President Joe Biden issued a sweeping executive order on AI just months after his first run with the technology.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
President Joe Biden asked ChatGPT to explain a legal case, write a Supreme Court briefing, and a song.
"Wow, I can't believe it could do that," he said after his first ChatGPT run, according to Wired.
The experience also pushed Biden to sign an executive order on AI safety.
After over three decades in the Senate, eight years as vice president, and three presidential campaigns, you'd think nothing would surprise President Joe Biden.
Then, last spring, he tried out ChatGPT. A few months later, he signed sweeping legislation targeting the new technology.
Arati Prabhakar, Biden's chief science and technology advisor and director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, told Wired that she and Biden put the bot up to a few tasks.
First, they asked it to explain a lawsuit between Delaware (the state Biden represented as a senator) and New Jersey (the home state of singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen, to whom Biden had just presented the National Medal of Arts) as if it was talking to a first grader. "OK, kiddo," the bot began.
Biden's science and technology chief, Arati Prabhakar, showed him how to use ChatGPT.
Bloomberg/Getty Images
Then, they asked it to write a legal brief for a Supreme Court case, write a song in the style of Springsteen, and generate an image of Biden's dog, Commander, in the Oval Office.
"Wow, I can't believe it could do that," Biden told Prabhakar, according to Wired.
Buthis first encounter with generative AI also sparked concern.
Prabhakartold Wiredthat Biden later asked the team to address the potential risks of AI. That led to the sweeping executive order he signed in October. The orderrequires major tech companies to adhere to certain safety guidelines, notify the federal government of their work, and share testing results.
Biden also reportedly told his cabinet that AI would touch the work of every department and agency at a meeting in early October. "The rest of the world is looking to us to lead the way," he said.
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Visible Wireless could be an appealing carrier if you use a lot of data each month.
Eve Montie/Business Insider
Visible Wireless is Verizon's shot at the low-cost mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) market, providing access to Verizon's 5G and 4G LTE networks for as little as $25 a month.
Visible's base plan and premium plan, Visible+, come with unlimited data subject to deprioritized speeds. However, Visible+, the best cheap cell phone plan for unlimited data, offers 50GB of guaranteed high-speed data for an added monthly fee. Both plans also come with unlimited hotspot data usage at varying maximum speeds.
I tested the efficacy of Visible's base plan in New York City through an average week, looking into the MVNO's coverage consistency, data reliability, and call quality, among other factors. If you're looking to make the switch, I also outline the setup process as a new user and compare plan offerings so you can judge whether Visible has a plan that suits your needs.
Plan offerings and flexibility
The baseline Visible plan comes in at $25 a month (or $275 annually) and includes unlimited data subject to deprioritization, unlimited talk and text to Mexico and Canada, and unlimited hotspot data.
The premium Visible+ plan costs $45 a month (or $395 annually). In addition to the base plan's offerings, the premium plan guarantees a 50GB allotment of high-speed data and higher unlimited hotspot speeds. It also adds more international perks and a discount on Verizon's home internet.
Unlimited (including 50GB/month of guaranteed premium high-speed data)
$45
$395 (around $33/month)
Spam protection
Smartwatch service
Unlimited mobile hotspot (capped at 10Mbps)
Unlimited talk and text to Mexico/Canada
Unlimited talk, text, and data roaming in Mexico/Canada
Widespread international calling and texting
5G Ultra Wideband access
$10/month discount on Verizon home internet
One complimentary Global Pass day each month (unlimited talk, text, and high-speed data in 140 countries)
Separating itself from Visible's base plan, Visible+ includes international calling from the US to over 30 countries and texting to over 200 countries, which, along with unlimited data and hotspot data, make for an excellent deal relative to big-budget phone plans that offer similar benefits with a much higher price tag.
While the Visible base plan and upgraded Visible+ program include unlimited data, Visible+ customers are guaranteed 50GB of premium high-speed data monthly. This discrepancy is important to note in terms of deprioritization, as Visible+ customers won't be subjected to slower data speeds in congested areas as long as they're within their high-speed data allowance.
