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Economy

Universal Music shares increase following Pershing Square’s $64 billion acquisition bid

by admin April 7, 2026
written by admin

In this article

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Activist investor Pershing Square announced on Tuesday its intention to acquire Universal Music Group in a cash and stock transaction valued at approximately 55.8 billion euros ($64.4 billion).

The proposal entails that shareholders will get a cumulative amount of 9.4 billion euros ($10.85 billion) in cash along with 0.77 shares of new stock for every share of UMG owned. This translates to a total value of 30.4 euros per share, representing a 78% premium over UMG’s closing share price from April 2, according to a statement from Pershing on Tuesday.

UMG shares were last observed trading 11% higher, having fallen 23% thus far this year.

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Universal Music shares year to date.

“Ever since UMG’s public offering, Sir Lucian Grainge and the management team have excelled in cultivating and continuously enhancing a premier artist roster while delivering solid business results,” stated Pershing Square CEO Bill Ackman in Tuesday’s announcement.

“Nevertheless, UMG’s stock price has struggled due to a range of issues unrelated to its music business performance and crucially, all of these can be remedied with this deal.”

He pointed out several reasons for UMG’s lackluster performance, including uncertainty tied to Bollore Group’s 18% ownership, the delay in its U.S. listing, and “suboptimal” communication and engagement with shareholders.

As per the transaction’s terms, UMG will create a new merged entity with Pershing Square and will be listed on the New York Stock Exchange, with expectations that the deal will be finalized by year-end.

Pershing has put forth a proposal for a board refresh, suggesting that Michael Ovitz, “one of the most recognized executives in global entertainment,” be appointed as chairman of UMG. Additionally, the proposals include that two more affiliates from Pershing Square join UMG’s board.

The transaction is also contingent upon a new employment contract and compensation package for UMG CEO Lucian Grainge.

UMG was separated from French media conglomerate Vivendi, with the controlling shareholder Vincent Bollore retaining a stake valued at around 5.9 billion euros at that time. The leading company behind numerous platinum-selling artists, such as Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift, was listed on the Euronext Amsterdam stock exchange in 2021, initially valued at 46 billion euros.

Stocks in Vivendi and Bollore rose by 11% and 6.3%, respectively, on Tuesday.

Billionaire Ackman has been advocating for UMG, the largest music company globally, to shift its primary listing to the U.S., contending that the stock is undervalued compared to its intrinsic worth and suffers from limited liquidity.

CNBC has already reached out to Bollore and UMG for comments. Vivendi has chosen not to respond to the news.

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April 7, 2026 0 comments
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Gemini is accelerating access for troubled users to obtain mental health resources
Tech/AI

Gemini is accelerating access for troubled users to obtain mental health resources

by admin April 7, 2026
written by admin

The announcement comes after a wrongful death lawsuit claiming that Gemini had ‘coached’ an individual into committing suicide.

The announcement comes after a wrongful death lawsuit claiming that Gemini had ‘coached’ an individual into committing suicide.

Apr 7, 2026, 10:09 AM UTC
STK255_Google_Gemini_B_474198
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Robert Hart
Robert Hart is a reporter based in London at The Verge, focusing on AI developments and is a Senior Tarbell Fellow. He previously covered topics related to health, science, and technology for Forbes.

Google has reported enhancements to Gemini aimed at guiding users towards mental health support amid crises. This modification occurs while the tech giant is under a wrongful death lawsuit which alleges its chatbot “coached” an individual to commit suicide, part of a series of legal actions claiming real damage from AI systems.

When a dialogue suggests a user might be in distress regarding suicide or self-harm, Gemini already activates a “Help is available” feature that connects users to mental health crisis resources, such as a suicide hotline or text crisis line. Google states that this update — more accurately a redesign — will simplify this into a “one-touch” interface for quicker access to help.

The support module is also now equipped with more compassionate responses designed “to encourage individuals to seek assistance,” according to Google. Once initiated, “the ability to request professional help will be consistently accessible” throughout the conversation.

Google indicated that it consulted with clinical specialists for the redesign and is dedicated to helping users in distress. It additionally revealed a $30 million global funding initiative over the next three years “to support global hotlines.”

