SpaceX · Elon Musk · Iran · Facebook · Fortune Technology
Creators who built followings based on trust refuse to outsource some tasks to AI: Humans can ‘sense a decoy’
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It took eight seconds to produce, making it more of a cute party trick than a piece of art.
Key facts
- CEO Daily is curated and edited by Joseph Abrams, Jason Ma, Claire Zillman, and Lee Clifford
- Meanwhile, lease agreements obligate SpaceX to pay Valor close to $20 billion
- Private equity investor Antonio Gracias’ Valor Equity Partners was one of Tesla's earliest institutional investors and holds roughly 7.3% of SpaceX, making him the second-largest individual
- Rosewood Hotel Group, owned by Hong Kong’s Cheng family, has introduced a global, gender‑neutral policy granting all employees 16 weeks of fully paid parental leave, including for adoption
Summary
The big leadership story: A ‘troubling’ relationship under the microscope ahead of the SpaceX IPO. The markets: U.S. futures tick up in hopes that a U.S.-Iran peace deal is imminent. For their birthday, a friend texted this AI-generated “painting” created from an old photo of me that he’d pulled from Facebook. As Adam Smith said, the real price of everything is “the toil and trouble of acquiring it.” It’s an important factor for leaders to weigh as they decide which creative work to assign to AI and which to leave to humans. Matthew Hussey and Gabby Bernstein are authors whose popularity stems from fostering deeply human conversations about topics like authenticity, personal connections, and vulnerability. Hussey uses his digital self to give fans access to personalized dating advice. “The idea that the reporter would co-write an email or book with AI is grotesque.