Visible's base plan has access to unlimited data that is subject at any time to deprioritized speeds, and it doesn't have access to the newer 5G Ultra Wideband networks.
Visible offers the coverage of their broadband giant parent Verizon at a fraction of the cost.
Eve Montie/Business Insider
With either Visible plan, customers can bring their own phones as long as they're compatible with Verizon's network. Visible has a compatibility checker available on their site, and if your phone isn't found to be compatible you can trade it in for credit toward a new phone or swap it for free with an Android phone. You can also elect to keep your previous phone number through a "porting-in" process on Visible's website or mobile app.
There isn't much in the way of setup guidance beyond the articles on Visible's help site, and once your SIM or eSIM is activated, the setup process is complete. Overall, the experience as a new customer is barebones — particularly compared to a competitor like Mint Mobile, which provides the new user with a setup assistance kit, a guided walkthrough of the app and its capabilities, and an easily navigable support site.
New Visible customers can opt to test the service with a free 15-day trial — and if results are less than you'd hoped for, it's easy to cancel the trial through Visible's app.
Coverage area
An enticing reason for switching from one of Verizon's pricier premier plans to a Visible plan is that you'll get to keep the same network coverage at a lower monthly cost for a single line.
Operating under Verizon's network, Visible provides strong 4G LTE, 5G, and 5G "Ultra Wideband" connections across most of the United States, with some gaps in coverage in less populated areas. Visible+ offers 5G Ultra Wideband coverage in many urban areas, so your data speeds will be the fastest that a 5G connection can provide.
Before signing up for Visible, check in on their provided coverage map to confirm whether Verizon covers your area.
Visible's coverage map indicates 5G and 4G/LTE covered areas in blue and 5G Ultra Wideband covered areas in teal.
Visible Wireless
Service reliability and speeds
The best feature of Visible's unlimited data plans is that your data is truly unlimited in the manner of the best cell phone plans from major carriers, in that speeds aren't capped after you use a certain amount of data, unlike some other nominally unlimited plans.
That said, Visible customers are prioritized after Verizon's higher-paying customers who use the same network and could theoretically encounter slower speeds at any time on the Visible baseline plan. However, in areas with less network congestion, you may not experience any meaningful disruption from deprioritization.
Even conducting my testing in New York City didn't leave me disappointed. On the baseline Visible unlimited plan, I could load videos and social media apps with almost no buffering time, which means a lot in an urban area, where everyone is using data simultaneously in close proximity. My texts sent from just about anywhere, calls went through totally fine, and the audio quality was quite good.
Video calls came with mixed results, however. While on a 4G connection, I could see and hear the person on the other end of the line perfectly fine. The reverse connection was not so clean, though, and my call partner noted that my audio and video were skipping to the point of incoherence (despite their being connected via a high-speed WiFi network). When I tried another call while connected with four bars of 5G data, the issues disappeared entirely.
This disparity wasn't entirely surprising, as a 4G connection will be generally less reliable than a 5G (or a 5G Ultra Wideband) connection. It's worth noting that I had a 4G connection at all versus a 5G one, as my testing regions were entirely covered by Verizon 5G coverage according to Visible's coverage map, so the slower connection suggests that I was subject to deprioritization in a congested area.
One con of being on Verizon's coverage network in a populous area is that they're a popular network for a reason, and a lot of people use their services. Thus, Visible customers may encounter deprioritization more frequently.
Customer support
As far as in-app and online support is concerned, Visible offers a typically distant level of customer care that you can generally expect from a wireless carrier (particularly a larger network or an MVNO operating on one), with a basic help page that refers the user to a knowledge base of support articles to help resolve any issues you may have in setup, activation, or account information.
Visible's app includes the same help center knowledge base as its desktop website and a shop tab that you can use to purchase smartwatches or upgrade your phone.
