Category: Business

  • How to set up and customize Google Alerts: Track the search terms and topics you’re interested in

    A businessman in a suit works in an office at a computer, holding his chin looking thoughtful.
    Google launched Google Alerts over 20 years ago to monitor new mentions of specific search terms.

    • Google Alerts monitors the internet for new mentions of search terms you're trying to target.
    • You can set up a Google Alert for any search term, and customize or delete it anytime.
    • Google Alerts can be delivered to you immediately, or at specific times of the day or week.

    When you want the latest updates on a trending news story, to know who won the game you couldn't missed live, or see what new shows are dropping onto Netflix this week, chances are that you turn to a Google search.

    But what if you didn't even have to spend time searching because Google had already sent the exact information you wanted right to your inbox?

    Google Alerts proactively searches the web for specific terms you've selected and delivers relevant content to you as often as you'd like, be it once a day, once a week, or just as soon as that search term pops up in a new article, blog post, or in the description of some new video content.

    Google launched Google Alerts in 2003 after one of the company's first engineers, Naga Kataru, brought the idea directly to Google's founders. The very first keywords used to test the alerts were "Google" and "Larry Page."

    Though Google Alerts is still around more than two decades later, the software has drawn criticism from users over time. Users have said the alerts are too limited, inaccurate, or irrelevant. Dozens of media monitoring companies, such as Awari, Meltwater, Talkwalker, Muck Rack, Cision, and Prowly, have cropped up in the last decade to offer alternatives to Google Alerts.

    One advantage of Google Alerts, however, is that it's completely free to use. And while brands and high-profile figures may need a more sophisticated software to monitor their media mentions, Google Alerts can work just fine for the average everyday user.

    Here's how to set up, customize, and delete a Google Alert.

    How to set up Google Alerts

    To set up a Google Alert, first make sure you are logged into your Google account, then navigate to the Google Alerts page, which is simply www.google.com/alerts.

    1. Type the search term you want to follow into the bar reading "Create an alert about…" and search for it. For instance, if you're interested in news about job cuts in the tech industry, you might want to create an alert about "Google layoffs."

    2. Click the blue box that reads "Create Alert."

    A screenshot of the Google Alerts page shows the term "Google layoffs" in the search bar, with a red box and red arrow emphasizing the "Create Alert" button.
    Google Alerts get delivered right to your email inbox.

    That's it! You just created a Google alert. You can access and edit your alerts from the Google Alerts homepage or via the alerts Google sends to your email inbox.

    Though Google Alerts doesn't have its own dedicated app, you can still set up alerts for yourself on your iPhone or other smartphone. Simply visit the Google Alerts page using your phone's browser and follow the above steps.

    If you're expecting to pop up in the news anytime soon, you might want to consider setting up a Google Alert for your own name. And though there's no way to find out if anyone in particular is Googling you, you can always run a search for your name on Google Trends to see if there's any significant search interest.

    But even when you've set up all your Google Alerts, your work isn't quite done. By default, Google will send you updates about your alert (or alerts) once every day. If you'd like your alerts to be sent more or less often, here's how you'll do it.

    How to customize Google Alerts

    Go to the Alerts page and find the Google Alert you want to customize.

    1. Click on the pencil icon to the right of the alert to open its settings.

    2. On the next page, you can set how often you get alerts, what language they need to be in, from what region they are sourced (you can geo-fence to a specific country or from "Any Region"), what sources you want your alerts to come from (news, blogs, and web, e.g.), and more.

    A screenshot shows the customization options for Google Alerts, with a red box and red arrow emphasizing dropdown menus for alert frequency, sources, language, region, and amount.
    You can decide how often you want to receive Google Alerts.

    3. Hit the blue "Update alert" box.

    If you want all your alerts delivered at a specific time, hit the gear icon to the right of "My alerts" and choose a delivery time. You can limit your alert updates to once daily or even once weekly.

    You can also ask that Google send all your alert updates in a single email rather than sending each one individually.

    How to delete a Google Alert

    Deleting a Google alert is even simpler than creating one.

