• Home
  • Investing
  • Global
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech/AI
  • Lifestyle
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Global
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech/AI
  • Lifestyle
  • About Us
  • Contact
LOGIN
Monday, April 20, 2026
Top Posts
Costco: Compounding Power of Trust and Discipline
Uber: The Rulebreaker’s Playbook
Google: Search Box to Empires
Y Combinator: Accelerator or University
Investing Guidance – Oct 24, 2025
Investing Guidance – Oct 17, 2025
Intel: The Traitorous Eight
Investing Guidance – Nov 19, 2025
Investing Guidance – Nov 12, 2025
Investing Guidance – Nov 7, 2025
SUBSCRIBE NEWSLETTERS
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Global
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech/AI
  • Lifestyle
  • About Us
  • Contact
Copyright 2021 - All Right Reserved
American Airlines drops 3% in premarket trading following the rejection of the United megamerger.
Economy

American Airlines drops 3% in premarket trading following the rejection of the United megamerger.

by admin April 20, 2026
written by admin

In this report

  • AAL
  • UAL
Track your preferred stocksREGISTER FOR A FREE ACCOUNT
Planes from American Airlines and United Airlines at Terminal A of Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR) in Newark, New Jersey, United States, on Thursday, January 12, 2023.
Aristide Economopoulos | Bloomberg | Getty Images

American Airlines shares dropped in premarket trading on Monday after it dismissed discussions of a potential large-scale merger with United Airlines late in the previous week.

The historic U.S. airline released a statement on Friday, soon after the market closed, to refute speculation about a possible agreement between the two carriers.

“American Airlines is not involved with or interested in any negotiations regarding a merger with United Airlines,” the statement said.

“While adjustments in the wider airline market may be essential, a union with United would harm competition and consumers, which is inconsistent with our interpretation of the Administration’s approach to the industry and principles of antitrust regulations,” it continued.

American’s stock last decreased nearly 3% in premarket trading, reversing the gains made on Friday during a broad market upswing.

United CEO Scott Kirby proposed a possible merger with competitor American to the Trump administration at the White House in February, although it is believed the airline had been contemplating the idea since at least the previous fall.

“Size would enhance” competition on international flights from the U.S., Kirby stated during the “Stratechery” podcast in an episode aired in January.

He noted that when passengers travel to the Middle East, they often opt for airlines from that region.

“[But] if we are larger and have more options for those travelers, perhaps, it…[makes] more sense for them to choose us when traveling to the Middle East.”

A merger would create the world’s largest airline, which raises significant regulatory scrutiny and fears of forming a monopoly in the market.

The two companies, along with Delta Air Lines and Southwest Airlines, already control around 80% of the domestic market share.

A merger between United and American would lead the two to command approximately 40% of the domestic market, according to airline data analytics firm OAG.

“President Trump has a penchant for seeing major deals come to fruition,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy stated on CNBC’s “Power Lunch” earlier this month, expressing that there is “opportunity for mergers in the aviation sector.”

Nonetheless, Duffy cautioned: “Should a merger occur between major airlines, they will need to divest certain assets. We do not want to see a single airline controlling vast infrastructure in America; otherwise, it will impact pricing over time, resulting from a lack of competition.”

George Hay, a law professor at Cornell University, previously informed CNBC: “This would be unprecedented. I can’t envision even the faintest possibility that a court would approve it.”

— Leslie Josephs contributed to this article

Select CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss a moment from the most reliable name in business news.

April 20, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Chinese technology employees are beginning to educate their AI counterparts—and resisting
Tech/AI

Chinese technology employees are beginning to educate their AI counterparts—and resisting

by admin April 20, 2026
written by admin

In China, tech employees are being directed by their supervisors to prepare AI agents to take their positions—leading to a period of introspection among previously excited early adopters.

Earlier this month, a GitHub initiative known as Colleague Skill, claimed that employees could use it to “distill” the skills and characteristics of their colleagues and recreate them using an AI agent, gained significant traction on Chinese social media. Although the project was intended as a parody, it resonated with tech professionals, many of whom informed MIT Technology Review that their employers are urging them to log their workflows to automate certain tasks and processes using AI agent tools such as OpenClaw or Claude Code. 

To initiate Colleague Skill, a user designates the coworker whose responsibilities they wish to mimic and inputs basic profile information. The tool subsequently imports chat histories and documents from Lark and DingTalk, two widely-used workplace applications in China, generating reusable guides detailing that coworker’s tasks—and even their distinctive quirks—for an AI agent to duplicate. 

