logo
#

Latest news with #Peng

Business Insider CEO details post-layoff strategy
Business Insider CEO details post-layoff strategy

Axios

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Axios

Business Insider CEO details post-layoff strategy

Business Insider's recent layoffs and changes were "very difficult" but necessary to put the business back on track, CEO Barbara Peng said at an Axios event at Cannes on Wednesday. "We have a responsibility to build a sustainable business. If we can't support ourselves, we actually can't do all the good journalism that we want to and really reach that potential," she said. Why it matters: Publishers are reckoning with declining search traffic across the media industry and reinvesting as they prepare for potentially even greater disruption from AI. What they're saying:"We had to let go of a lot of really talented people, and that's hard for an organization, but the reason we made these changes was because of our strategy," Peng said. "About a year and a half ago, I took us back to being Business Insider after we were Insider for many years and focused us back in on our core and our strengths and what people love about us, which is business, tech and innovation journalism," she said. Catch up quick: BI laid off 21% of its staff last month as the organization goes "all-in on AI." In May, Peng said in a staff memo that BI has launched several AI-driven products, including onsite search and paywall technology. "This just in general is not new for Business Insider. We were born in the moment that the smartphone launched, and it was really a moment that we embraced. We were very curious. We found joy in it. We tried things. We were risk tolerant, and we're approaching this moment exactly the same," she told Axios on Wednesday. Zoom in: Peng said BI has pulled back on areas that were sensitive to search traffic like its SEO- and Google-driven commerce business and has invested in new experiments like an AI-generated audio briefing. "You can imagine that this really opens up other times in the day, other audiences that wouldn't have had access to us," Peng said. Peng said BI's revenue will be more heavily weighted to subscription and events. Its audio briefing isn't yet monetized. "One of the things you have to think about especially with innovation and trying things is you kind of have to give a little bit of space for the product to launch and to take hold," Peng said. "If we can engage an audience, if we can bring them value, we can monetize it afterwards."

Chelsea bring in Livia Peng as first summer addition
Chelsea bring in Livia Peng as first summer addition

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Chelsea bring in Livia Peng as first summer addition

Chelsea have confirmed the signing of Swiss international goalkeeper Livia Peng from Werder Bremen on a four-year contract. The 23-year-old will officially link up with the Blues on 1 July, once her current deal expires, and is expected to compete with Hannah Hampton for the starting spot under new head coach Sonia Bompastor. Advertisement Peng arrives as a direct replacement for Sweden's Zecira Musovic, who is set to leave the club this summer when her contract runs out. Capped seven times by Switzerland, Peng previously enjoyed success at FC Zurich, where she helped the side secure league and cup doubles in both 2019 and 2022. She joined Werder Bremen in 2023 and quickly became their first-choice keeper, starting all but one of their Frauen-Bundesliga matches last season as they finished seventh. Speaking about his move, Livia said: "I'm excited about everything. I'm looking forward to meeting the team, the staff, and everyone at the club. The support here is so big, I can't wait to play at Stamford Bridge. Advertisement "I'm excited to meet the fans at the stadium. I've heard so many good things about them. I'm looking forward to seeing what the Chelsea family is like. I want to feel their passion and support."

Chelsea sign Swiss international keeper Peng
Chelsea sign Swiss international keeper Peng

Yahoo

time10-06-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Chelsea sign Swiss international keeper Peng

Chelsea have completed the signing of Swiss international goalkeeper Livia Peng on a four-year deal. WSL Full-Time were informed of the news via an official club press release from The Blues this afternoon. Advertisement Peng will officially join Chelsea from German Google-Pixel Frauen-Bundesliga club Werder Bremen when she becomes a free agent on 1 July 2025. The player started her senior career in her native Switzerland with FC Zürich. Spells with BK Häcken and Levante followed before Peng joined German club Werder Bremen in 2023. On the international stage, Peng has nine senior caps to her name for Switzerland. The keeper will now test herself alongside some of the world's very best players at new club Chelsea. After joining The Blues, Peng said 'It feels so good to be here. When I was 10, I dreamed of playing for Chelsea. Now, my childhood dream has come true and it's so exciting. I'm really happy to join the Chelsea family and get started. It's such a big club. Chelsea want to win titles and so do I. We're a good match. I'm hungry to win here.' Peng comes in as a replacement for Swedish keeper Zećira Mušović who is moving on this summer when her contract with the South West Londoners comes to an end.

Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use
Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use

"Yesterday, a paraglider named Liu Ge set a new world record for the altitude of a conscious human flight in the #Qilian Mountains," reads a Douyin post on May 25, 2025 written in simplified Chinese, referring to the cluster of peaks in northern China. Footage in the post supposedly shows three clips from the accident -- an aerial view of the man followed by a closer angle apparently from a sports camera and finally visuals of the paraglider covered with ice and flying over clouds. Similar visuals surfaced on X and Facebook after Chinese media reported a paraglider named Peng Yujiang was carried away by a sudden updraft to an altitude of over 8,500 kilometres (5,200 miles) while training in the Qilian Mountains in Gansu Province on May 24. Peng lost consciousness for a short time before he regained awareness and operated the paraglider back to the ground, according to an article from state-run broadcaster CCTV (archived link). According to an incident report issued by the Gansu Province Aviation Sports Association, Peng was banned from flying for six months although authorities said his ground training did not require prior approval (archived link). Multiple paragliding experts told AFP there have been previous cases of paragliders being carried up to dangerous heights. "It is possible to get carried up to extreme altitudes, but it also happens to be very easily avoidable. This can only happen in cumulonimbus clouds, aka thunderstorms," said Emil Kaminski, safety officer at the Hong Kong Paragliding Association. "Pilots who have been lifted to such dangerous heights have either intentionally flown into them OR inadvertently flown into them because not paying attention to weather OR due to poor training, poor understanding of the weather." "This is very rare (to be accidentally carried to such an altitude) but it is possible," Geoff Davison, a paragliding instructor at Fly Koh Larn in Thailand, separately said. However, the circulating footage is not an accurate depiction of the incident. A reverse image search using a keyframe found the first five seconds in the compilation matches a clip posted May 26 on Facebook that bears the watermark of Doubao AI, a ChatGPT-like conversational bot created by TikTok owner ByteDance (archived link). The subsequent clips have inconsistent visuals, an AFP analysis found. The colour of the paraglider's helmet and the straps of the equipment are initially white but inexplicably turn black. The man's legs are also depicted hanging out of the paraglider at first but is later shown as covered by an insulating cocoon. Despite the meteoric progress in Generative AI, errors still show up in AI-generated content. These defects are the best way to recognise a fabricated image. Multiple news organisations including Reuters, NBC News and ABC News said they took down footage of the incident from CCTV after they found signs of AI (archived here, here and here).

Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use
Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use

AFP

time09-06-2025

  • Climate
  • AFP

Visual errors in China paragliding accident clip suggest AI use

"Yesterday, a paraglider named Liu Ge set a new world record for the altitude of a conscious human flight in the #Qilian Mountains," reads a post on May 25, 2025 written in simplified Chinese, referring to the cluster of peaks in northern China. Footage in the post supposedly shows three clips from the accident -- an aerial view of the man followed by a closer angle apparently from a sports camera and finally visuals of the paraglider covered with ice and flying over clouds. Image Screenshot of the false Facebook post taken on June 4, 2025 Similar visuals surfaced on X and Facebook after Chinese media reported a paraglider named Peng Yujiang was carried away by a sudden updraft to an altitude of over 8,500 kilometres (5,200 miles) while training in the Qilian Mountains in Gansu Province on May 24. Peng lost consciousness for a short time before he regained awareness and operated the paraglider back to the ground, according to an article from state-run broadcaster CCTV (archived link). According to an incident report issued by the Gansu Province Aviation Sports Association, Peng was banned from flying for six months although authorities said his ground training did not require prior approval (archived link). Multiple paragliding experts told AFP there have been previous cases of paragliders being carried up to dangerous heights. "It is possible to get carried up to extreme altitudes, but it also happens to be very easily avoidable. This can only happen in cumulonimbus clouds, aka thunderstorms," said Emil Kaminski, safety officer at the Hong Kong Paragliding Association. "Pilots who have been lifted to such dangerous heights have either intentionally flown into them OR inadvertently flown into them because not paying attention to weather OR due to poor training, poor understanding of the weather." "This is very rare (to be accidentally carried to such an altitude) but it is possible," Geoff Davison, a paragliding instructor at Fly Koh Larn in Thailand, separately said. However, the circulating footage is not an accurate depiction of the incident. A reverse image search using a keyframe found the first five seconds in the compilation matches a clip posted May 26 on Facebook that bears the watermark of The subsequent clips have inconsistent visuals, an AFP analysis found. The colour of the paraglider's helmet and the straps of the equipment are initially white but inexplicably turn black. The man's legs are also depicted hanging out of the paraglider at first but is later shown as covered by an insulating cocoon. Image Screenshots showing the visual inconsistencies between the clips Multiple news organisations including Reuters, NBC News and they took down footage of the incident from CCTV after they found signs of AI (archived here, here and here).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store