violated. The FBI declined to comment when contacted by the BBC.

The reported firings come as the Trump administration seeks to purge what it sees as left-wing and so-called “woke” policies and officials from every part of the federal government.

Several right-wing commentators had criticised agents and police officers who were pictured kneeling on social media at the time.

But their proponents argue the kneeling was a tactic to reduce tensions with protesters, rather than signalling that the agents agreed with their views.

The act became a symbol of dissent against racism, as viral footage showed Floyd’s killer, white police officer Derek Chauvin, kneeling on his neck while he was pinned to the floor for more than nine minutes.

An official post-mortem examination found Floyd died of a heart attack caused by neck compression. Chauvin is currently serving a 22-and-a-half-year sentence for Floyd’s murder.

Taking the knee had also been used in the US as a protest against racial injustice and police brutality before Floyd’s murder – notably by former NFL player Colin Kaepernick.

Friday’s mass sacking is the latest in a string of firings at the FBI.

The agency’s former acting director Brian Driscoll, former assistant director in charge of the Washington field office Steven Jensen, and Spencer Evans, former special agent in charge of the Las Vegas field office, have all been let go recently.

Earlier this month, the three former agents sued FBI Director Kash Patel and US Attorney General Pam Bondi, alleging the officials fired them to appease President Donald Trump.

In its statement on Friday, the FBI Agents Association said Patel’s “dangerous new pattern of actions are weakening the Bureau” and making it “harder to recruit and retain skilled agents – ultimately putting our nation at greater risk.”

Challenging the Client

0



Client Challenge



JavaScript is disabled in your browser.

Please enable JavaScript to proceed.

A required part of this site couldn’t load. This may be due to a browser
extension, network issues, or browser settings. Please check your
connection, disable any ad blockers, or try using a different browser.

Verifying the Accuracy of Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu’s Address at UNGA | United Nations News

0

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed the United Nations General Assembly, signalling he saw no end in sight for the war on Gaza, despite international condemnation.

Netanyahu also dismissed a UN commission’s findings that Israel has committed genocide in Gaza, saying the forced displacement of civilians undermined the assessment.

Recommended Stories

list of 3 itemsend of list

Here’s a rundown of some of his key claims, fact-checked.

Netanyahu’s claims on Gaza

Claim: If Hamas agrees to Israel’s demands, the war could end “right now”.

Factcheck: Israel, with full political and military support from the US, has blocked numerous efforts to reach a ceasefire in Gaza.

Netanyahu and his government have been repeatedly blasted by the families of captives held in Gaza, along with hundreds of thousands of Israelis, who protested to call for an end to the war and the return of all captives.

On March 18, Israel torpedoed a ceasefire deal with Hamas by killing over 400 Palestinians and starting a months-long total blockade that led to famine in the enclave.

Earlier this month, Israel claimed it had agreed to a ceasefire proposal again, only to immediately bomb Qatar in an ultimately failed effort to wipe out the entire political leadership of Hamas outside Gaza and kill any hope of negotiations.

Claim: Israel is taking great pains to minimise civilian casualties in Gaza.

Factcheck: Contrary to Netanyahu’s statement that the ratio of non-combatant to combatant casualties in Gaza is “less than two to one”, an investigation in August revealed that a classified Israeli database clearly showed that 83 percent of the people Israel was killing in Gaza were civilians.

The investigation by +972 magazine, Local Call, and the Guardian showed that out of the list of 8,900 names of Hamas fighters in the database, several were listed as “probably” killed, meaning the percentage of civilians killed may be even higher.

Claim: Hamas is the one endangering civilians in Gaza by forcing people to act as its human shields.

Factcheck: Netanyahu’s claim that “Hamas implants itself in mosques, schools, hospitals, apartment buildings and tries to force these civilians not to leave, to stay in harm’s way”, repeated a justification Israel has often used to bomb places where civilians shelter.

This includes hospitals, schools, mosques, water facilities, power stations and other infrastructure required to sustain life.

Meanwhile, it has offered no evidence of an effort by Hamas and other fighters to use civilian facilities as so-called “military command and control centres”.

Claim: A country committing genocide would not plead with civilians to get out of the way of its bombs.

Netanyahu claims that issuing forced evacuation orders, which give families very little time to pack up their entire lives and flee or risk being killed, negates multilateral evidence-based findings that genocide is being committed in Gaza.

The International Court of Justice, an independent international UN commission of inquiry, the International Association of Genocide Scholars, a large number of international human rights groups, including Israeli group B’Tselem and Amnesty International, and several countries have found that Israel has been committing genocidal acts in Gaza.

The UN and a slew of international organisations and doctors working on the ground in Gaza have testified that Israel has also been systematically blocking aid while creating a highly unsafe and desperate environment in which aid is regularly looted.

Claim: Israel is not blocking aid from entering Gaza; it is Hamas that is stealing the aid from Palestinians.