Colleague Skill was developed by Tianyi Zhou, an engineer at the Shanghai Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. Earlier this week, he mentioned to the Chinese publication Southern Metropolis Daily that the project began as a publicity stunt, driven by AI-related job cuts and the increasing trend of companies requesting employees to automate their own roles. He did not reply to further requests for comment.

Internet users have found humor in the concept behind the tool, making light of automating their colleagues before themselves. Nevertheless, the popularity of Colleague Skill has ignited extensive discussions regarding workers’ dignity and individuality in the era of AI.

After encountering Colleague Skill on social platforms, Amber Li, 27, a tech professional in Shanghai, utilized it to replicate a past coworker for a personal experiment. Within moments, the tool produced a document detailing how that individual performed their job. “It is surprisingly good,” Li remarks. “It even captures the person’s little quirks, like how they respond and their punctuation habits.” With this skill, Li can employ an AI agent as a new “coworker” to assist her with debugging her code and providing instant replies. It felt eerie and unsettling, according to Li. 

Nonetheless, substituting coworkers with agents may become a commonplace practice. Following the rise of OpenClaw as a national sensation, employers in China have been urging tech workers to experiment with agents. 

While AI agents can manage your computer, analyze and summarize news, respond to emails, and make restaurant reservations on your behalf, tech workers report that their practical use has, to this point, been limited in professional settings. Asking employees to create manuals outlining the intricacies of their daily tasks, as Colleague Skill does, is one approach to help close that gap. 

Hancheng Cao, an assistant professor at Emory University specializing in AI and labor, posits that companies have justifiable motives for encouraging employees to develop work guides like these, beyond merely following a trend. “Firms gain not only internal experience with the tools, but also richer data on employee expertise, workflows, and decision-making patterns. This enables companies to identify which aspects of work can be systematized or codified and which still rely on human judgment,” he explains.

However, to employees, creating agents or even blueprints for them can feel odd and isolating. One software engineer, who spoke with MIT Technology Review anonymously due to concerns over job security, trained an AI (not Colleague Skill) on their workflow and found the process felt reductive—as if their work had been condensed into modules in a manner that made them simpler to replace. On social media, workers have resorted to dark humor to convey similar sentiments. In one comment on Rednote, a user noted that “a cold farewell can be turned into warm tokens,” humorously suggesting that if they use Colleague Skill to distill their coworkers into tasks first, they themselves might endure a bit longer.

The push for creating agents has also inspired inventive counteractions. Frustrated by the notion of reducing an individual to a skill, Koki Xu, 26, an AI product manager in Beijing, released an “anti-distillation” skill on GitHub on April 4. The tool, which Xu constructed in about an hour, aims to frustrate the process of establishing workflows for agents. Users can select from light, medium, or heavy sabotage modes based on how closely their supervisor is monitoring the process, and the agent reformulates the content into generic, non-actionable language that would yield a less effective AI replacement. A video Xu shared about the project became viral, amassing over 5 million likes across platforms.

Xu informed MIT Technology Review that she has been tracking the Colleague Skill phenomenon from the beginning and that it has prompted her to reflect on alienation, disempowerment, and the wider implications for labor. “I initially considered writing an op-ed, but decided it would be more impactful to create something that counters it,” she states.

Xu, who holds both undergraduate and master’s degrees in law, mentioned that the trend also raises legal issues. While a company might argue that work chat histories and materials produced on a work laptop are corporate assets, a skill like this can also capture aspects of personality, tone, and judgment, making ownership much less clear. She expressed hope that Colleague Skill encourages broader discussions about how to safeguard workers’ dignity and identity in the AI era. “I believe it’s essential to stay informed on these trends so we (employees) can engage in shaping how they are utilized,” she asserts. Xu herself is an enthusiastic AI user, with seven OpenClaw agents established across her personal and work devices.

Li, the tech employee in Shanghai, mentions that her company has not yet developed a method to replace actual workers with AI tools, primarily due to their unreliability and the requirement for constant supervision. “I don’t feel like my job is immediately at risk,” she states. “But I do feel that my value is being degraded, and I’m unsure how to address it.”

April 20, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Man murders seven of his offspring, and an eighth child, in mass shooting in Louisiana.
Global

Man murders seven of his offspring, and an eighth child, in mass shooting in Louisiana.

by admin April 20, 2026
written by admin

Troy Brown, Elkins’s brother-in-law, informed the Washington Post that he cohabited with the assailant, who had been distressed following his wife’s request for a divorce. “Following the initial disagreement regarding the divorce, he seemed to be losing his sanity,” he relayed to the publication.