    1. Go to your Google Alerts page.

    2. Locate the trash can icon to the right of the alert you want to delete and click it.

    A screenshot of Google Alerts shows a trash can icon emphasized by a red box and red arrow to delete a Google Alert.
    You can edit or delete Google Alerts right from the alerts homepage.

    That's that — the alert is gone. A taskbar at the top of the page will pop up reading "Your alert on 'Google layoffs' has been deleted" and giving you the option to "Undo" that action or "Dismiss" the alert, which permanently deletes it, as does simply closing the Google Alerts page.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Recent South Dakota policy threatens professors who include their pronouns or tribal affiliations over email. It’s part of a concerning ‘longer-term agenda’ overtaking the US.

    University of South Dakota
    The University of South Dakota is enacting a discriminatory policy against professors who choose to express their pronouns and tribal affiliations via email signature.

    • A policy in South Dakota prevents some professors from listing certain details in email signatures.
    • Public university faculty are prohibited from sharing gender pronouns or tribal affiliations. 
    • Experts say it's part of a broader attempt to roll back rights for protected groups.

    South Dakota has joined a group of right-leaning states trying to curtail expressions of personal identity in the US.

    In December, the South Dakota Board of Regents issued a policy prohibiting professors at public universities in the state from including their designated gender pronouns or tribal affiliations in their email signatures, the Associated Press reported on Friday.

    And it didn't take long for the board – which governs the state's six public universities — to take action.

    Two University of South Dakota professors — Megan Red Shirt-Shaw and Red Shirt-Shaw's husband, John Little — recently told the AP they'd received written warnings to remove those details from their signatures.

    On X, formerly Twitter, the two said they'd received their warnings in mid-March. The consequence, Little told the AP, could be as severe as losing their jobs.

    "I was told that I had 5 days to remove my tribal affiliation and pronouns," Little wrote in an email to the AP. "I believe the exact wording was that I had '5 days to correct the behavior.'"

    Little added that if the request wasn't met, administrators would evaluate whether or not to invoke suspension or even termination as punishment.

    On X, Red Shirt-Shaw said she "made the difficult decision" to comply with the warnings, removing her tribal affiliation and gender pronouns from her email signature, "so I would not miss the remainder of the academic year."

    That said, Red Shirt-Shaw found a workaround: She has continued to place those details "in the body of each email that I send," which she said on X "will not be challenged (for now)." Little has done the same.

    For Red Shirt-Shaw, including those details is personal. As director of Native Student Services at the university, she wrote, "I feel I have an ethical responsibility to claim the tribal nations that make me who I am."

    The American Civil Liberties Union's South Dakota chapter also weighed in on X. The group called the Board of Regents' policy an effort by the state's leadership "to shove queer identities out of public life."

    Other experts agree that the South Dakota Board of Regents' guidelines are an escalation of a larger movement sweeping the US.

    Larger efforts at play

    South Dakota's flashpoint over email signatures comes as a national discourse rages about rights for LGBTQ+ Americans and members of diverse and protected groups.

    "Quite frankly, this is the first time I've heard of a state university choosing to use branding standards to eliminate what obviously has become a practice of including pronouns and tribal affiliations to emails," Paulette Grandberry Russell, president of the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education, told the AP.

    "But I'm not surprised, given the current climate we're in," she added, calling the decision by the state's Board of Regents a "steady progression" in a broader push.

    Grandberry Russell told the AP she thinks that such early-stage measures in conservative states could be used as a "testing ground" to determine if more severe laws could take hold.

    Kelly Benjamin, a spokesperson for the American Association of University Professors, an advocacy group for academics in higher education, told the AP that it's the latest step in "a longer-term agenda" aimed at limiting diversity, equity, and inclusion measures to protect LGBTQ+ Americans.

    Benjamin pointed to recent efforts in states like Florida and Arkansas. Florida lawmakers, for example, have passed bills that have limited or prevented access to services for transgender individuals, including gender-affirming care or even the ability to update their correct gender on their driver's license.

    Though LGBTQ+ Americans benefited from legal strides in the 2010s like a landmark Supreme Court decision upholding the legality of gay marriage in 2015, more recent actions by some Republican state leaders have raised the specter of threats to similar protections. South Dakota's recent policy is just one example.