Like other prominent chatbot developers, Google emphasized that Gemini “does not replace professional clinical care, therapy, or crisis intervention,” yet recognized that many individuals are utilizing it for health guidance, particularly in times of emergency.

This update comes amidst increasing examination of the effectiveness of industry safety measures. Reviews and inquiries, including our investigation into the availability of crisis resources, often highlight situations where chatbots fail vulnerable users by assisting them in concealing eating disorders or arranging violent acts. Google generally outperforms many competitors in these evaluations, but is not flawless. Other AI enterprises, including OpenAI and Anthropic, have also made strides to enhance their identification and aid for at-risk users.

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JD Vance arriving in Hungary to support Orban's campaign for re-election
Global

JD Vance arriving in Hungary to support Orban’s campaign for re-election

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

Hungary, nearly solitary among EU nations, has resisted pressures from Brussels to reduce its reliance on Russian fossil fuels. In Washington, Orban further pledged to increase purchases of US liquefied natural gas (LNG), along with US nuclear technology and fuel. Hungary is heavily reliant on Russian oil via the Druzhba pipeline from the east, and on Russian gas through the TurkStream pipeline from the south.

April 6, 2026 0 comments
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Few indications of progress as Trump's Iran deadline approaches
Global

Few indications of progress as Trump’s Iran deadline approaches

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

He and his team responsible for national security commemorated their latest initiative – which involved orchestrating numerous aircraft and elite military forces, as well as utilizing deception and advanced technology. However, this endeavor, although impressive, aimed to prevent what Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth recognized as a “possible catastrophe”.

April 6, 2026 0 comments
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After court defeat, RFK Jr. assumes greater authority over CDC vaccine panel
Tech/AI

After court defeat, RFK Jr. assumes greater authority over CDC vaccine panel

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

The qualifications for membership also look very different between the existing charter and the renewal issued today. Under the current charter, ACIP members “shall be selected from authorities who are knowledgeable in the fields of immunization practices and public health, have expertise in the use of vaccines and other immunobiologic agents in clinical practice or preventive medicine, have expertise with clinical or laboratory vaccine research, or have expertise in assessment of vaccine efficacy and safety.” Those particular core requirements—expertise in immunization practice and vaccine science—were key to Murphy’s conclusion that Kennedy’s appointees were not fit to serve on the committee.

The renewal notice omits those specific requirements and instead emphasizes a “geographic balance” (representing various regions of the country) and a “balance of specialty areas.” It lists a broad array of specialties that cover a much wider range of medical and scientific disciplines and possibly beyond, including: “biostatistics, toxicology, immunology, epidemiology, pediatrics, internal medicine, family medicine, nursing, consumer issues, state and local health department perspective, academic perspective, public health perspective, etc.”

Suggested changes

Some of the alterations in the renewal may reflect pressure from an anti-vaccine organization aligned with Kennedy. That group, the Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), is led by Kennedy ally Del Bigtree and has been collaborating with Aaron Siri, an attorney who worked on Kennedy’s unsuccessful presidential bid and has brought numerous lawsuits seeking damages for alleged vaccine injuries. Siri is also known for petitioning the Food and Drug Administration to revoke the polio vaccine.

Last month, ICAN urged Kennedy to amend ACIP’s charter, and Siri’s law firm submitted a draft with track-changed edits outlining their preferred language for the new charter. The draft proposes that ACIP members have expertise in any area “deemed relevant by the Secretary,” and it explicitly requires that “At least two members shall have direct and substantial experience advocating for and/or treating those injured by vaccines.”

The Department of Health and Human Services did not answer Ars Technica’s questions about edits to the renewal notice or possible revisions to the CDC’s full charter text. Spokesperson Andrew Nixon, in an emailed statement, only said the renewal is part of “routine statutory requirements and do not signal any broader policy shift.”

April 6, 2026 0 comments
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From folding boxes to repairing vacuums, the GEN-1 robotics model achieves 99% reliability
Tech/AI

From folding boxes to repairing vacuums, the GEN-1 robotics model achieves 99% reliability

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

Robotics-focused machine-learning firm Generalist has unveiled GEN-1, a physical AI platform it claims “crosses into production-level success rates” across “a broad range of physical skills” that previously required the dexterity and muscle memory of human hands. Generalist also emphasizes the new model’s knack for reacting to disruptions by improvising fresh maneuvers and “connect[ing] ideas from different places in order to solve new problems.”