April 20, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A high-ranking Iranian official informs the BBC that Tehran will not relinquish control over the Strait of Hormuz.
Global

A high-ranking Iranian official informs the BBC that Tehran will not relinquish control over the Strait of Hormuz.

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

“They are the marauders who traded our territory to the Americans,” was Azizi’s comeback referencing the US military installations throughout the Middle East that, together with other facilities, were consistently targeted by Iran’s drones and missiles. The US, he remarked, was “the most formidable pirate globally.”

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Blue Origin effectively repurposed its New Glenn rocket
Tech/AI

Blue Origin effectively repurposed its New Glenn rocket

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

However, it did not succeed in delivering its space-oriented cell tower cargo.

However, it did not succeed in delivering its space-oriented cell tower cargo.

Apr 19, 2026, 8:28 PM UTC
Blue Origin Launches New Glenn Rocket with Communications Satellite from Cape Canaveral, Florida
Blue Origin Launches New Glenn Rocket with Communications Satellite from Cape Canaveral, Florida
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O’Brien serves as the Verge’s weekend editor, boasting over 18 years of experience, which includes a decade as managing editor at Engadget.

The launch today of AST SpaceMobile’s BlueBird 7 satellite via Blue Origin’s reusable New Glenn rocket was a partial achievement. The New Glenn landed safely on its target pad, making it the second successful launch and landing of the first stage booster, officially providing Jeff Bezos with a reusable launch vehicle. Regrettably for AST SpaceMobile, the undertaking was not as fruitful. Its space-based cell tower was positioned in a lower orbit than intended by the launch vehicle’s second stage, making it effectively nonoperational.

In a release, the company stated:

Although the satellite detached from the launch vehicle and activated, the altitude is insufficient to operate with its onboard thruster technology, resulting in its deorbit.

Bezos, for his part, shared a video of the landing on X without providing any commentary.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

  • Terrence O’Brien
  • Blue Origin

Most Popular

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
FBI Director Kash Patel pledges to take legal action against The Atlantic regarding allegations of alcohol misuse.
Economy

FBI Director Kash Patel pledges to take legal action against The Atlantic regarding allegations of alcohol misuse.

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

FBI Director Kash Patel makes a gesture while testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee during a hearing focused on the oversight of the Federal Bureau of Investigation on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., on September 16, 2025.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Kash Patel announced on Sunday that he intends to sue The Atlantic magazine for defamation concerning a recent article alleging that he often drinks alcohol excessively.

Patel noted during his appearance on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures” that he would initiate the lawsuit on Monday.

“We will not accept this without resistance,” Patel stated. “You want to attack my integrity? Bring it on. I will see you in court.”

When pressed about his intentions to sue the magazine, Patel asserted, “Definitely, it’s happening tomorrow.”

“We uphold our reporting on Kash Patel,” stated Atlantic Editor-in-Chief Jeffrey Goldberg in a response to CNBC.

Explore more politics coverage from CNBC

  • Three important points about FISA Section 702: Congress approves a temporary extension of a controversial surveillance initiative
  • House Democrat Sam Liccardo investigates questionable oil trades during the Iran conflict
  • Tanker diplomacy: Trump encounters challenges from Havana to Hormuz
  • Kalshi and Polymarket lobby as insider trading and betting come under Congressional scrutiny

On Friday, the magazine released a comprehensive article referencing over two dozen sources that made explosive assertions regarding Patel’s conduct.

The sources indicated to the magazine that Patel often drinks to such an extent that it is visibly noticeable, and that his security team has occasionally struggled to rouse him due to evident drunkenness.

In one case, The Atlantic detailed that a request for “breaching equipment” was made because Patel was inaccessible behind locked doors. The magazine additionally reported that, early in his term, meetings had to be postponed to later times due to his drinking habits.

Current and former officials expressed to The Atlantic their concerns that Patel’s actions pose a risk to national security, particularly as the U.S. engages in military operations against Iran, a key state sponsor of terrorism.

Patel’s attorney, Jesse Binnall, in a letter directed to The Atlantic and shared on X, stated he cautioned the magazine that multiple elements of its reporting were inaccurate.

Binnall urged the magazine not to publicize assertions claiming that Patel drinks excessively at Washington D.C. venue Ned’s and The Poodle Room in Las Vegas, the information regarding his security team’s difficulties waking him, and allegations that his behavior threatened public safety, among other points in the article.

“[S]hould The Atlantic decide to publish this demonstrably false and slanderous article, Director Patel will have no choice but to take immediate legal action to preserve his reputation,” stated the letter signed by attorneys Binnall and Jared Roberts.