    Meanwhile, violence against members of the LGBTQ+ communities has also increased as these debates have raged in the background. A 2022 Business Insider investigation found that homicides of transgender people, for instance, doubled between 2019 and 2021.

    The University of South Dakota did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent outside of normal working hours.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • An influx of new residents to GOP-leaning Montana could be the key voting bloc that decides the state’s hotly-contested Senate race

    Aerial View of Downtown Bozeman, Montana, in Summer.
    Bozeman, Montana.

    • The Montana US Senate race is set to be one of the most competitive races in the country.
    • Now there's a new layer to the race: recent transplants who could sway the election.
    • An influx of new residents has driven up home prices and shined a light on housing affordability.

    Montana's US Senate race is shaping up to be one of the marquee races of 2024 as three-term Democrat Jon Tester hopes to fend off an aggressive challenge from his likely GOP opponent, Tim Sheehy.

    The contest has huge national implications. A win for Tester in Montana would give Democrats a fighting chance to retain control of the Senate, while a GOP victory would be the culmination of a long road to regaining a critical seat in the conservative-leaning state.

    With former President Donald Trump highly likely to win Montana in November, many Republicans believe he'll be able to aid down-ballot candidates like Sheehy.

    But it's not that simple.

    Tester, a moderate Democrat, has established a political brand that has defied the state's GOP orientation for nearly 20 years. And it's about to be tested even further due to the state's recent population surge, with transplants from Western states like California, Oregon, and Washington poised to be an electoral wild card in a contest that was already set to be competitive.

    Montana has always drawn people who are attracted to the outdoors. During the coronavirus pandemic, many transplants found refuge in the state as they worked remotely. With many of these new residents possessing higher incomes — coupled with the demand for housing — home prices have gone through the roof in recent years.

    The median home price in Montana hit $425,000 in late 2023, a 75% increase from 2018, The New York Times reported.

    In Bozeman, which has become a hot spot for affluent transplants, the median home price has risen to an astonishing $770,000, according to the newspaper.

    According to the US Census Bureau, Bozeman's population jumped from roughly 37,000 to more than 53,000 from 2010 to 2020. In 2022, the city's population grew even further to 56,000.

    The rising prices have shined a brighter light on housing affordability, as many native Montanans have been priced out by ever-increasing rents. Outside of Bozeman, some longtime residents are now residing in RVs due to the heightened costs.

    With strong support from GOP Gov. Greg Gianforte, the Montana legislature passed housing and land-use reform bills that overhauled the construction process — and now permit more housing density.

    The issue is sure to be a major issue for Tester — as well as the eventual GOP Senate nominee — for a state in transition.

    In 2018, Tester won reelection to a third term by roughly 18,000 votes out of nearly 505,000 ballots cast.

    National Republicans see Montana as one of their best opportunities to win a "red" seat, especially as many transplants left Democratic-dominated coastal states for a more rustic environment.

    But the Senate race is projected to be incredibly close. And for Democrats and Republicans, the newest Montanans will likely be an unpredictable voting bloc.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Memorial Day weekend marred by severe weather — and it’s not over

    Powerful storm leaves building badly damaged
    Powerful storm rips through Valley View, Texas

    • Memorial Day weekend was marred by severe storms across the US.
    • More than 20 people died, and tornado warnings are in effect for Maryland, Texas, and other states.
    • Scientists blame the heat and say the severe weather will continue. 

    Memorial weekend is the unofficial start of summer, and this year it was marred by a series of severe weather incidents that scientists say could continue as temperatures rise.

    Severe weather, including thunderstorms and tornados, swept across Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kentucky over the holiday weekend, destroying buildings and killing over 20 people, according to the Associated Press.

    Andy Beshear, the governor of Kentucky, declared a state of emergency on Monday after five people died in the state from incidents associated with the severe weather.

    The storms moved to the Northeast on Memorial Day, placing the Washington, DC, metropolitan area under a tornado watch on Monday evening. Parts of Texas, the Lower Great Lakes, and the Mid-Atlantic continue to be under a tornado watch for Tuesday, the National Weather Service said.