Visible's app, meant to be a source for users to manage their service, could use some work.
Eve Montie/Business Insider
From a user experience standpoint, the shop tab in the app isn't terribly useful; you only purchase a new phone or smartwatch every once in a long while, so the shop tab isn't the most useful resource to include in the mobile app. It doesn't help that the app requires you to log in every time you use it, which is a bit of a chore.
You can also manage your plan in the Account tab, view your plan specifics, and upgrade your plan from the app. All the most pertinent user information lives in the Account tab, and you can chat there with a digital assistant to access quick help.
Overall, relative to the outstanding customer support offered by competitor Mint Mobile, Visible's app and site support are lackluster and not particularly user-friendly.
In my testing, Visible's base plan had consistently reliable coverage, allowing me to send texts, make calls, and load apps seamlessly. Though I encountered disruptive, slower data speeds when taking video calls in a congested area, this deprioritization was momentary and ultimately a minor blemish on an overall positive experience with the service.
If you don't use massive amounts of monthly data, however, Visible is likely not worth the monthly price, as other budget carriers like Mint Mobile and Tello Mobile provide tiered data plans that cost less than Visible's base plan.
FAQs
Who owns Visible Wireless?
Visible Wireless is owned by Verizon, and it runs using Verizon's 4G LTE and 5G networks.
While this means that users have access to Verizon's network at a considerably lower cost than Verizon's base plans, it does mean that base Visible customers will be prioritized after Verizon customers in congested areas.
Visible data speeds may slow down to accommodate the higher-paying Verizon customers, who ultimately pay for convenience and top-tier data speeds.
Does Visible work abroad?
If you're a Visible customer from the US going abroad outside of Mexico and Canada, you'll need to pick up a local SIM card to use data while overseas.
Visible and Visible+ provide unlimited calling and texting to Mexico and Canada from the United States. Visible+ adds unlimited data roaming in both countries, but neither plan includes international data roaming in countries outside of Mexico and Canada.
Customers with Visible+ can also make calls to over 30 countries and send texts to over 200 countries, and WiFi calling should work anywhere if you have access to a WiFi network.
How do Visible's unlimited plans work?
Visible's unlimited plans are prepaid monthly and include unlimited data, unlimited hotspot data, and unlimited talk and text on Verizon's coverage network. Under Verizon's umbrella, Visible users can take advantage of 4G LTE speeds consistently and even 5G (or 5G Ultra Wideband for Visible+ users) if there isn't much network congestion.
The service is intended to be a low-cost alternative for customers looking to use Verizon's network but who aren't in the budget for one of their more premium plans. Visible strips the process of network management down to the basics, with no annual contracts or hidden fees, just prepaid data service.
The caveat is that while your data is unlimited, the speed of the data could slow down due to Verizon network traffic at any time on the base Visible plan or after the guaranteed 50GB of high-speed data on Visible+.
Does Visible offer a family plan?
Unfortunately, Visible only offers unlimited plans for one line at a time and does not offer a traditional "family" plan. For example, if you have multiple base subscription lines on your plan, each will cost $25 a month.
Visible used to provide a "Party Pay" option that added discounts for multiple lines on the same plan, but the service ended as of January 2023.
A coal-fired power plant in China's Zhejiang province.
Getty Images
The US is trying to cut itself off from China's green tech like solar, EVs, and batteries.
The moves could hit China's economy and risks slowing down the green transition.
The US and China, as the world's largest polluters, are key to solving the climate crisis.
There will be a long list of grievances when China's top climate envoy, Liu Zhenmin, visits the US this month for his first formal talks with US officials.
The meeting comes as the US and China jockey for power in the green-energy transition. The Biden administration is trying to cut itself off from Chinese goods that are key to solving the climate crisis — such as solar panels, electric vehicles, batteries, and semiconductors. The US wants to protect its factories against competition from cheaper products, which, in turn, could hit China's economy and risk slowing down the green transition. China is also under pressure to stop building new coal plants, the dirtiest form of power production, because the expansion undercuts the country's promise that its greenhouse-gas emissions will start dropping after 2030.
