daily brief

🌏 China spurns Nissan

Plus: AI’s godmother isn’t into fairy tales.

Image for article titled 🌏 China spurns Nissan
Photo: Tingshu Wang (Reuters)

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Here’s what you need to know

Nissan’s profits surged 92% last year as sales grew in every major market — except China. The Japanese automaker recorded a profit of 426.6 billion yen ($2.7 billion) for its fiscal year that ended in March.

Amazon’s stock hit a 52-week high. Investors are responding positively to its latest earnings report and its efforts in the AI space.

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Wall Street and the U.S. Treasury Department are trying to curb cyber attacks. The entities even have a fancy name for their offensive and defensive efforts: Project Fortress.

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A Boeing plane skidded off the runway in Senegal and caught fire yesterday. Ten people were injured, including the pilot, and were taken to the hospital.

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The great vac in the sky

Climeworks's Mammoth project
Image: Climeworks/Handout (Reuters)
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OK, maybe it’s not in the sky. But a Swiss company that is selling carbon removal to companies just opened the world’s biggest pollution “vacuum” in Iceland, shown above.

What exactly is a carbon vacuum? Well, the Climeworks Mammoth project aims to remove 36,000 metric tons of emissions a year from the atmosphere through 72 air scrubbers. The company has some big name clients buying into its services, with Microsoft and H&M Group among them.

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But not everyone is impressed with the technology. Jonathan Foley, the executive director of the climate non-profit Project Drawdown, wrote in Scientific American in December that such projects remove too little carbon and themselves consume too much (possibly carbon-emitting) energy to live up to the hype that surrounds them. Instead, he writes, efforts should be focused on directly reducing emissions in the first place.


Quotable: AI’s godmother isn’t focused on the apocalypse

“I [worry] about the overhyping of human extinction risk. I think that is blown out of control.” Fei-Fei Li, a computer scientist who created a massive database, ImageNet, that laid the foundation for modern artificial intelligence. She was speaking at the Bloomberg Technology Summit in San Francisco Thursday.

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Li’s accomplishments have earned her the nickname “godmother of AI.” She’s now an AI policy adviser to the Biden Administration and the co-director of Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute, and thinks a much better use of our time is focusing on the immediate, tangible, and useful impacts of artificial intelligence.


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🎤 ‘It’s obviously nice to have Taylor Swift’: A Meta exec on Threads vs. Elon Musk’s X

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🤒 Oracle’s plan to ‘transform’ healthcare delivery with Cerner is falling short

🍩 Krispy Kreme had its best sales day ever — on Valentine’s Day

✈️ A union protest over an airline merger caused chaos for dozens of flights

🔌 Trump offers to gut Biden’s EV and environmental rules for oil execs’ support


Surprising discoveries

Hertz charged a customer who rented a Tesla nearly $300 for gas. Yep, you read that right.

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Engineers have a plan for freeing the Dali, the ship that crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore back in March: Blow up the rest of the bridge.

Gene therapy helped a toddler in the U.K. regain hearing. The surgery to administer the treatment took a mere 16 minutes.

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Tuna crabs aren’t tuna nor crabs. But they’re coating the ocean floor off of San Diego.

A rocky planet? With an atmosphere?? Outside of our solar system??? Astronomers have found one — but it’s quite hellish.

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Our best wishes for a productive day. Send any news, comments, tuna salad, and crab cakes to [email protected]. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Morgan Haefner.

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Correction: In yesterday’s Daily Brief, we did not clarify that Foxconn’s $10 billion investment in Wisconsin was not successful. We apologize for this error.