Zuckerberg to axe thousands of low performers, authors hit back at UK government over ‘AI theft’

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Mark Zuckerberg is preparing to sack thousands of low performers
at Meta as part of a productivity drive that “celebrates aggression”. The US billionaire has unveiled plans to cut and replace 5pc of the company’s lowest performers – equivalent to around 3,600 staff – in the coming months. In a memo to staff on Tuesday, first reported by Bloomberg, Mr Zuckerberg said: “I’ve decided to raise the bar on performance management and move out low-performers faster.” Telegraph

Kate Mosse and Richard Osman have hit back at Labour’s plan to give artificial intelligence companies broad freedoms to mine artistic works for data, saying it could destroy growth in creative fields and amount to theft. The best-selling novellists spoke out after Keir Starmer a national drive to make the UK “one of the great AI superpowers” and endorsed a 50-point action plan that included changes to how technology firms can use copyrighted text and data to train their models. The Guardian 

Apple has already been in the news this week after Bloomberg journalist and Apple expert Mark Gurman claimed that the entry level iPad could soon be upgraded to run on the same processor as the iPad mini. The A17 Pro would give it the requirements necessary to offer Apple Intelligence. However, that wasn’t the only thing his Power On newsletter mentioned – Gurman claimed that a new Apple TV 4K was on the cards for this year, too. And it’s “planned for release toward the end of the year”, he revealed. T3.com

Apple AI is sending misleading push notifications about sensitive stories like Gisele Pelicot’s mass rape trial, Britain’s grooming gang scandal and a prison officer filmed having sex with an inmate. Concerns have now been raised with Apple by multiple news organisations over the AI summary feature, which is available on iPhones with Apple Intelligence. The feature “must be revoked”, the National Union of Journalists told Sky News, as the “inaccurate news summaries shared to audiences through Apple Intelligence demonstrate the feature is not fit for purpose”. Sky News 

The US markets watchdog has filed a lawsuit against Elon Musk alleging he failed to disclose that he had amassed a stake in Twitter, allowing him to buy shares at “artificially low prices. “The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) lawsuit alleges that the multi-billionaire Tesla boss saved $150m (£123m) in share purchases as a result. According to SEC rules, investors whose holdings surpass 5% have 10 days to report that they have crossed that threshold. Musk did so 21 days after the purchase, the filing says. In a social media post Musk called the SEC a “totally broken organisation.” BBC 

Millions of broadband, mobile and TV customers will see their bills increase this spring. Depending on your provider and when your contract started, your bill could rise by the rate of inflation plus a percentage on top. New rules introduced by industry regulator Ofcom, requiring broadband, mobile and pay TV providers to set out any price rises in pounds and pence before you take out a new contract, come into force on Friday 17 January. However, these rules DON’T apply to contracts taken out before providers implemented these new terms.

Chris Price
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