top exec
Campbell's admission about shocking industrial practice resurfaces after top exec made claims about soup's ingredient in leaked audio
National Guard soldiers shot in Washington DC'terror attack' are named... as Afghan gunman's chilling 40-hour drive across the country emerges Patrick Mahomes' bizarre addition to his Thanksgiving meal leaves fans disgusted My book on the Kennedys was used as a'mistress manual' by Olivia Nuzzi... then this wannabe Carolyn Bessette had the nerve to hound me with these outrageous texts: MAUREEN CALLAHAN Bryan Kohberger becomes nightmare prison diva... as he throws huge tantrum over BANANAS behind bars Campbell's under fire again just a day after top exec was canned for soup ingredient bombshell Watch distressing moment'drugged' Tara Reid COLLAPSES... as friends reveal urgent developments about'surveillance footage': 'They should be prosecuted' Deaths from highly infectious virus are growing... as states brace for widespread outbreaks Karoline Leavitt's family member was swarmed by ICE agents while picking up son from school as child's father tell her to'self deport' Cuckolded ex of writer who'had affair' with RFK Jr rebounds with lookalike feminist... who hates men but fetches his coffee How my bifold doors nearly killed me. It's a middle-class status symbol, but a horrific danger landed me in surgery. Her people tell me extraordinary accusation is'highly defamatory'. Princess of Wales visits the Anna Freud Centre to launch new project supporting children's mental health Campbell's under fire again just a day after top exec was canned for soup ingredient bombshell READ MORE: Campbell's FIRES executive secretly recorded saying its soups are full of'bioengineered meat' and made for'poor people' Campbell's admission to illegally discharging wastewater into a major US river has resurfaced amid a scandal involving its iconic soup ingredients. The New Jersey-based company admitted in September that its Napoleon, Ohio, canning plant illegally dumped wastewater more than 5,400 times from April 2018 to December 2024, breaking federal water pollution laws.
Revealed: What makes the perfect Race Across the World partner (and why it probably ISN'T your mum!)
National Guard soldiers shot in Washington DC'terror attack' are named... as Afghan gunman's chilling 40-hour drive across the country emerges Patrick Mahomes' bizarre addition to his Thanksgiving meal leaves fans disgusted My book on the Kennedys was used as a'mistress manual' by Olivia Nuzzi... then this wannabe Carolyn Bessette had the nerve to hound me with these outrageous texts: MAUREEN CALLAHAN Bryan Kohberger becomes nightmare prison diva... as he throws huge tantrum over BANANAS behind bars Campbell's under fire again just a day after top exec was canned for soup ingredient bombshell Watch distressing moment'drugged' Tara Reid COLLAPSES... as friends reveal urgent developments about'surveillance footage': 'They should be prosecuted' Deaths from highly infectious virus are growing... as states brace for widespread outbreaks Karoline Leavitt's family member was swarmed by ICE agents while picking up son from school as child's father tell her to'self deport' Cuckolded ex of writer who'had affair' with RFK Jr rebounds with lookalike feminist... who hates men but fetches his coffee How my bifold doors nearly killed me. It's a middle-class status symbol, but a horrific danger landed me in surgery. Her people tell me extraordinary accusation is'highly defamatory'. Princess of Wales visits the Anna Freud Centre to launch new project supporting children's mental health Revealed: What makes the perfect Race Across the World partner (and why it probably ISN'T your mum!) READ MORE: How does your commute compare to the world's longest? From former spouses to reunited brothers, BBC's Race Across the World has had a wide range of pairings over the years.
An AI-powered chatbot for customers helped Goldman Sachs' Marcus realize 'massive savings,' according to a top exec. Here's how.
Chatbots and artificial intelligence have delivered great returns for Goldman Sachs' Marcus as the online bank looks to manage its growth. Marcus, Goldman's digital consumer bank, significantly "cut down on costs and expenses in terms of people" at call centers by using the tech, Abhinav Anand, an MD and head of lending for consumer at Goldman Sachs, said at a recent industry event. "That itself, at the scale at which we are growing, is a massive savings and a good way to measure the return on our investments," said Anand, who was speaking at the Ai4 Finance Summit in New York on Tuesday. Marcus is not "removing call center positions" but rather using the chatbots, which the bank calls "intelligent AI enabled chat services," to manage growth, a spokesperson for Goldman Sachs told Insider. "We are not removing call center representative positions, we are continuing to grow across the board in the consumer business including within our call centers. We are growing at an incredible pace and are continuously hiring for new roles and positions," the spokesperson told Insider.
Google wants 'more work' with Defense Department, top exec says
Fox News Flash top headlines for Nov. 7 are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com Google has no intention of leaving the national security business, despite perceptions in some quarters that the tech giant is against working with the Defense Department. The search giant's senior vice president for global affairs said Tuesday that the firm currently has contracts with the Pentagon to work on cybersecurity, business automation and deepfake detection, and would like to have more, reports DefenseOne. "It's been frustrating," Kent Walker said at the National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence Conference in reference to perceptions that the company is against working on these issues.
What We Learned from Top Execs about their Big Data and AI Initiatives
NewVantage Partners has released its 7th annual survey of senior corporate c-executives on the topics of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence (AI) business adoption. The survey was first conducted in 2012 in response to Fortune 1000 business and technology c-executives who sought to understand the potential impact of Big Data and its implications for leading companies. This year, c-executive decision-makers comprised 97.5% of the survey participants, with nearly 65 Fortune 1000 or industry leading firms among the participants. In recent years, Fortune 1000 companies have come to recognize that to compete with highly-agile data-driven competitors, mainstream firms must become more adept at leveraging their data assets โ 91.6% of executives report that the pace of investment in Big Data and AI is increasing, while 87.8% report a greater urgency to invest. Yet, mainstream companies face challenges in becoming data-driven.
How an IBM Watson Health rescue mission collapsed -- and a top exec was ousted
The elite team of engineers and medical specialists assembled by IBM's Watson Health division had the innocuous code name "Project Josephine," but its mission could not have been more urgent: to fix the artificial intelligence software at the core of the company's campaign to tackle the $7 trillion global health care market. The predicament faced by IBM officials, STAT has found, was that it could not get its software to reliably understand and analyze language in patient medical records. That was critical for the company to deliver on multimillion-dollar contracts with hospitals and drug companies. Unlock this article by subscribing to STAT Plus and enjoy your first 30 days free! STAT Plus is a premium subscription that delivers daily market-moving biopharma coverage and in-depth science reporting from a team with decades of industry experience.
Microsoft is working on AI chips across its different devices, top exec says
Microsoft is working on an artificial intelligence (AI) chip for its next generation HoloLens headset. And the U.S. technology giant could take it to other products in its hardware range, Panos Panay, corporate vice president of devices at Microsoft, told CNBC on Tuesday. In July, Microsoft disclosed it was working on a processor for the second generation of HoloLens, a headset that allows users to interact and touch digital images overlaid on the real world. Microsoft calls this "mixed reality." The AI chip will allow HoloLens to do things like recognize objects in the line of sight.