"The recent moves by the US to connect the climate issue with trade measures, industrial competition, and national security is something I'm sure the Chinese will raise because they have a lot of concerns on this policy direction," Li Shuo, the director of China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, told Business Insider.
Li said China's view was that the US prioritized economic competition at the expense of mitigating the climate emergency. The world needs affordable green technology for the energy transition, and China's record levels of investment have driven down the costs, he added.
A recent example is the remarkable rise of BYD, a Chinese automaker that briefly eclipsed Tesla this year as the world's largest seller of EVs.
However, the US views China as a threat to both national security and the climate. The country's boom in green-tech manufacturing was largely powered by dirty energy, with coal still accounting for about 60% of China's electricity, an S&P Global analysis found. And even though China is adding renewable energy to its grid faster than any other country, it's also building new coal-fired power plants at a rapid clip.
Coal is a major source of tension between the US and China, Li said. China has no policy to signal a coal slowdown, undermining its climate promises.
The issue could be inflamed following a deal this week among seven of the world's wealthiest countries to stop burning coal for power by 2035. During a G7 meeting in Italy, Japan, another major coal user, endorsed the timeline for the first time and was joined by the US, Canada, and several European nations.
For its part, the US in late April finalized stricter emissions limits on power plants, which are expected to speed up the shift away from coal. About 16% of US electricity comes from coal, a steep drop over the past decade largely due to the fracking boom that made gas a cheaper source of power.
But neither the US nor China is in a position to compromise, Li said.
China defends its coal expansion as a matter of energy security. Last year, sky-high temperatures and drought in regions reliant on hydropower forced rolling blackouts and factory closures.
Biden-administration officials, including the climate envoy John Podesta and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, in recent months have said the US is evaluating new strategies to counter China's dominance over green technology. Former President Donald Trump said he would impose tariffs of more than 60% on China if he won the election in November.
Given the tension, there likely won't be any major breakthroughs during this month's talks, Li said. But the fact that the world's two largest polluters are meeting in person shows that the climate still carries special weight. Few Chinese senior officials travel to the US.
The Dali brought down the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore in March.
Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images
Chubb, the Baltimore bridge insurer, is set to pay out $350 million, per The Wall Street Journal.
The bridge's collapse in March killed six people and shut down the port of Baltimore.
Chubb, the state of Maryland, and victims' families will likely sue the ship's owners, per the Journal.
The insurer of Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge is gearing up to issue a $350 million payout to the state of Maryland, The Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday.
Chubb has opted to pay the full coverage amount quickly and could approve it within weeks, per the outlet, which cited Henry Daar, the head of US property claims for the bridge's broker WTW.
"I am confident that Chubb will pay the full limits of liability," Daar told the Journal.
"I give Chubb kudos for recognizing that this is clearly going to be a full-limits loss," he added. "They could spend millions and millions of dollars in fees for accountants and adjusters over the next few years, or they could pay the claim."
Chubb's payment would be the first related to March's disaster. The Lloyd's of London insurance syndicate previously warned that the bridge's collapse could trigger the "largest single maritime insurance loss ever," with Barclays analysts estimating that the damage caused could lead claims worth up to $3 billion.
The bridge collapsed after the Dali container ship collided with one of the bridge's support beams in the early hours of March 26, killing six people and shutting down the port of Baltimore, which analysts have estimated cost the economy about $15 million a day.
Chubb, the state of Maryland, and the victims' families are likely to sue the Dali's Singaporean owners to recover some of their losses from the crash, per the Journal.
Chubb didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider. WTW confirmed the Journal's reporting but declined to elaborate.
Satellite imagery of flooded homes in Korsunka, Ukraine, on May 15, 2023.
Satellite image (c) 2023 Maxar Technologies via Getty Images
Ukraine wants to limit companies taking satellite imagery of its territory, according to reports.