In 2025, The Atlantic uncovered that an official from the Trump administration had added its editor, Goldberg, to a Signal messaging group discussing U.S. bombing operations against Houthi targets in Yemen.

Patel, a longstanding Trump supporter, was confirmed as FBI director last year, despite objections from all Democrats and two Republicans, who raised concerns regarding his lack of experience and previously controversial remarks.

Recently, Patel drew attention for downing a beer after Team USA secured the gold medal in ice hockey at the 2026 Olympic Games.

Select CNBC as your preferred source on Google and never miss out on the most trusted name in business news.

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Cloud development platform Vercel experienced a security breach.
Tech/AI

Cloud development platform Vercel experienced a security breach.

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

The organization claims the breach stemmed from an infiltrated ‘third-party AI tool.’

The organization claims the breach stemmed from an infiltrated ‘third-party AI tool.’

Apr 19, 2026, 7:54 PM UTC
Screenshot 2026-04-19 at 3.53.46 PM
Screenshot 2026-04-19 at 3.53.46 PM
Terrence O'Brien
Terrence O’Brien is the Verge’s weekend editor. He has over 18 years of experience, including a decade as managing editor at Engadget.

Vercel, a prominent development platform for hosting and deploying web applications, has been breached, and the attackers are trying to sell the compromised data. An individual claiming to be associated with ShinyHunters, responsible for the recent breach of Rockstar Games, shared some data online, revealing employee names, email addresses, and activity timestamps. Vercel acknowledged in a message on X that a “security incident” occurred, affecting a “limited subset” of its clientele. Vercel stated that an infiltrated third-party AI tool was the entry point for the attack, though it did not clarify which third party was implicated.

Vercel advised administrators to check their activity logs for any unusual behavior. The company also recommended taking measures to “review and rotate environmental variables” as an additional safety measure in case API keys, tokens, or other sensitive information were compromised. It concluded its security bulletin with this statement:

Our investigation has shown that the breach originated from a third-party AI tool whose Google Workspace OAuth application was part of a larger compromise, potentially affecting hundreds of users across multiple organizations.

We are releasing the following IOC to assist the broader community in investigating and scrutinizing potential malicious activities within their environments. We recommend that Google Workspace Administrators and Google Account owners verify the use of this app without delay.

Follow topics and authors related to this article to see more like it on your personalized homepage feed and to receive email notifications.

  • Terrence O’Brien

Most Popular

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Blue Origin's rocket-reuse achievement tarnished by an upper-stage failure
Tech/AI

Blue Origin’s rocket-reuse achievement tarnished by an upper-stage failure

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

Blue Origin’s heavy-lift New Glenn made its third flight on Sunday, showcasing the company’s first successful orbital-class booster reflight, but the mission ended with a setback for Jeff Bezos’s flagship rocket — a critical part of NASA’s Artemis lunar program.

The 321-foot-tall (98-meter) New Glenn rocket ignited its seven methane-fueled BE-4 engines at 7:25 a.m. EDT (11:25 UTC) Sunday, commencing a gradual ascent from its pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida.

The core engines, each delivering more than half a million pounds of thrust, accelerated the vehicle past Mach in roughly a minute and a half. About three minutes into flight, the booster shut down its engines and separated from New Glenn’s upper stage, which continued under two BE-3U engines burning liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.

The first stage followed a downrange parabolic trajectory, briefly reaching space before steering itself toward Blue Origin’s offshore landing platform about 400 miles southeast of Cape Canaveral. It relit its motors for two braking burns and touched down on the ship in a smoky but accurate landing less than 10 minutes after liftoff.

The touchdown completed the booster’s second flight — the vehicle, named Never Tell Me The Odds, made its debut with a successful launch and recovery on Blue Origin’s previous New Glenn mission in November. Blue Origin, founded and owned by Jeff Bezos, has repeatedly landed and reused its smaller New Shepard suborbital booster, but New Glenn is much larger and more demanding. It flies to higher altitudes, reaches greater speeds, and is roughly three times the height of New Shepard.

Technicians installed new engines on the booster for Sunday’s mission, though Blue Origin intends to reuse the engines from the November flight on future New Glenn missions, CEO Dave Limp said.

New Glenn gives Blue Origin access to a broader market for launches to low Earth orbit and beyond. SpaceX has demonstrated it can refurbish and relaunch a Falcon 9 booster in as little as nine days, and can fly Falcon 9s five or more times in a week by operating a fleet of reusable boosters across three active pads. Blue Origin executives expect that reusing New Glenn boosters will allow them to achieve a significantly higher launch tempo.

