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American City Business Journals
Here’s why Mark Zuckerberg is a bad boss, according to a leadership expert
To understand why Meta Platforms Inc. has been struggling of late and likely won’t rebound anytime soon, one doesn’t have to look much beyond founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, according to one leadership expert. Bad bosses can be placed into five different categories, Bill George, a senior fellow at Harvard Business School, told CNBC. Zuckerberg, who has headed Facebook’s parent company since he founded it while a student at Harvard, fits into three of those, George said.
Reuters
Russian consumer prices drop for 10th week as rate-setting meeting looms
Russian consumer prices fell for a 10th straight week, led by a drop in prices for some staple vegetables, data showed on Wednesday, just two days before the central bank is expected to trim interest rates for the sixth time this year. Sluggish consumer demand and the rouble’s strength over the past few months have also slowed inflation. The consumer price index dipped 0.03% in the week to Sept. 12 after easing 0.13% a week earlier, the federal statistics service Rosstat said on Wednesday.
Reuters
Ukraine welcomes report on international security guarantees rejected by Moscow
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and his government are studying proposals drawn up by senior officials and the former head of NATO that envisage Western countries providing future security guarantees to Kyiv. Russia has already condemned the draft document, which also underlines Ukraine’s continued “aspiration to join NATO and benefit from its mutual defence arrangements”. Moscow views NATO’s eastern expansion as a direct threat to its own security and has cited the prospect of Ukraine building closer ties with the alliance as a major reason for its invasion on Feb. 24.
Reuters
Turkey’s Erdogan: Armenian attitude towards Azerbaijan will have consequences
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday Armenia’s attitude towards Azerbaijan was unacceptable and would have consequences, after days of clashes between the two neighbours. “We find the situation that has occurred due to Armenia’s violation of the agreement – reached after the (2020) war that resulted in the victory of Azerbaijan – to be unacceptable,” Erdogan told a rally in the Turkish capital Ankara. Armenia and Azerbaijan, which have been at odds for decades over the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, accused each other of starting a series of border clashes that erupted late on Monday.
Bloomberg
Russia Is Getting Frozen Out As Traders Negotiate Metals Contracts
(Bloomberg) — The metals world is beginning its annual ritual of hashing out contracts for the upcoming year with one key question in many traders’ minds: What’s going to happen to Russian supplies? Most Read from BloombergUS Inflation Tops Forecasts, Cementing Odds of Big Fed HikeTerra Co-Founder Do Kwon Faces Arrest Warrant in South KoreaStocks Hold Gains in Volatile Day After Selloff: Markets WrapUgly Selloff Pushes Stocks Down Most Since 2020: Markets WrapXi Returns to World Stage With Puti
Yahoo News
‘Betrayal and injustice’: U.N. secretary-general says global climate change response is falling short
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres delivered a stark message demanding more aggressive action to mitigate climate change at the beginning of the U.N. General Assembly.
Reuters
California’s Newsom signs bill requiring social media firms transparency
The law, AB-587, will require social media companies to publicly post their policies regarding hate speech, disinformation, harassment and extremism on their platforms, and report data on their enforcement of the policies. Last year, the governor of Texas signed a bill prohibiting social media firms from restricting users or their posts based on their viewpoint. The Supreme Court in May blocked the law, after technology industry groups sued.
The Root
Reparations Advocates Tell California Gov. Gavin Newsom: Don’t Extend Legislation Deadline
A couple of months ago, The Root wrote about California’s progress in potentially becoming the first state to offer reparations to those who are descendants of the slave trade in the United States. First, there was a 500-page report released in June documenting how the U.S. could address the wrongs done to African Americans. Then, there was the task of the state looking into who would gain any monetary benefits from a potential payout. Now, reparations advocates are pushing back on a bill that w
Bloomberg
IBM to Post $5.9 Billion Pension-Transfer Charge in Third Quarter
(Bloomberg) — International Business Machines Corp. said it would report a $5.9 billion one-time pretax charge in the third quarter as a result of an agreement to offload pension obligations to two life insurers.Most Read from BloombergUS Inflation Tops Forecasts, Cementing Odds of Big Fed HikeTerra Co-Founder Do Kwon Faces Arrest Warrant in South KoreaStocks Hold Gains in Volatile Day After Selloff: Markets WrapUgly Selloff Pushes Stocks Down Most Since 2020: Markets WrapXi Returns to World St