    The NWS warned of flash flooding in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic region on Monday, and hail in the Southern Plains and Texas on Tuesday and possibly Wednesday.

    Semi truck damaged in Texas storm
    Severe weather damages a truck stop in Texas

    Harold Brooks, a senior scientist at the National Severe Storms Laboratory in Norman, Oklahoma told the AP that a persistent pattern of warm, moist air is behind the string of tornadoes over the past two months.

    Sjoukje Philip, a researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, said that while attributing tornadoes to climate change is not straightforward, there is a link.

    "With hotter sea surface temperatures, the air can hold more moisture. So I can also imagine that whenever there is precipitation, whether that's from a tornado or something else, there can be more rainfall, on shorter timescales. So that's a really clear relation," Philip told the AP.

    The series of storms comes as temperatures climb in parts of the US, including Texas, where weather forecasters predicted temperatures of up to 120 degrees Fahrenheit this weekend in some parts of the state. And just last week, in Mexico, temperatures got so hot that multiple monkeys suffered heat stroke and were dropping from trees like apples.

    Philip noted that 2023 was the hottest year on record and that average temperatures are expected to continue to rise, which could trigger more severe weather.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Disengaged voters could be the key to Biden winning a second term. But they need to be convinced on the economy.

    Biden
    President Joe Biden speaks about investing in clean energy manufacturing at CS Wind in Pueblo, Colorado.

    • A new poll shows Trump's polling gains have been powered by voters who didn't cast a ballot in 2020.
    • The Times says these voters could stay home or return to Biden. 
    • Many of these voters actually lean Democratic, but they've drifted away from Biden over the economy.

    President Joe Biden's reelection chances could rest on the support of irregular and disengaged voters — a segment of the population who sat out the hotly-contested 2020 presidential race.

    But Biden would have to convince these voters that his vision for the economy would ultimately work for them, as their lagging support for his campaign has given former President Donald Trump a major opening ahead of November.

    A New York Times/Siena College poll released last month shows Trump's polling gains have been powered by registered voters who didn't vote in 2020. Among these so-called irregular voters, Trump had a seven-point advantage over Biden (43% to 36%) for the 2024 contest in the latest poll. And Trump held an overall one-point lead (46% to 45%) among registered voters, while Biden had a one-point lead over Trump among voters aged 18 to 29.

    However, there's no guarantee these voters will remain in Trump's corner in November, the Times wrote. With many irregular voters splitting their tickets — which is already being seen as Democratic Senate candidates in swing states including Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are running ahead of Biden — Trump's support among these disengaged voters could falter as partisan leanings sharpen closer to the election. Many of these less engaged voters could eventually support Biden or stay at home, said the Times.

    A big issue for irregular voters appears to be the economy, the poll showed. Democratic-leaning irregular voters said they view the economy as either "poor" or "fair," while Democratic voters who vote more regularly, described the economy as "good" or "excellent," the report said.

    This presents a challenge for Biden as he aims to bolster his economic message — especially among young voters and minorities who would generally be inclined to back him based on prior voting trends. In the 2020 election, Biden dominated among young voters aged 18 to 29, winning this group by 24 points over Trump, according to Pew Research.

    But as recent data has showed, the 2024 race will be fought on much different terrain than the 2020 contest.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Cockroaches wouldn’t exist without humans. We helped them become one of the world’s worst pests, according to a new study.

    German cockroach
    A German cockroach on a piece of bread.

    • The German cockroach is one of the most common household pests worldwide.
    • New research found that the species evolved to thrive in human dwellings about 2,100 years ago.
    • "It's a creation of human-made environments," a researcher told the Washington Post.

    If you ever saw a cockroach scuttling across your kitchen floor or a restaurant wall, chances are it was a German cockroach. The German roach is the most common of the 70 different cockroach species in the US.

    For 250 years, scientists didn't know where it came from and how it managed to spread to every continent on Earth except Antarctica. Now that mystery has been solved, and the answer is that it's largely our fault.