GEN-1 expands on Generalist’s earlier GEN-0 model, which the company promoted in November as a proof of concept for applying scaling laws to robotics training, demonstrating that more pretraining data and compute translate into better post-training performance. But whereas large language models have been able to process the trillions of words available online for training, robotic systems don’t have a comparable, easily accessible supply of high-quality examples of how humans manipulate objects.

To close that gap, Generalist has turned to “data hands”, wearable pincer devices that record micro-movements and visual cues as people perform manual tasks. The company says it has gathered more than half a million hours — and “petabytes of physical interaction data” — to train its physical model.

Take my money (from my wallet) (then put it back).

The outcome is an autonomous system precise enough to place cash into a wallet and versatile enough to fold laundry or sort auto parts. Generalist says the model now achieves 99 percent success rates on repetitive but delicate mechanical tasks — such as folding boxes, packing phones, and servicing robot vacuums — and operates at roughly three times the speed of GEN-0. The company adds that GEN-1 can reach these levels after only about an hour of adapting its pretraining to the “robot data” relevant to its specific robotic embodiment.

Recovering from mistakes

Historically, complex robotic systems have tended to rely on precisely preprogrammed motions or be trained to specialize in a single task with little variation. What Generalist says sets GEN-1 apart is a single model’s ability to improvise from prior experience and handle disruptions naturally, even when those situations are “well outside the training distribution.”

April 6, 2026 0 comments
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Wisconsin's governor rejects age verification for pornography
Tech/AI

Wisconsin’s governor rejects age verification for pornography

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

Governor Tony Evers claims that the legislation ‘places an intrusive strain on adults.’

Governor Tony Evers claims that the legislation ‘places an intrusive strain on adults.’

Apr 6, 2026, 9:47 PM UTC
STKS517_AGE_VERIFICATION_A
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Emma Roth
Emma Roth is a writer focused on the streaming battles, consumer technology, cryptocurrency, social networking, and various other topics. She previously worked as a writer and editor at MUO.

Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers rejected a proposed law that would have mandated residents to confirm their age before reaching pornographic websites, as earlier reported by 404 Media. In a communication to assembly members the previous week, Evers stated that the measure “places an intrusive strain on adults seeking access to constitutionally protected materials.”

The legislation (AB 105) would have mandated that sites with over one-third of their total content categorized as harmful to minors implement a “reasonable” form of age validation, such as requesting users to display their government-issued identification. More than two dozen states have already implemented similar age verification regulations for access to adult content, encompassing Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Missouri, Texas, and Virginia. Consequently, Pornhub has restricted its site in these areas.

Recently, the Wisconsin chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union testified that AB 105 “raises considerable concerns regarding privacy, surveillance, and the First Amendment,” which seems to align with Evers’ views. “I am vetoing this bill in its entirety as I take issue with its violation of the personal privacy of Wisconsin citizens,” Evers stated, expressing concerns about data security and the potential misuse of personally identifiable information collected through the age verification process.

An initial version of Wisconsin’s age verification legislation also proposed a prohibition on virtual private networks (VPNs), which individuals have been utilizing to bypass online age checks. Lawmakers eliminated this clause in February, although VPNs are increasingly facing scrutiny from regulators worldwide.

Despite nullifying this legislation, Evers is open to other variations of age verification methods, including “device-based” approaches that would authenticate the age of users through their mobile devices or computers.

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Trump administration concludes Medicare Advantage payment rate better than anticipated, providing support to health insurers.
Economy

Trump administration concludes Medicare Advantage payment rate better than anticipated, providing support to health insurers.

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

In this piece

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Mehmet Oz, head of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, addresses an event held by the Action for Progress Coalition at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., U.S., Feb. 2, 2026.
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On Monday, the Trump administration confirmed an increase in payment rates for privately managed Medicare plans for 2027 that exceeded earlier estimates, benefiting health insurance stocks.