Factcheck: Several reports have found that Hamas is not stealing the meagre aid that is allowed into Gaza. One report was by Israel’s own army, another by the US’s foreign aid agency, USAID.

Israel has imposed full blockades of all aid entering the Strip at various times, most recently between March and May this year.

In May, it announced its support for the so-called Gaza Humanitarian Foundation as an aid distributor, with only four locations for the two million people in the entire Gaza Strip.

The GHF relies on armed guards and Israeli soldiers to “secure” its premises, and more than 1,000 people have been killed there as they tried to secure food aid for their families.

On the other hand, Netanyahu has admitted openly that his government is supporting a Palestinian militia in Gaza that is widely reported to be looting aid trucks.

Netanyahu’s claims on the region

Claim: Iran is rapidly developing a massive nuclear weapons programme and a massive ballistic missile programme that were meant to destroy Israel, threaten the US and blackmail nations.

Factcheck: Iran has always said its nuclear programme, which it has had for over two decades, is for civilian purposes and that it is not seeking a nuclear weapon.

Iran does not currently possess a nuclear weapon, unlike what Israel is believed to possess.

Western belief in the 2000s that Tehran wanted to build a bomb culminated in UN sanctions, which were lifted through the 2015 nuclear deal, which heavily restricted Iran’s enrichment capacity.

Trump unilaterally left the deal in 2018, prompting Iran to gradually ramp up its nuclear enrichment, which is now at up to 60 percent, a close technical step from the over 90 percent required for a bomb, but it maintains it will never build a weapon of mass destruction.

Claim: Israel has killed Iran’s top military commanders and its top nuclear scientists

Factcheck: Israel has succeeded in assassinating dozens of top military commanders and nuclear scientists across Iran, but Iranian authorities have vowed that eliminating individuals will not stop it from achieving its goals.

They also said some of the country’s air defences remain intact, while others have been repaired or replaced. Iran has also threatened to launch more retaliatory strikes if Israel attacks it.

Claim: Israel has killed half of the leadership of the Houthis, Hamas, and Hezbollah, destroyed former Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad’s armaments in Syria and deterred Shia militias in Iraq.

Factcheck: The Israeli military has attacked Yemen repeatedly, including its single-largest strikes on the capital Sanaa on Thursday, allegedly targeting the headquarters of the Houthi General Staff, and killing the Houthi prime minister last month, along with other cabinet ministers and leaders.

But it does not appear to have wiped out Houthi military command, which continues to launch drone and missile strikes on Israel in opposition to the war on Palestinians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank.

Israel has assassinated much of the top political and military leadership of Hezbollah, including longtime secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah, but the Lebanese group remains defiant, vowing to continue fighting against Israel.

Israel has killed senior political leaders of Hamas inside and outside Gaza, including Yahya Sinwar and Ismail Haniyeh. Hamas, although weakened, continues to launch attacks against invading Israeli ground forces in Gaza and is recruiting more fighters.

In Syria, after the fall of the 50-year Assad dynasty, Israel continued to attack Syria’s military assets and infrastructure, destroying much of it. Israel also continues to militarily occupy the Golan Heights and large parts of Syria south of the capital Damascus, arguing it is necessary for its security.

Latvia calls on NATO to strengthen Baltic air defense in response to Russian incursions

0

Latvia urges NATO to bolster Baltic air defence after Russian incursions

Trump Authorizes ‘Full Force’ Deployment of Troops to Portland

0

President Donald Trump has ordered the deployment of US troops to “war ravaged” Portland, Oregon, authorising use of “full force” if necessary.

“I am directing Secretary of War, Pete Hegseth, to provide all necessary Troops to protect War ravaged Portland, and any of our ICE Facilities under siege from attack by Antifa, and other domestic terrorists,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social. “I am also authorizing Full Force, if necessary.”

After Los Angeles, Washington, DC, and Memphis, Portland would be the fourth city where the president has deployed troops on US soil.

Portland’s mayor Keith Wilson, a Democrat, had previously pushed back on Trump’s plans to deploy troops.

“I have not asked for – and do not need – federal intervention,” he said earlier this month.

Trump’s Saturday morning post does not specify whether he intends to activate national guard or regular US military.

Sean Evans: Slow Progress Can Still Have Meaning, Just Like Glaciers Changing Landscapes Without Speed

0

Hot Ones host Sean Evans delivered a poignant motivational speech during a surprise appearance on popular Twitch streamer Kai Cenat’s Mafiathon 3 livestream on Wednesday, offering insight and advice related to patience and perseverance wrapped in his signature down-to-earth style.

Evans, who has built a career interviewing celebrities while they consume progressively spicier chicken wings, appeared on Cenat’s 30-day streaming marathon to raise money for building a school in Nigeria, hosting a live Hot Ones segment. However, it was Evans’ impromptu speech about persistence that’s been making the rounds online.