Russia could access the images through shell companies, a Ukrainian defense official said.
This comes a month after the US warned that China is providing geospatial intelligence to Russia.
Ukraine says it is cracking down on satellite images of its territory over fears that they could be used by Russia against it, according to reports.
"Every day, satellite companies take images of Ukrainian territory. These images can be used by the enemy," Ukraine's deputy defense minister, Kateryna Chernohorenko, said in a statement relayed by multiplemediaoutlets.
Chernohorenko said that "in times of war, we must minimize the risks of the enemy using images of Ukraine," adding that Russia can access them through shell companies, per Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.
Ukraine's defense ministry has signed a memorandum of understanding with unnamed satellite companies to limit the distribution of such images, per the Kyiv Independent, and met with the leadership of one of them, according to Ukrainska Pravda.
The ministry also said it had struck a deal with one satellite company, which it refused to name for security reasons, to provide high-resolution imaging for security and defense purposes, per the Kyiv Independent.
Ukraine's Ministry of Defense didn't immediately reply to a request for comment from Business Insider.
The news comes a month after the US warned its allies that China is providing geospatial intelligence to Russia, as Bloomberg reported.
Satellite imagery has proven a crucial resource for capturing and verifying the movements of naval assets, Russia's advances into Ukraine, the war's death toll, and the trail of destruction left by fighting across the front line.
Both Ukraine and Russia have used satellites, notably Elon Musk's Starlink network, for military purposes, to allow soldiers to communicate on the front lines and for weapons systems and drones to function.
Elon Musk has denied Ukrainian claims that Russians are using Starlink, saying that the network is inoperable in Russia, but a complex black market has allowed terminals to fall into the hands of Russian soldiers and those of other armed forces, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Business Insider spoke to interior designers and gardeners to learn which trends are best to add or eliminate from backyards this year.
Here's what they said.
Wabi-Sabi-inspired outdoor spaces are on the rise.
Weathered decor features can make an outdoor space feel cozier.
aztekphoto/Shutterstock
Wabi-Sabi design, which embraces weathered materials, rustic elements, and organic shapes, is in, according to Kelsey Ross, designer, landscape architect, and owner of Garden Party Landscape Design.
"In practice, this can mean opting for natural, unstained cedar fencing that fades from tan to silver over time," she said.
Other opportunities to embrace the trend include choosing weathered brick for your patio and planting trees with a naturally weathered or gnarly shape.
People are embracing cold-plunge tubs in their backyard spaces.
Use of the tubs, typically available at spas and wellness facilities, can help reduce inflammation and improve mental health.
Personalizing a backyard with a fun umbrella is in.
You can add color and personality to your outdoor space.
Ozgur Coskun/Shutterstock
People are adding flair to backyard design by introducing pops of color and creative shapes — and a fun and colorful umbrella is a great way to lean into the trend.
"When clients design their dream outdoor space, they look for individuality. What better way to do that than in their shade solution? " Holmes Holiday told BI. "We see many bold colors and scalloped designs."
Outdoor pergolas are having a major moment.
Pergolas can be built with added shades for sun protection.
aceshot1/Shutterstock
According to Marisa Bettencourt, founder of North + Fair Interior Design, outdoor pergolas are all the rage right now.
"Outdoor pergolas provide additional shade and can help define an area in your yard that's meant for entertaining and mingling," she said.
The outdoor structure, typically made from wood and topped with a slatted roof, can be built in several styles. But Bettencourt said pergolas with retractable shades (for privacy and sun protection) are especially popular.
Edible gardens are top of mind for many this year.
Growing fruits, vegetables, or herbs is a great use of outdoor space.
Joanne Dale/Shutterstock
Lindsey Hyland, expert gardener and founder of Urban Organic Yield, expects to see more edible gardens in backyards this year.
"The idea is to integrate fruits, vegetables, and herbs into landscaping in a way that's not only practical but also aesthetically pleasing," she told BI.
On the other hand, large outdoor kitchens are a fading trend.