The average payments for Medicare Advantage are set to rise by 2.48%, translating to over $13 billion, in 2027, as reported by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Back in January, the Trump administration suggested a minor payment rate rise of 0.09%, leading to a drop in insurer shares managing those plans.

Stocks of UnitedHealth and CVS Health surged over 9% in after-hours trading on Monday. Meanwhile, Humana‘s shares rose by approximately 12%.

“Medicare Advantage and Part D must be beneficial for those who depend on them,” stated CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz in a statement. “These revisions make coverage more affordable and guarantee that patients derive genuine value from their policies.”

The closely monitored government payment rate specifies how much insurers are allowed to charge for monthly premiums and the benefits included in their plans, and ultimately, it influences their profitability.

Medicare Advantage is a privately managed health insurance program contracted through Medicare. Over half of Medicare beneficiaries are enrolled in such programs, attracted by reduced monthly premiums and additional benefits that traditional Medicare does not cover, according to the health policy research organization KFF.

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The single data point that might truly illuminate your role and artificial intelligence
Tech/AI

The single data point that might truly illuminate your role and artificial intelligence

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

This piece first appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter on AI. To receive stories like this in your inbox before anyone else, enroll here.

In the realm of Silicon Valley, a job apocalypse spurred by AI is regarded as inevitable. The atmosphere is so bleak that a societal impacts researcher at Anthropic, in response to a request for more hopeful outlooks regarding AI’s future, mentioned a possible recession in the near future and a “collapse of the early-career ladder.” Her more outspoken peer Dario Amodei, the company’s CEO, has described AI as “a general labor substitute for humans” capable of performing all jobs within five years. And those sentiments are not exclusive to Anthropic, obviously.

Consequently, these discussions have understandably left many employees feeling anxious (and are likely fueling support for initiatives to entirely halt the development of data centers, some of which gained momentum last week). This anxiety is not alleviated by politicians, none of whom have presented a clear strategy for what follows.

Even economists who have warned that AI has not yet resulted in job losses and may not lead to a crash are starting to acknowledge that it could uniquely and unprecedentedly affect our work patterns.

Alex Imas, from the University of Chicago, is one such economist. He conveyed two key points during our conversation on Friday morning: a frank evaluation that our predictive tools are quite deficient, and a “call to action” for economists to begin gathering the one type of data that could facilitate a plan for addressing AI in the labor market.

Regarding our inadequate tools: consider that any occupation consists of various individual tasks. For instance, a part of a real estate agent’s role is to inquire about what type of property clients wish to purchase. The US government has documented thousands of these tasks in a vast catalogue initiated in 1998 and continually updated. This was the data that OpenAI researchers utilized in December to assess how “vulnerable” a job is to AI (for example, they determined that a real estate agent is 28% vulnerable). Then in February, Anthropic leveraged this data in analyzing millions of Claude conversations to identify the tasks people are actively employing its AI for and the points of overlap.

However, understanding AI vulnerability in tasks leads to a deceptive comprehension of how at risk a specific job may be, according to Imas. “Vulnerability alone is a completely ineffective metric for forecasting displacement,” he asserted.

Indeed, it is revealing in the most dire scenario—for an occupation where virtually every task could be performed by AI without any human supervision. If an AI model can accomplish all those tasks for less than what you’re being compensated—which is not assured, as reasoning models and agentic AI can accumulate significant costs—and perform them effectively, that job is likely to vanish, asserts Imas. This reflects the frequently cited case of the elevator operator from years past; perhaps today’s equivalent is a customer service agent solely tasked with handling phone call triage.

Yet, for the majority of occupations, the situation is not as straightforward. The specifics are crucial as well: while some jobs may face ominous prospects, discerning how and when these changes will occur is challenging when solely considering vulnerability.

Take coding as an example. A person creating high-quality dating applications, for instance, may utilize AI coding tools to produce in one day what previously required three days. This boosts productivity for the worker. The employer, maintaining the same financial outlay, can now yield more output. Consequently, will the employer seek to hire more employees or fewer? 

This is the question that Imas argues should keep any policymaker awake at night, as the answer will vary across industries. And we are navigating in uncertainty. 

