Snap Inc blames AI as it lays off 1,000 workers

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Snapchat’s parent company plans to lay off 16% of its employees, around 1,000 people, citing “rapid advancements in artificial intelligence”, the social media company told staff on Wednesday in an internal memo.The staff reduction is part of a wave of tech industry layoffs in the past year, with many firms blaming AI for the cuts.Snap Inc’s layoffs follow demands last month from Irenic Capital Management, an activist investor whose portfolio manager wrote a letter to the Snap Inc CEO, Evan Spiegel, calling on him to reduce costs and headcount while criticizing the company’s current strategy.In Spiegel’s memo to staff, he claimed that the layoffs would move Snap towards profitability and suggested that artificial intelligence could fill the lack of human labor.“While these changes are necessary to realize Snap’s long-term potential, we believe that rapid advancements in artificial intelligence enable our teams to reduce repetitive work, increase velocity, and better support our community, partners, and advertisers,” Spiegel wrote.

Snap, which owns the photo- and video-sharing app Snapchat, joins a host of other tech companies that have carried out mass layoffs amid the AI boom.Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Jack Dorsey’s financial services firm Block and others have cut tens of thousands of jobs while embracing a shift towards AI tools and claiming that the technology allows for businesses to do more with less human labor.Although Spiegel’s memo stated that the company had already seen productivity benefits from AI, many experts and workers believe that the reality of receiving gains from implementing AI is murkier.Former workers and even pro-AI executives have also sometimes accused firms of “AI-washing” layoffs in an attempt to posture for investors and the market.Marc Andreesen, a venture capitalist and AI booster, similarly claimed recently that AI-related cuts were being used as an excuse for firms that had overstaffed.

As discontent with AI and concern over its impact on the labor market grow, however, top AI firms such as OpenAI and Anthropic have become increasingly concerned about their image problem and have mounted a political charm offensive to address AI’s potentially harmful effects on the labor market,OpenAI published a set of policy proposals earlier this month suggesting companies could move to a four-day workweek and that the government could create a public wealth fund to return profits to citizens,Snap’s stock rose around 6% in the early hours of trading on Wednesday following news of its layoffs – recovering some of its value after dropping in price over 30% in the year to date,The company, which was founded in 2011, employed about 5,200 people as of December of last year, according to regulatory filings,It had posted an additional 300 open roles, which Spiegel told staff will no longer be filled.

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Stephen Colbert to Trump: ‘Why would you start a beef with the pope?’

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‘This craving to go viral is tiresome’: the artists sick of the pressure to promote on social media

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Sir Neil Cossons obituary

Neil Cossons, who has died aged 87, wore a convincing disguise as a mild, respectable, affable, slightly conventional chap. But over a long and outstanding career in the museums and heritage sector – during which he was director of the Science Museum for 14 years – civil servants, trustees and ministers who battled with him over policy and funding discovered he was as tenacious as a terrier. He was determined to preserve and promote Britain’s scientific and industrial heritage and make culture accessible to all.In 2000 he became chair of English Heritage, the quango responsible for protecting the historic environment – since split into Historic England and the charity English Heritage, which cares for 400 sites and monuments.In his first year there, he led the steering group that produced Power of Place, an influential policy document produced in partnership with other heritage organisations, which stressed the value and potential of the wider historic environment including high streets, town centres and suburbs; it set the tone of his interests at English Heritage

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V&A censored catalogues after demands by Chinese printer

One of the UK’s leading museums has accepted demands by a Chinese firm that publishes its catalogues to remove images that fall foul of the country’s censorship laws.The Victoria and Albert Museum has agreed to requests by the Chinese printing company to delete maps and images from at least two recent exhibition catalogues, according to documents released to the Guardian after freedom of information requests.Like other prominent institutions, including the British Museum, Tate and the British Library, the V&A often uses Chinese printers because they can produce catalogues at half the cost of British or European companies.But in doing so, they have to accede to censorship requests relating to any topics or images deemed sensitive by the Chinese government, such as Buddhism, Taiwan, Tibet, Tiananmen Square and pro-democracy activities.The disclosures from the V&A lay bare the detailed scope of China’s censorship on museum publishers

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Jon Stewart on Trump’s Jesus photo denial: ‘Do you even care about lying to us any more?’

Late-night hosts reacted to the breakdown of peace talks between the US and Iran and Donald Trump’s one-sided beef with Pope Leo XIV.Jon Stewart returned to the Daily Show on Monday evening to break down the public clashes between Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV, which began when the pope delivered a “beautiful, compassionate message” for the Easter holiday calling for peace around the world.“It does not come into my brain that anyone in the world hearing the Pope’s message of peace will have some kind of weird problem with it,” the host noted. Except for Trump, who posted on his social media website Truth Social that the leader of the Catholic church was “weak” and a “loser”.“I am really starting to sour on this president,” Stewart joked

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Miracle Mile: boy meets girl, romcom meets nuclear war

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