    The German cockroach is "a creation of human-made environments," Edward Vargo, an entomology professor at Texas A&M University and co-author of a new study identifying the roach's origins, told The Washington Post.

    The German cockroach can't survive in "temperate winters outdoors" and all species of cockroaches "prefer warm, moist places where they can feed on human and pet foods, decaying and fermenting matter, and a variety of other items," according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

    That's why it's pretty safe to say that if human-built establishments like houses, stores, restaurants, and other buildings didn't exist, neither would these pesky pests.

    The researchers published their results last week in the peer-reviewed journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Where did the German roach come from?

    Scientists have long understood that the species thrive indoors, but their origins remained a mystery.

    Through DNA analysis, Vargo and his colleagues found that the species' closest relative is the Asian cockroach.

    The German roach evolved from its Asian cousin about 2,100 years ago to adapt to "human settlements in India or Myanmar," the researchers reported in their paper.

    With advancements in transportation and "temperature-controlled housing," the German cockroach made its relatively recent global spread, the researchers said in their report.

    How the German cockroach took over

    The German cockroach's adaption to warm environments, ability to rapidly breed, and unique resistance to insecticides make them a frustratingly common presence in households.

    For example, in a lifetime, one adult female German roach can produce four to eight egg capsules containing up to 48 eggs each, according to Penn State's Department of Entomology. Do the math and that's between 192 to 384 roaches, if every egg survives to adulthood.

    But German roaches didn't migrate thousands of miles across oceans and continents on their tiny insect legs. Their global spread coincides with advancements in human travel and housing, according to the study.

    In particular, the researchers determined that the German cockroach's spread began along two routes, west and east of its origin in India or Myanmar.

    The roach's westward spread likely occurred during times of increasing "commercial and military activities of the Islamic Umayyad or Abbasid Caliphates" about 1,200 years ago, the researchers reported. Meanwhile, the pest's eastward spread about 390 years ago was likely caused by "European colonial commercial activities between South and Southeast Asia."

    Understanding the German cockroaches' origins could help other scientists understand how the species evolved to become so resilient against common insecticides. One study found that they're resistant to five types of common household insecticides.

    "If we can know the origin of the species, we can try to identify the mechanism of this rapid evolution of insecticide resistance," Qian Tang, a research associate at Rowland Institute at Harvard who led the new study told the Post.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Basketball Hall of Famer Bill Walton dies at 71

    Basketball legend Bill Walton
    Basketball legend Bill Walton

    • Basketball legend Bill Walton died after a battle with cancer, the NBA announced May 27.
    • Walton, 71, won two NCAA titles and two NBA championships.
    • As a sports broadcaster, Walton was known for his colorful commentary.

    Basketball legend Bill Walton has died after a prolonged battle with cancer, the National Basketball Association announced on May 27.

    Walton, 71, played center and won two National Collegiate Athletic Association titles while playing with UCLA. He later won two NBA championships after joining the league — one with the Portland Trail Blazers and one with the Boston Celtics. Walton was the NBA's MVP for the 1977 to 1978 season. Walton was named one of the sport's Top 50 players by the NBA in 1997. He was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 1993, followed by the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.

    "Bill Walton was truly one of a kind," NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. "As a Hall of Fame player, he redefined the center position. His unique all-around skills made him a dominant force at UCLA and led to an NBA regular-season and Finals MVP, two NBA championships, and a spot on the NBA's 50th and 75th Anniversary Teams."

    After retiring from basketball, he started his career in sports broadcasting in 1990. As a basketball broadcaster and analyst, he covered college and NBA games for broadcasters, including ESPN, CBS, and NBC, as well as the NBA's Los Angeles Clippers.

    His sports commentary was fun and colorful. Once, he gobbled down a cupcake still topped with a lit candle on live TV. He would often go on air wearing Grateful Dead t-shirts and other colorful attire.

    In a statement, Martin Jarmond, UCLA's Alice and Nahum Lainer Family Director of Athletics, said that Walton "represented so many of the ideals that our university holds dear."