Upkeeping an outdoor kitchen takes a lot of work.
brizmaker/Shutterstock
Lara Hermanson, principal and cofounder of Farmscape, told BI that people are moving away from large outdoor kitchens to preserve the natural feeling of a backyard.
"Clients are more interested in reconnecting with nature in their space than having their backyard feel like an extension of their family room," she said.
Artificial turf lawns are out.
Unless you can't grow anything in certain areas, stay away from artificial turf.
"When artificial turf was trending a few years back, people assumed it was a shortcut to a maintenance-free outdoor space," she told BI. "But in reality, it can get blisteringly hot when exposed to direct sun and tends to hold on to pet odors."
The designer recommended using artificial turf as a last resort in deeply shaded areas or where other groundcover solutions are not an option.
Monoculture lawns are on the decline.
Standard lawns with grace and shrubs can actually be bad for native plant species.
Nick Beer/Shutterstock
According to Alice Moszczynski, an interior designer at Planner 5D, monoculture lawns with uniform grass fields are declining in popularity.
"The monoculture lawn trend is falling out of favor due to its high water consumption, chemical dependency, and lack of biodiversity, which can contribute to ecological imbalances," she told BI.
Firepits are becoming a thing of the past.
Firepits can be nice for entertaining at night, but they take up a lot of valuable space.
Avinash.Saini/Shutterstock
Holmes Holiday said most modern firepits are trending out — despite their practicality for evenings outdoors.
"While firepits can create a cozy atmosphere, oversized designs have been left in the past," she told BI. "They dominate smaller outdoor areas, taking away from the overall space."
Industrial-style, minimalist design is out.
Ultra-modern furniture and lots of cement can make a backyard feel cold.
"People are moving away from cold, hard materials like concrete and steel in favor of warmer, more inviting settings that include a mix of natural elements," the gardener told BI.
This trend also includes a move toward more biodiverse and wild gardens.
Taylor Swift is often photographed leaving her townhouse in the Tribeca neighborhood in New York City.
TheStewartofNY/GC Images via Getty Images
Newly minted billionaire Taylor Swift has collected an impressive real estate portfolio.
One of her properties, a townhouse in NYC, was the recent target of an attempted break-in.
Take a look at the properties she currently owns in Nashville, California, and more.
Taylor Swift will never be out of style — or at least out of homes.
The superstar has built up a real estate portfolio that is worth at least $100 million, according to property records seen by Business Insider. She's used trusts and limited liability companies (LLCs) to buy homes throughout the US.
Swift reached billionaire status last year, and her record-breaking Eras Tour is a big factor in her fortune.
Some of her most recognizable abodes are her multiple apartments in the Tribeca neighborhood of New York City and the sprawling Rhode Island mansion where the star hosts her famous friends for summer parties.
In 2009 at age 19, Swift made her first major purchase: a 4,000-square-foot, three-bedroom penthouse in The Adelicia in Nashville, Tennessee for $1.99 million.
The "Speak Now" singer has kept her residence at The Adelicia since the beginning of her stardom.
Google Maps
Not only is The Adelicia close to Nashville's Music Row, but it also has a private garage, heated pool, and fitness center, according to the building's website.
As of 2021, the appraised value of the apartment is over $3.7 million, according to public property records viewed by BI.
Swift told Vulture that she designed the penthouse herself. When she spoke to the publication in 2013, she had a photo on display of Kanye West interrupting her at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards. Under the photo she reportedly wrote, "Life is full of little interruptions."
Swift reportedly bought the Northumberland Estate in Forest Hills, Tennessee in 2011 for $2.5 million.
It's unclear if Swift still owns the Nashville property.
Art Wager/Getty Images
The estate has an appraised property value of about $3.7 million as of 2021. Although multiple outlets — including The Wall Street Journal — have reported that Swift owns the mansion, BI was unable to confirm her ownership via property records in 2024. (We've reached out to her representatives in an attempt to clarify if she still owns the property.)
