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Jeff Bezos' Most Prized Possession Breaks Historical Auction Records At Almost $53 Million
Jeff Bezos amassed his wealth through Amazon stocks and owns hundreds of millions of dollars worth of real estate, but one of his most valuable possessions may surprise you: art. Among his collection is the renowned piece "Hurting the Word Radio #2 (1964)" by Ed Ruscha, purchased by Bezos for almost $53 million. This artwork, a prime example of Ruscha’s text-based paintings, stands as a signature piece in Bezos’ collection. As concerns over stock market volatility persist, the world’s wealthiest
BenzingaWarren Buffett's Latest $2.6 Billion Buy Brings His Total Investment in This Stock to More Than $77 Billion in Under 6 Years
The Oracle of Omaha has purchased shares of his favorite stock for 23 consecutive quarters.
Motley FoolMassive News for Intel Stock Investors
Intel was hit with more bad news that has enormous implications for investors.
Motley FoolAnthropic now lets kids use its AI tech -- within limits
AI startup Anthropic is changing its policies to allow minors to use its generative AI systems -- in certain circumstances, at least. Announced in a post on the company's official blog Friday, Anthropic will begin letting teens and preteens use third-party apps (but not its own apps, necessarily) powered by its AI models so long as the developers of those apps implement specific safety features and disclose to users which Anthropic technologies they're leveraging. In a support article, Anthropic lists several safety measures devs creating AI-powered apps for minors should include, like age verification systems, content moderation and filtering and educational resources on "safe and responsible" AI use for minors.
TechCrunch3 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks That Could Make You a Millionaire
Many different types of stocks can mint millionaires -- from big to small.
Motley FoolBluesky now lets you personalize main Discover feed using new controls
Bluesky is now allowing users to personalize their main Discover feeds. The social network is rolling out an updated version of its app that lets users offer feedback about its algorithmic feed so they can better customize it using "Show more like this" and "Show less like this" buttons in a post's menu to choose which content the algorithm surfaces. The change will help Bluesky users create a timeline that takes into consideration their own preferences, not what the company thinks they should see.
TechCrunchQuantumScape Making Big Moves: Time to Buy Before It Skyrockets?
The battery start-up might reach its ambitions sooner than expected.
Motley FoolI Finally Decided to Cut My Losses and Sell This Stock -- Here's Why
This real estate technology company could be hit hard by a changing real estate market.
Motley FoolStock Market News for May 10, 2024
Wall Street closed sharply higher on Thursday, with interest rates still dominating the proceedings.
ZacksApple Says No Major App Developers Accept New Outside Payments
(Bloomberg) -- No major app developers have signed up to use outside payment options that Apple Inc. introduced earlier this year for its App Store because the fees they pay would be at least as high as they were before, according to testimony presented to a federal judge.Most Read from BloombergElon Musk Pledges to Grow Supercharger Business He Just DecimatedApple Nears Deal With OpenAI to Put ChatGPT on iPhoneIce Cube’s Big3 Basketball League Sells Its First Team in $10 Million DealBiden Set t
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