Nothing says "done" like "very complete, pretty much".
Nothing says "done" like "very complete, pretty much".
Approaching a major international conflict like a Call of Duty campaign.
Tired: SpaceX will be a $1.5 trillion memestock. To the moon!
Wired: SpaceX is a mostly a satcoms business with a lot of new AI risk (and rivals waiting in the wings).
Hereβs my latest for @breakingviews.reuters.com:
Apropos of nothing, some stats from a Breakingviews colleague:
Tourism's share of the UK economy is low by EU standards. The ONS puts its gross value added at Β£60bn in 2023, under 3% of the total. France and Germany are ~4% (and neither has a monarchy).
YouTube is eating TV (streamers too) - and there's not much that traditional broadcasters can do about it @jen-johnson.bsky.social www.reuters.com/commentary/b...
No amount of hospitality can save the American people from the president's desire to make them pay more for imported goods!
The UK really pulled out all the stops for that state visit...and still got tariffed for sending a single military officer to Greenland.
If regulators wonβt enforce their digital safety rules now, when will they? Hereβs my take on the Grok issue for @breakingviews.reuters.com
www.reuters.com/commentary/b...
Wild that this is now necessary to report accurately on a tech platform and its features:
"A Reuters reporter asked Grok on X to convert a picture of himself into one wearing a bikini, echoing what has become a common request [...] by users."
www.reuters.com/sustainabili...
The biggest M&A deal ever. An easier ride for fiscally challenged governments. A crypto bailout.
Those are some of the things Breakingviews columnists predict for 2026 in a new e-book, βFar Side of the Boomβ.
Access the book π reut.rs/3YDKKwu
Or read articles online π reut.rs/45puKSz
From Breakingviews - Breakingviews - US raid on Venezuela threatens new global ruptures reut.rs/4jrILFa
Put ads everywhere? Turn the BBC into Netflix? On paper, there are plenty of alternatives to the licence fee. In practice, most roads lead to one destination: a shrunken BBC. I look at the numbers in my latest column. www.reuters.com/commentary/b...
The new season of the White Lotus practically writes itself.
EU M&A rules morph from growth catalyst to weapon - www.breakingviews.com/columns/cons... @jen-johnson.bsky.social
UK cyber support invites more moral hazard - www.breakingviews.com/columns/brea... @jen-johnson.bsky.social
Pretty sharp reversal given Zuckerberg was (reportedly) trying to entice AI talent with billion-dollar pay packages only a few months ago.
Kids will inevitably use VPNs to dodge online age restrictions. And a generation equipped with privacy tools is a lot harder for advertisers to target.
Here's my piece on the knock-on impacts of online safety laws π
Suddenly Blue Origin isn't just the rocket company that did the all-female gimmick spaceflight. It's now the heir apparent to all of SpaceX's government launch contracts.
This is the same guy who claims "population collapse due to low birth rates is a much bigger risk to civilization than global warming."
RedBird might have got the Telegraph, but its headaches aren't over. Here's my column on the latest chapter in the broadsheet's sale saga. π
"The Journal earlier reported that the device wonβt be a phone, and that Ive and Altmanβs intent is to help wean users from screens."
Think I speak for all millennials when I say I'm not excited about the surveillance Tamagotchi.
Armchair energy experts started blaming renewables as soon as the lights went out across the Iberian peninsula. Here's my piece on why the grid deserves more attention, regardless of what caused the blackout.
www.breakingviews.com/considered-v...
How it feels explaining The Formula to people who think the UK got off lightly with a 10% tariff.
Apropos of nothing, I've just remembered that Liz Truss blamed the Bank of England for undermining her policies.
Understandably, most governments favour a "negotiate first, retaliate later" approach. But there's no way the U.S. can hold talks with ~60 aggrieved trading partners at once. Some will surely have to retaliate before they've had chance to plead their cases.
Canβt stop thinking about the big tariff chart Trump was waving around. Did they get it made at a DC print shop yesterday? Or use one of those online services where you send in your PDF and get the poster board mailed to you?
This has the energy of an unhinged game show.
If I heard correctly, Trump just said the Great Depression was caused by a lack of tariffs?
That's just not true. The Smoot-Hawley tariff made matters worse.
I imagine we're going to see a few more journalists adding their Signal accounts to their bios. Just on the off chance they somehow get looped into a top secret intelligence briefing.