The Northumberland Estate is a Greek Revival-style home that was built around 1934. It formerly belonged to Guilford Dudley Jr., who served as the US ambassador to Denmark, WSJ reported.
Swift bought an 11,000-square-foot colonial-style mansion in Watch Hill, Rhode Island for $17.75 million in 2013.
the pop star is known to celebrate Independence Day at her Rhode Island home.
Jared DiPietro/Getty Images
The home, formerly known as Holiday House, was built in 1904. Swift wrote "the last great american dynasty" on her "folklore" album about the home's former owner, Rebekah Harkness.
She reportedly paid for the home in cash.
"I got the house when I was in my early twenties as a place for my family to congregate and be together," Swift told Entertainment Weekly, saying that she learned about Harkness "as soon as I was being walked through [her former Rhode Island] home."
Swift is known for throwing Fourth of July parties at the house, which is at the highest point of Watch Hill and has views of Little Narragansett Bay. The mansion has eight bedrooms, eight fireplaces, and a pool.
It now has an assessed value of $20,434,100, according to property records.
Swift bought the Beverly Hills mansion known as the Goldwyn Estate in 2015 for $25 million.
Swift's Beverly Hills home is a part of history.
PS3000/Getty Images
The property now has an assessed value of just under $30 million, according to property records.
Swift reportedly bought the estate through an LLC from the Goldwyn family. It belonged to the legendary Hollywood producer who was part of the iconic Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film studio, and reportedly hosted old Hollywood stars such as Clark Gable and Bette Davis.
The mansion has six bedrooms, a tennis court, a whole apartment for guests, and a swimming pool.
In 2017, the home was granted historic landmark status, WSJ reported.
Swift welcomed herself to New York by buying two penthouse units in Tribeca's Sugar Loaf building in 2014 for $19.95 million.
Swift's Tribeca apartment has been the target of break-in attempts.
Gotham/GC Images via Getty Images
She had the penthouses converted into an 8,309-square-foot duplex, which now has 10 bedrooms and 10 bathrooms.
Swift bought the penthouses from "The Lord of the Rings" director Peter Jackson through an LLC.
Three years later in 2017, she bought the townhouse next door for $18 million, and in 2018, she purchased yet another apartment in the Sugar Loaf building for $9.75 million. All four of her reported NYC apartments can be linked by LLCs that share the same tax addresses on property records.
Andrew Azoulay, a real-estate agent in Manhattan, told The Wall Street Journal that he advised Swift to buy the townhouse to act as a private garage and to buy the second-floor apartment to connect the garage to her duplex in the Sugar Loaf building.
Her townhouse has been the target of break-in attempts over the years. In January, a man was arrested for trying to gain access to the building while Swift was attending the Kansas City Chiefs game versus the Bills in Buffalo.
New graduates in Austin, Atlanta, and Houston earn the highest cost-of-living-adjusted starting salaries, per Gusto.
New York City attracts the largest share of new grad hires despite offering a smaller adjusted salary.
More Americans are migrating South for better cost-of-living and job opportunities.
Recent college graduates are flocking to New York City for their first jobs,but their degrees may go the furthest in Texas or Georgia.
New data from small business payment platform Gusto reveals new grads in Austin, Atlanta, and Houston have the highest cost-of-living-adjusted starting salaries when factoring in housing and other expenses.
Though New York City accounts for nearly 10% of new grad hires — the largest share of all the major cities — its adjusted starting salary givesa new grad half of what they'd earn in Austin.
The report used real-time data from over 300,000 businesses that use Gusto and defined "new grads" as full-time salaried employees aged 20 to 24.
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Between April 2023 and March 2024, new graduates in Austin earned an average of over $58,000 in cost-of-living-adjusted dollars, given the city's slightly below-average cost of living compared to the national average. New grads in Atlanta earned an adjusted $57,500, while Houston grads earned $56,250.
