Fujifilm sues Xerox for over $1 bln
Fujifilm Holdings sued Xerox for well over $1 billion, faulting it for succumbing to pressure from activist investors Carl Icahn and Darwin Deason. Fred Katayama reports.
The battery start-up might reach its ambitions sooner than expected.
Nvidia hasn't been able to make much of a dent in the automotive chip market, but there is one company that's winning big in this space.
While the energy sector has gotten off to a hot start this year, opportunities in master limited partnerships (MLP) stick out from the crowd.
These three reliable dividend payers have historically high yields thanks to deep price declines.
Intel was hit with more bad news that has enormous implications for investors.
Sternlicht moved his real estate company Starwood Capital Group to Miami in 2018, but he says a lot more companies want to “move down” and can’t.
“I don’t have a financial adviser because no one‘s going to take $25,000.”
Intel and AMD's latest earnings reports make one thing clear about the state of Nvidia's competition in the AI chip market.
AI startup Anthropic is changing its policies to allow minors to use its generative AI systems -- in certain circumstances, at least. Announced in a post on the company's official blog Friday, Anthropic will begin letting teens and preteens use third-party apps (but not its own apps, necessarily) powered by its AI models so long as the developers of those apps implement specific safety features and disclose to users which Anthropic technologies they're leveraging. In a support article, Anthropic lists several safety measures devs creating AI-powered apps for minors should include, like age verification systems, content moderation and filtering and educational resources on "safe and responsible" AI use for minors.
Homebuyers with means are turning to an old strategy to get around a new crop of high mortgage rates: all-cash deals.