In the coder’s instance, such efficiencies allow dating applications to reduce prices. (A skeptic might anticipate companies merely pocketing the profits, yet in a competitive marketplace, they risk being undercut if they do.) These lower prices will invariably stimulate some surge in demand for the applications. But to what extent? If millions more individuals desire it, the company might expand and ultimately recruit more developers to fulfill this demand. However, if demand hardly increases—perhaps those who don’t currently use premium dating apps will still not want them even at a lower price—fewer coders will be necessary, resulting in layoffs.

Regularly applying this hypothetical across every job with tasks that AI can perform yields the most critical economic inquiry of our era: the particulars of price elasticity, or the extent to which demand for something shifts when its price shifts. This is the second aspect of what Imas highlighted last week: we currently lack this data throughout the economy. However, we could. 

We possess figures for grocery products like cereal and milk, Imas notes, because the University of Chicago collaborates with supermarkets to gather data from their price scanners. Yet we lack such figures for tutors, web developers, or dietitians (all professions identified as having “exposure” to AI, by the way). Or at least not in a manner that’s been extensively compiled or made accessible to researchers; sometimes it’s distributed among private companies or consultancies. 

“We require, akin to a Manhattan Project, to gather this information,” Imas states. Moreover, it’s not solely necessary for occupations that could evidently be impacted by AI now: “Fields not yet exposed will inevitably become exposed in the future, warranting a tracking of these statistics across the entire economy.”

Acquiring all this data would demand time and resources, but Imas argues that it’s valuable; it would provide economists with the first genuine insight into how our AI-driven future could evolve and offer policymakers an opportunity to devise a strategy for it.

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This Safari Lodge in Kenya Cultivates More Than 80 Varieties of Fruits and Vegetables On-Site
Lifestyle

This Safari Lodge in Kenya Cultivates More Than 80 Varieties of Fruits and Vegetables On-Site

by admin April 6, 2026
written by admin

With Hotels With Great Taste, we’re unveiling the “special ingredient” that hotels utilize to craft unforgettable, significant culinary moments for their visitors.

While visiting Sirikoi Lodge, I opened my cottage door one afternoon to discover Nditu, the orphaned female giraffe who considers Sirikoi and its vicinity her territory, nibbling on some trees merely steps away.

While it might seem a bit of a cliché to label a hotel as enchanting, I can’t think of a more fitting term to encapsulate the experience of visiting this Kenyan lodge. On a typical morning, you might spot a herd of elephants stopping by for a drink just a few feet from where you’re relishing your breakfast, or a pair of impalas frolicking across the property.

Despite being situated next to a watering hole within Lewa Wildlife Conservancy’s 93,000 acres of natural beauty, Sirikoi is a place where you truly feel at home, even as you encounter views that leave you rubbing your eyes in astonishment. The stunning grounds, bi-daily game drives, incredible wildlife encounters, and savanna sunsets were all absolutely breathtaking.

I was equally enchanted by Sirikoi’s culinary program, much of which centers around the more than 80 fruits, vegetables, and herbs cultivated in the property’s organic gardens. Head chef Zachary Macharia collaborates closely with head gardener George Domiano to define the lodge’s culinary philosophy, resulting in fresh, wholesome meals deeply rooted in seasonality. Picture farm-fresh eggs transformed into perfectly cooked omelets or scrambles, lunches composed of a vibrant array of salads, and straightforward dinners where the ingredients take center stage.

Both Macharia and Domiano have dedicated over 15 years to the lodge. Domiano’s experience in regenerative agriculture and organic farming brought him to Sirikoi, which had an established garden that cofounder Sue Roberts was enthusiastic to expand and convert to a 100% organic model. Advocating regenerative methods such as zero tillage farming, Domiano joined the team in 2011 and took on the role of head gardener in 2012. Under his guidance, the garden has thrived and now provides the bulk of Sirikoi’s produce, from the citrus and passion fruit served during breakfast to the broccoli and potatoes accompanying dinner.

The region’s climate is particularly favorable for cultivating most fruits and vegetables year-round. Many plants that would typically struggle to grow in the local soil are nurtured through grafting, a technique wherein the root of one plant supports the growth of another.

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After court defeat, RFK Jr. assumes greater authority over CDC vaccine panel
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Trump administration concludes Medicare Advantage payment rate better than anticipated, providing support to health insurers.

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