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
I've operated one of America's most powerful lasers—here's how a shot day unfolds
Tech/AI

I’ve operated one of America’s most powerful lasers—here’s how a shot day unfolds

by admin April 19, 2026
written by admin

Back in the control room, I take a seat and begin charging the capacitor banks. At this point there’s no turning back except for an emergency shutdown, which would mean losing the shot and waiting for everything to cool.

“Charging.”

The room falls silent. Everyone fixes their gaze on the monitors. No one speaks.

I usually exchange a look with the researcher whose experiment the shot is for — today it’s Joe, a visiting scientist from Los Alamos National Lab, who designed the target we’re about to vaporize. He’s holding his coffee like it’s precious. I return my attention to the console.

“Charge complete. Firing system: shot in three, two, one. Fire.”

I push the button. A heavy thud moves through the building as the accumulated energy is released into the beam. The monitors freeze, capturing the moment of the shot: beam profiles, spectra, diagnostics—these readings give a complete picture of how the laser performed and whether the shot was clean. Down in the vacuum chamber, a spot smaller than a human hair has reached temperatures measured in the millions of degrees.

I lean back in my chair and start logging laser parameters as everyone exhales. A radiation safety officer goes down first to check readings around the target chamber before anyone else can enter. The experimental team follows to collect the data.

Sometimes everything works flawlessly. Other times a shutter fails to open and the shot is lost.

For example, one afternoon in 2023 we’d spent three hours prepping for a high-priority shot. Target aligned. Capacitors charged. I pressed the button and heard nothing. A shutter had failed somewhere in the chain. The monitors stayed frozen, showing black. Nobody said a word. I wrote SHOT FAILED in the logbook and began the hourlong cooldown sequence. That’s the part they don’t show in movies: sitting in silence, waiting to try again. We got the shot four hours later.

This anticipation is part of the job: hours of patience for about ten seconds you never quite get used to. All of it happens beneath a campus where thousands of people walk above, unaware that for a fraction of a second a tiny point of matter hotter than the surface of the Sun existed below their feet.

Ahmed Helal, research scientist, The University of Texas at Austin. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

April 19, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Harry and Meghan's visit resembled a royal tour - however, numerous Australians were not intrigued.
Global

Harry and Meghan’s visit resembled a royal tour – however, numerous Australians were not intrigued.

by admin April 18, 2026
written by admin

For the Sussexes, the sole recognition of the business aspect of the journey was found at the conclusion of a five-page pre-tour briefing. It stated: “As with numerous visits of this kind, a limited number of private engagements are included to bolster wider commercial, charitable, and community aims.”

April 18, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Follow Us

Recent Posts

  • American Airlines drops 3% in premarket trading following the rejection of the United megamerger.

    April 20, 2026
  • Chinese technology employees are beginning to educate their AI counterparts—and resisting

    April 20, 2026
  • Man murders seven of his offspring, and an eighth child, in mass shooting in Louisiana.

    April 20, 2026
  • A high-ranking Iranian official informs the BBC that Tehran will not relinquish control over the Strait of Hormuz.

    April 19, 2026
  • Blue Origin effectively repurposed its New Glenn rocket

    April 19, 2026

Newsletter

Join the BusinessStory newsletter for fresh insights, market analysis, and new stories!

Categories

  • Business (17)
  • Economy (394)
  • Global (413)
  • Investing (8)
  • Lifestyle (103)
  • Tech/AI (1,100)
  • Uncategorized (10)

Our Company

We’re dedicated to telling true stories from all around the world.

  • Ilulissat 3952, Greenland
  • Phone: (686) 587 6876
  • Email: [email protected]
  • Support: [email protected]

About Links

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertise With Us
  • Media Relations
  • Corporate Information
  • Compliance
  • Apps & Products

Useful Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Closed Captioning Policy
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Personal Information
  • Data Tracking
  • Register New Account

Newsletter

Join the BusinessStory newsletter for fresh insights, market analysis, and new stories!

Latest Posts

Blue Origin effectively repurposed its New Glenn rocket
FBI Director Kash Patel pledges to take legal action against The Atlantic regarding allegations of alcohol misuse.
Cloud development platform Vercel experienced a security breach.
Blue Origin’s rocket-reuse achievement tarnished by an upper-stage failure

@2025 – All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by BusinessStory.org

Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin Youtube Email
  • Home
  • Investing
  • Global
  • Business
  • Economy
  • Tech/AI
  • Lifestyle
  • About Us
  • Contact