Since the’ speech was so eloquent, here it is in its entirely:

“Slow motion is better than no motion. You know, you might be facing a mountain of problems, but don’t just wait for that perfect moment to race to the summit, okay? Just start with a step. Just take a step forward. Every expert that you know was once a beginner. Every master of their craft was once a big, embarrassing mess. Glaciers, okay, they can change landscapes, but they don’t do it with their speed. They do it through steady pressure by always moving forward. Don’t be so afraid of not moving fast enough that you choose not to move at all. That’s what I have. Thank you so much for watching. Shout out to the chat.”

The 39-year-old Illinois native, who studied broadcast journalism at the University of Illinois and worked as a copywriter before launching Hot Ones in 2015, has built his reputation on thoughtful interviewing combined with the unique challenge of increasingly spicy wings.

The show, which he co-created with Chris Schonberger, has been praised for Evans’ deep research and ability to extract authentic moments from celebrity guests. But as Evans alluded to in his speech, his success wasn’t made overnight.

Evans began his career doing on-camera interviews with celebrities like 2 Chainz and Steph Curry for Complex Magazine before Hot Ones launched him to internet fame. In 2017, Evans told me he thought he was destined to be a weatherman, based off a compliment from one of his professors.

It makes sense that Evans wanted to participate in Cenat’s ambitious Mafiathon 3, which began Sept. 1 and features 30 days of continuous streaming, as Cenat had appeared on Hot Ones just two months ago. Cenat’s livestreaming event has already broken records, with the influencer currently holding nearly 767,000 active Twitch subscribers, the most ever, as he aims for 1 million. Previous celebrity guests have included Kim Kardashian, Mariah Carey, and Linkin Park.

Did your workplace make our list of the 100 Best Companies to Work For?
Explore this year’s list.

NBA Player Michael Porter Jr. Puts Denver Condo on Market for $5.3 Million

0

Michael Porter Jr. listed his 3-bedroom, 4-bath condo on the 40th floor of Four Seasons Residences in Denver for $5.25 million, according to Charlie Lankston of Realtor.com.

Michael Porter Jr. Bought Denver Condo For $4.5 Million

This comes nearly three months after the Denver Nuggets traded the 6-foot-10 wing and a 2032 first-round draft pick to the Brooklyn Nets for Cameron Johnson.

Porter, 27, was selected 14th overall by the Nuggets in the 2018 NBA draft out of the University of Missouri. He signed a five-year contract extension with Denver in 2021 that was worth an estimated $200 million.

That same year, Porter paid $4.5 million for his 4,800-square-foot condo, which had previously been owned by famed architect Curtis Fentress, per Lankston.

NBA Star Michael Porter Jr. Lists Denver Condo For $5.3M NBA Star Michael Porter Jr. Lists Denver Condo For $5.3M
Architectural Digest
NBA Star Michael Porter Jr. Lists Denver Condo For $5.3MNBA Star Michael Porter Jr. Lists Denver Condo For $5.3M
Architectural Digest

The listing is held by Kim Norton of Kentwood Real Estate Cherry Creek.

“Originally conceived as the private residence of one of the world’s most revered masters of public architecture, it bears the unmistakable imprint of precision, discipline, and artistry,” the listing notes.

“Walls of glass invite light to move across marble floors and polished surfaces, transforming the home throughout the day, while at night the city below becomes a glittering sea of lights.

“Two expansive covered balconies, framed by bespoke custom planters, extend the living spaces outward, framing both mountain vistas and urban horizons while preserving perfect privacy.”

Four Seasons Residences Offers A Variety Of Amenities

The primary suite features a custom-designed bed frame and a wall of beautifully crafted closets. The spa-inspired bath boasts a deep soaking tub and dual vanities.

Although smaller, the additional two guest suites are just as luxurious, “reflecting the same commitment to comfort and refinement,” the listing notes.

In addition, Porter’s unit showcases high-tech smart features, including custom lighting and remote-controlled shades, which are meant to “heighten both simplicity and ease” of life inside the unit.

Four Seasons Residences also offers residents a 24-hour concierge and valet, in-residence dining, housekeeping, a full-service spa, a state-of-the-art fitness center, and a year-round saltwater pool.

Porter Spends $250 Per Day On Ubers In New York City

Porter has been continuing his life of luxury in New York.

Per Spotrac, Porter is slated to earn $38.3 million this upcoming season and $40.8 million in 2026-27. However, the six-year NBA veteran admitted recently that he’s been racking up Uber bills.

Speaking during the Nets’ media day, Porter said that he’d originally arrived in New York with his car and had been planning to drive himself around.

Porter quickly realized he didn’t feel comfortable navigating the busy streets, so he decided to switch to Ubers for roughly $250 per day.

“I’m recently getting acclimated to the city,” he said, per the New York Post. “The traffic is tough. I shipped a car out here. I was thinking, ‘Can I drive?’ I ended up being like, ‘No.’ The $200 to $250 a day of Ubering is worth it out here.”

The former Nuggets star later told reporters that he has already found himself a home, explaining that he lives in a “peaceful” neighborhood near the Nets’ home arena at Barclays Center.