3 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Business Archive

Archives for August 2024

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Medialab bought Imgur, Genius, and Amino. But the founders of those sites say Medialab isn’t paying up.

Medialab, started by Whisper co-founders Michael Heyward and Brad Brooks, has left a trail of lawsuits following its acquisitions. Apparently it loaded up on cheap debt — and the Genius lawsuit alleges that it’s slow-rolling its acquisition payments to service that debt.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Oliver Darcy is leaving CNN.

The CNN media reporter announced today that he’s starting his own news outlet called Status — a nightly briefing covering the media industry, Hollywood, and Silicon Valley.

Darcy is the latest journalist to move from a big outlet to an independent enterprise. Status will be subscription-based, and will launch with an initial (as of yet unnamed) sponsor.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
“There are tough conditions in the legacy business.”

That’s what WBD CEO David Zaslav said during an earnings call on Wednesday, referencing the company’s $9.1 billion goodwill impairment charge linked to the value of its legacy TV networks and “uncertainty” about sports rights now that the NBA is headed to streaming:

It’s fair to say that even two years ago, market valuations and prevailing conditions for legacy media companies were quite different than they are today, and this impairment acknowledges this and better aligns our carrying values with our future outlook.

Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Disney’s Hulu buyout could cost it up to $5 billion more.

After Disney agreed to buy Comcast’s 33 percent stake in Hulu with an initial payment of $8.6 billion, the two companies entered arbitration to determine Hulu’s fair value. Now, Disney says in an SEC filing that it could end up paying up to $5 billion depending on the outcome of arbitration.

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Airbnb is relaunching ‘Experiences’ amid economic downturn.

The service — which allows users to book non-accomodation activities like tours and outings — was paused last year to focus on “core offerings,” but now a “more affordable” version of it will be reintroduced next year according to the holiday rental company’s Q2 earnings call.

This follows some anti-tourism backlash against the company, and Airbnb warning that it was seeing “signs of slowing demand from US guests.”

Jess Weatherbed
Jess Weatherbed
Sony sees strong gaming growth despite weaker PS5 sales.

The Japanese entertainment giant is reporting an operating profit of 279.11 billion yen ($1.9 billion) for Q1 2024, up 10 percent year-over-year.

Most of that growth comes from its music and gaming software segments, the latter of which was driven by first-party games and PlayStation Plus subscriptions. Meanwhile, Sony sold just 2.4 million PS5 console units compared to the 3 million it previously estimated.

A graph taken from Sony’s Q1 2024 earnings
A graph taken from Sony’s Q1 2024 earnings
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Gaming software and music streaming have more than compensated for Sony’s dwindling PS5 hardware sales.
Image: Sony
‘There’s no price’ Microsoft could pay Apple to use Bing: all the spiciest parts of the Google antitrust ruling

Finally, a legal ruling on whether TikTok is a real search engine. (It’s not.)

Nilay Patel and Sarah Jeong
Emma Roth
Emma Roth
Warner Bros. Discovery may not break up after all.

The Financial Times reported last month that WBD execs considered splitting its streaming and studio business from its struggling TV networks. But now, execs have determined this may not be “the best option at this time,” according to the FT.

Instead, WBD reportedly plans on selling smaller assets, such as the Polish broadcaster TVN or a stake in its game’s business.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
The terror machines at Elliot Management view Nvidia as overvalued and say AI isn’t going to live up to the hype.

Elliott Management, famous for targeting underperforming companies such as Twitter, says Nvidia is in a bubble, in a new letter to investors.

Many of AI’s supposed uses are “never going to be cost-efficient, are never going to actually work right, will take up too much energy, or will prove to be untrustworthy”, it said.

Elizabeth Lopatto
Elizabeth Lopatto
Number go down, Wall Street edition.

The sell-off at least in part is about Wall Street losing confidence in AI. (I did warn you it was going to be a year of reckoning back in February!) There are a couple of other things going on, with potentially long-term effects on tech, too.

Crypto, a proxy for investors’ appetite for brainless risk, started a plunge that continued to worsen into Monday morning. The cause of all this came from three surprising pieces of economic data that came out last week, causing traders to rethink how they make, or at least don’t lose, money.

Mia Sato
Mia Sato
Let’s play a game.

Scroll through the pictures below and try to match each desk chair with the platform it’s for sale on: Amazon, AliExpress, or Shein.

The correct answer doesn’t really matter — as John Herrman writes, this is the state of online shopping, where products that look the same are for sale everywhere, often at different prices or by different sellers. Everywhere you look, products are cheap, fast, and anonymous.

A beige armless desk chair in a non-descript interior space.
Another beige armless desk chair in a nondescript interior space.
Another beige armless desk chair in a slightly different nondescript interior space.
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