    "He loved being back on campus at UCLA, calling games in Pauley Pavilion, and being around our teams,"Jarmond said. "We offer our deepest sympathy to his family, and we take solace in knowing that Bill made each day his masterpiece."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Social Security’s 2025 bump is projected to be the smallest in 5 years

    Grocery shopping
    Food inflation is hitting older adults hard.

    • Social Security's 2025 cost-of-living adjustment is projected to be 2.66%, below inflation.
    • The 2024 COLA was 3.2%, and 71% of older Americans found it insufficient for rising bills.
    • Over 67 million Americans receive Social Security, with food costs hitting older adults hardest.

    The impact of inflation is now projected to get even worse for millions of older adults in the US.

    The Senior Citizens League's latest projection forecasts Social Security's 2025 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) to be just 2.66%, the lowest increase since before the pandemic. That is below the level of inflation, which has hovered around 3.5% in recent months.

    The COLA for Social Security benefits was 3.2% in 2024. According to an ongoing survey by The Senior Citizens League, 71% of older Americans did not think this year's increase was enough to cover their rising bills at the time of publication.

    "With the forecast of a 2.66% COLA for 2025, it appears seniors will continue to suffer financial insecurity as much next year as they have this year," said Shannon Benton, executive director of The Senior Citizens League.

    According to the Social Security Administration, the average monthly benefit in 2024 is $1,907, up about $50 from 2023. According to Benton, the net benefit increase was just $40.20 after the cost of Medicare rose by $9.80 each month.

    Meanwhile, according to The Senior Citizen League's survey, 43% of respondents said their monthly expenses had increased by at least $185 a month in 2023 compared to the previous year.

    older man in orange shirt and glasses balances his head on his hands while staring into the distance with palm trees behind him
    Over 67 million Americans receive Social Security.

    Social Security recipients typically receive an increase in their benefits in January to compensate for the rising cost of living. The exact amount is based on the level of inflation observed in The Bureau of Labor Statistics' consumer price index (CPI) from July through September of the previous year.

    The cost-of-living increase can vary wildly each year. In 2020, the final adjustment based on pre-pandemic inflation, the COLA was 1.3%. In 2022, the increase was 8.7%.

    Over 67 million Americans receive Social Security, and an increase is not guaranteed. Since the COLA was added to Social Security benefits in 1975, there have been three years without a bump in the monthly checks.

    Like many Americans, the cost of food appears to be one area of inflation that is hitting older adults the hardest.

    In The Senior Citizen League's survey, 61% of respondents said food was their most increased expense.

    According to the USDA, their recommended food budget has increased by 27% since 2020. This is one of the biggest reasons Americans still don't feel good about the economy.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • ‘Pronatalist’ parents are under fire after the dad publicly slapped his toddler — and they think the criticism is racist

    Malcolm and Simone Collins
    Malcolm and Simone Collins.

    • A Pennsylvania couple has gained internet fame for their "pronatalist" goal of having many kids.
    • Now the parents have come under fire after the father publicly slapped his toddler in the face.
    • The parents, Malcolm and Simone Collins, told BI they think the backlash is overstated — and racist.

    Remember the American couple who's following in the steps of the ultra-rich people who want to repopulate the world with their children?

    Now they're in hot water after publicly smacking one of their kids.

    Malcolm and Simone Collins previously told Business Insider that they're on a mission to have a litter of children because, as pronatalists, they want to "set the future of our species."

    "I do not think humanity is in a great situation right now. And I think if somebody doesn't fix the problem, we could be gone," Malcolm Collins previously told BI in 2022. The couple has done several interviews with the press in an effort to explain their objectives as a couple and speak on behalf of a burgeoning pronatalist movement.

    But a recent interview the couple gave to The Guardian is getting a bad reception. The Guardian described a scene when Malcolm Collins slapped one of his toddlers in public after the child "knocked the table with his foot and caused it to teeter, to almost topple, before it rights itself."

    "Immediately – like a reflex – Malcolm hits him in the face," The Guardian's Jenny Kleeman wrote. "It is not a heavy blow, but it is a slap with the palm of his hand direct to his two-year-old son's face that's firm enough for me to hear on my voice recorder when I play it back later. And Malcolm has done it in the middle of a public place, in front of a journalist, who he knows is recording everything."

