Introducing Instagram teen accounts.
A new way to keep your teen safer as they grow. Like making sure they always have their seatbelt on. All right, sweetie pie, buckle up. Good job. Or ring the bell on their bike. Okay, kid, give it a try. Nice. Or remember their elbow pads. Knees too, okay? Yep. There you go. New Instagram teen accounts. Automatic protections for who can contact your teen and the content they can see.
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UVA Darden, not business school as usual. Artificial intelligence for humanity, for profit, or something else. I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. One of the biggest firms in artificial intelligence has hit a roadblock in its campaign to become a for-profit company. OpenAI, maker of ChatGPT, has hit the hurdle. Marketplace's Nova Safo explains.
OpenAI's nonprofit board is a vestige of when it was created a decade ago to build artificial intelligence to, quote, benefit humanity. But OpenAI has needed tens of billions of dollars in investments to get there, and the investors who footed the bill have wanted to secure a stake in future profits and to have more of a say in OpenAI's governance.
So in December, CEO Sam Altman said the chat GPT maker would convert itself into a for-profit corporation with its original non-profit board becoming a shareholder. That prompted a lawsuit from Elon Musk, who was among OpenAI's early backers and its current rival with his own AI company. Now a new plan. The non-profit board will remain in charge of
The part of OpenEI that takes in investor money and runs ChatGPT is to become a subsidiary structured as a public benefit corporation. Those are certified to have a mission to do a public good while also making a profit for shareholders.
I'm Novosafo for Marketplace. The key stock index in Frankfurt, Germany, is down 1.1 percent right now after a political thunderbolt today from Berlin. The leader of the conservative party there, Friedrich Merz, was not elected the leader of the country in a first round of voting by members of parliament. Merz needed to cobble together a coalition, but no. It's a first for Germany since the Second World War and an embarrassment for Merz, but he could still become chancellor in subsequent rounds.
The bond market is steady here now as the Federal Reserve meets today and tomorrow to consider what to do about tariffs that can be both inflationary and recessionary at the same time. Our coverage will be in the Marketplace Morning podcast. S&P futures are down six-tenths of a percent now.
133 Catholic cardinals are expected in the Sistine Chapel tomorrow to start choosing the next pope, and people around the world are placing millions of dollars in bets over who they think will get the two-thirds majority required to be the Catholic Church's next leader. Marketplace's Elizabeth Troval has more on the papal betting markets. People have been betting on who becomes the next pope for centuries, says John Holden with Indiana University. But...
We've seen a much bigger expansion of betting on the Pope globally as technology has gotten better and allowed word to spread quickly. Though people bets are not allowed in U.S. sportsbooks, many Americans are on Kalshi, a financial exchange and prediction market. Cardinal Pietro Parolin is the frontrunner there, which Victor Matheson with College of the Holy Cross says could be a good predictor.
Betting markets and prediction markets actually do a pretty good job at estimating what's going to happen. Though there's one thing markets can't account for, says Father Tom Daley with the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary. A really big factor that no one talks about because it's hard to talk about and you certainly can't bet on is the role that the Holy Spirit plays. Because, he says, cardinals are meant to elect the person God wants to be the successor.
I'm Elizabeth Troval for Marketplace. There's even a kind of fantasy football thing getting lots of global interest. Fanta Papa. If you go to the site, it reads, Chi sarà il prossimo pontifice? Who will be the next pontiff? It goes on in Italian, Take up the challenge to bring out the Vatican expert within you.
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Thank you.
One thing in common with U.S. and China, slowing birth rates. That may stress the environment less, but that's fewer people working and paying taxes to pay for populations getting older. China is offering cash and more parental leave to encourage people to have more kids there. Marketplace's China correspondent Jennifer Pak has been spending time with families in southern China's Dongguan City. It's a hot afternoon at a public square in Dongguan.
This toddler and his mom, Mo Guilan, are taking a stroll. I won't consider a second child for health and financial reasons. China used to have a one-child policy. Now up to three are allowed. But Mo Guilan says even with one child, her family's already taken a financial hit. There was nobody to help me take care of the baby after maternity leave, so I had to quit my factory job.
A lot of women worry about being able to keep their jobs after giving birth. Human Resources Executive Ai-Ring Yang says when she gave birth back in 2011, she was nervous about taking the three months maternity leave that she was entitled to. Once I took that long maternity leave, my work was given to another person and I worried that I could be replaced.
To make sure she didn't miss out on too much, she would go to the office during her maternity leave. Now she's in a senior HR role and a proud mom of a teenager. After having one child, I didn't want more. It's like mission accomplished. Oh!
Because employers bear the cost of benefits like maternity leave, women can be discriminated against in the hiring process, says mom of one Peng Lu. At interviews, employers would ask my age, if I'm married yet, and if I have any children. China's government officially bans such lines of questioning, but it still happens. Mom, I'm here!
Luckily, Peng Lu landed a job in the public sector, where women's rights are better protected. But even with that, she decided to quit after having her son and move back closer to her family so she wouldn't have to pay for expensive child care. Now she's planning a second child. Some cities are offering thousands of dollars in subsidies to anyone having three children.
Does that tempt Peng Lu? Probably not, she says. Ex-factory worker Mo Guilan feels the same. I won't give birth to a child just for a few thousand dollars. Raising kids, she says, costs way more than that.
In Dongguan City, I'm Jennifer Pak for Marketplace. With the Federal Reserve starting its two-day meeting on interest rates today concluding tomorrow, listen to the half-hour edition of Marketplace with my colleague Kai Risdahl on many public radio stations, of course, later today, or streamable from our homepage, marketplace.org. In Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio with the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.
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