Pierre Bien-Aimé
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The school says the lawsuit is retaliation by the administration because of Harvard, quote, "...refusing to turn over control of the school to the government."
The Pentagon is sending three warships and around 2,500 Marines to the Middle East.
It's the second deployment of Marines to the region in the past week.
Meanwhile, Iran says U.S.
and Israeli strikes have not stopped its ability to produce missiles.
And Iran's armed forces warned that they will target the country's enemies, including officials, pilots, and soldiers, in amusement parks, resorts, and tourist centers, saying, quote, "...no place in the world will be safe for you."
And a new federal indictment alleges that several super microcomputer employees, including one of its co-founders, helped smuggle billions of dollars in high-end NVIDIA chips to China using dummy devices to deceive an American inspector.
The alleged scheme involved a Southeast Asian company that repackaged servers before shipping them to China.
Three defendants couldn't be reached for comment.
Supermicro, which wasn't named as a defendant, said it has placed two employees on leave and fired a contractor.
It also said the alleged conduct was against its policies.
Heads up, an artificial intelligence tool helped us make this episode by creating summaries that were based on WSJ reporting and then reviewed and adapted by an editor.
We'll have more coverage of the day's news on the WSJ's What's News podcast.
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Thank you.
I think the potential of agentic is to rethink how work gets done overall.
It challenges all sorts of traditional orthodoxies around how organizations execute the work at hand.
Here's your midday brief for Monday, March 16th.
I'm Pierre Bien-Aimé for The Wall Street Journal.
NVIDIA's annual developers conference, GTC, begins today.