New York City, comparatively, came in at less than $28,500, well below the next-highest city on the list, Washington, DC, at $40,800. New York City's cost of living is over 125% more than the national average, meaning a salary of over $61,100 gets reduced by over half. Boston and Los Angeles were also at the bottom of the list, given living costs nearly 50% higher than the national average.
While recent graduates were most likely to flock to cities like New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco to start their careers, cost-of-living challenges may eventually push them South, to cities like Austin and Atlanta, where the Gusto report found salaries go the furthest. It's a decision many Americans have made in recent years.
Between July 2022 and 2023, Florida, Texas, and South Carolina were the three fastest-growing states by population in the nation, per the Census Bureau. Over the past year, BI has spoken with several people who've moved to the South — better weather, lower cost of living, and ample job opportunities were among the reasons they said they did so.
The Gusto report also found that new grads are also less likely to be remote workers compared to millennials — 21.5% of those aged 20-24 compared to 29.6% of those 30-39. Many recent grads are choosing to work full-time at the office for additional networking and mentorship opportunities. That tracks how different generations view in-office time: Younger and older workers tend to go into the office, while the workers in the middle — millennials — are pushing the continued remote work boom.
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But even as younger workers may find themselves stuck in cities with a higher cost-of-living, those jobs represent opportunities that have become harder to come by in the last few years.
It comes as higher-wage, white-collar workers see their own brutal job market. Gusto said that hiring was "frantic" in 2021 and 2022, the peak years of the Great Resignation and firms beefing up headcounts; last year, though, hiring fell "sharply." Now, that new grad hiring rate has stabilized — which isn't necessarily all bad news, but simply just shows how trends have changed from the frenzied firms trying to staff up, no matter what it took, to being a bit more measured.
The woman, who, according to a court document, is named Jeniffer Rocha, was delivering food for the UK delivery app Deliveroo in December 2022 when she got into an argument with Stephen Jenkinson, the customer she was delivering pizza to, per the BBC.
Jenkinson told the BBC that Rocha had arrived at the wrong location and that when he went to collect his order, he didn't bring his phone, leading to an argument about his delivery code number.
Jenkinson told the outlet that he raised his hand to Rocha's motorcycle helmet, and she then bit his thumb. "She'd taken it clean off," he told the BBC.
Jenkinson, a plumber, previously said that he had been unable to work since then and was financially "ruined." He said that he'd had months of surgery to reconstruct his thumb using part of his big toe and that he had no sensation in it.
In March, Rocha pleaded guilty to one count of grievous bodily harm without intent. She's set to be sentenced on Friday, a spokesperson for Winchester Crown Court confirmed to Business Insider.
A concerning loophole in app safety
When Rocha delivered to Jenkinson, she was working as a substitute for another rider.
Deliveroo classes its riders as "independent contractors," meaning they're self-employed, and because of this, they're able to appoint other people as substitutes. The substitutes can complete deliveries using a rider's account without registering.
This incident highlights the concerns around the potential dangers of substitute drivers, given that it can be hard for delivery companies to verify the identities of these substitutes.
Though Deliveroo riders have to be over 18 with no unspent criminal convictions, it's historically been up to individual riders, not Deliveroo itself, to check that their substitutes meet this criteria.
A Deliveroo spokesperson told BI that the company had "immediately" canceled the account Rocha was using when the "terrible incident" — the attack on Jenkinson — occurred.
But after Rocha appeared in court, the BBC spotted her twice collecting food for delivery on her moped, it reported.
On the second occasion, on April 18, it said that the manager of the takeaway she collected an order from said that she was delivering it for Deliveroo.
The Deliveroo spokesperson said that it had also canceled an alternative account that Rocha was using. It's unclear whether this was her own account or whether she was delivering as a substitute again.
"We take our responsibilities extremely seriously and are committed to preventing misuse of our platform," the spokesperson told BI. "We have strengthened our processes and recently introduced a new registration process and identity verification technology for substitute riders." This includes right-to-work checks rolled out by Deliveroo in April.