    Malcolm Collins resumed his conversation with the stunned reporter after telling his child: "I love you but you gotta be nice in restaurants. No, Toastie. You're going to get bopped if you do that."

    Soon afterward, the episode went viral on X — the platform owned by Elon Musk, whom Malcolm Collins was incidentally gushing over moments before striking his toddler.

    "The pro-natalist couple hits their children," one X user said, sharing a screenshot of the article.

    "Jesus Christ the kid is two!!!! My kid is two!!!! The idea of hitting her has simply never occurred to me and if you know any two-year-olds it should be obvious how obviously nuts it is to do this!!!!" another shared on X.

    In an email to Business Insider, Simone Collins said the toddler, named Torsten Savage, was intentionally acting out, and tipping over a table with glassware on top of it "could be deadly in a house with infants" if it were to happen at the couple's Pennsylvania home.

    "He is an incredibly sweet, smart, analytic kid, but he also has a major rebellious streak and is in the middle of his twos. This is all to say that yes, 100%, Torsten was pushing boundaries and not acting unintentionally," Simone Collins wrote. "Incidents in which we 'bop' our kids are unusual—usually when physical safety is at stake."

    Over the phone, Malcolm Collins told Business Insider that he "bopped" his son on the nose to jar him, not to hurt him. The couple chose the punishment specifically after observing "animal parenting models," he said.

    "Basically, across the nose is what we aim for," Malcolm Collins said. "The reason I think it's better than a slap on the wrist is because it doesn't need to be painful to have the same impact. By that, what I mean is when somebody enters the space around your face, it is very shocking and very reorienting, especially if you're in an emotional loop, which is easy for kids to get into."

    He added: "The only way you could achieve the same effect by hitting a child's wrist is to hit it large enough to cause a significant amount of pain, which I wouldn't want to do, but I can understand why visually people might be, 'Oh, the slight hit on the nose or the face is really bad' because it looks visually bad."

    The couple both said they found the backlash they faced on social media to be racist since, they argued, minorities often hit their children without the same backlash.

    "We are kind of shocked by the racism threaded throughout this recent controversy. It is pretty well-documented that African Americans and other minority groups practice corporal punishment much more than other groups," Simone Collins said via email, linking to a CNN article published in 2011.

    Malcolm Collins said it was "uniquely offensive" to him considering "the majority of Americans practice some form of corporal punishment, as you can see from the statistics with specifically that being the minority groups of Americans. So yeah, I think it's an arguably racist position."

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • iPhone home screens may get a total redesign when Apple launches iOS 18. Here’s what they might look like.

    A 12-year-old schoolboy and an iPhone screen showing various social media apps, including TikTok, Facebook, and X
    The current layout of iPhone home screens is a grid that allows users to organize their apps into folders.

    • iPhone home screens may look different when iOS 18 arrives.
    • The upcoming update could make home screens much more customizable, Bloomberg reported.
    • Apple is expected to make more major announcements at WWDC in June. 

    The home screen layout of Apple devices has remained largely unchanged since the iPhone debuted in 2007, but an upcoming update could mean an all-new design.

    Although many predict that Apple's upcoming Worldwide Developers Conference in June will be heavily focused on artificial intelligence announcements, Bloomberg reported that iOS 18 will also let users customize their home screens.

    iPhone uers will be able to change the color of app icons and arrange them however they want instead of in the grid pattern Apple is known for, according to Bloomberg. While some users might sort their apps in folders today, the update could allow them to color code their home screen.

    Along with a new home screen and AI-powered updates to several iPhone apps, iOS 18 reportedly includes new AI-enabled emojis capabilities.

    By pairing generative AI with its iconic emojis, Apple would allow users to create custom specialized emojis on the spot.

    The tech giant will be playing catch-up at its upcoming conference following splashy AI announcements from competitors like Google and Microsoft over the past few weeks.

    Wedbush Securities managing director Dan Ives called it Apple's "most anticipated event in a decade."

    Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, but more is expected to be revealed at WWDC, which kicks off on June 10.

    Read the original article on Business Insider