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Weer grote ontslagronde bij moederbedrijf Snapchat

SANTA MONICA (ANP/BLOOMBERG) - Snap, het moederbedrijf van Snapchat, voert opnieuw een grote ontslagronde door. Het Amerikaanse bedrijf ontslaat 16 procent van zijn medewerkers wereldwijd, wat neerkomt op ongeveer duizend voltijdmedewerkers. Dat blijkt uit een memo van topman Evan Spiegel die is ingezien door persbureau Bloomberg.

De ontslagen zouden nodig zijn om de efficiëntie te verhogen en meer winstgevende groei na te streven. De banenreductie vindt plaats kort nadat investeerder Irenic Capital Management een belang in het bedrijf heeft genomen en opriep tot snelle veranderingen om de financiële prestaties te verbeteren. De totale ontslagronde zou de kosten meer dan 500 miljoen dollar kunnen verlagen in de tweede helft van dit jaar.

In 2022 moest 20 procent van het personeel al vertrekken vanwege vertraging in de groei van advertentie-inkomsten. In 2024 werd nog eens 10 procent van het personeel ontslagen.


The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

How to turn old bread into a brilliant Italian cake – recipe | Waste not

This Lombardian ‘village cake’ is simple, delicious and endlessly adaptable

Old sourdough is my secret ingredient. To stop it going mouldy, I take it out of any plastic packaging and keep it in the bread bin with plenty of airflow around it – that way, it will dry out slowly, rather than turning mouldy. Any odds and ends, meanwhile, I store in a cloth bag to use in various dishes, from pangrattato (or poor man’s parmesan) to strata, a savoury bread-and-butter pudding.

My new favourite recipe discovery for using up stale bread is today’s torta paesana, or village cake, from Lombardy. The best way I can come up with to describe it is that it’s a bit like a firm baked custard.

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The supreme court needs to put limits on Trump’s use of the pardoning power | Steven Greenhouse

The president has reportedly promised mass pardons to administration officials. His misuse of the power goes far beyond what the constitution’s authors intended

Since returning to office, Donald Trump has issued more than 1,800 pardons – to financial fraudsters, drug kingpins, January 6 insurrectionists and others. Unfortunately, Trump’s pardons don’t begin to conform with Alexander Hamilton’s high-minded vision of how presidents would use pardons.

When the US constitution was being written in 1787, Hamilton, a delegate to the constitutional convention, pushed to give presidents a broad pardoning power, saying presidents would use it with “scrupulousness and caution”. But Trump’s use of that power has been anything but scrupulous and cautious.

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Glenrothan review – Alan Cumming heads home in Brian Cox’s big-hearted brotherly drama

Succession is the question as Cox directs and stars as a distillery boss tempting estranged brother Cumming back into the Highland fold

For his directorial debut, Brian Cox is painting in pretty broad strokes and primary colours; Glenrothan is a sentimental comedy-drama from screenwriter David Ashton about the troubled reunion of two brothers in Scotland. It can be a bit soppy, sometimes resembling Sunday-night TV comfort food, but this big-hearted picture wins you over, and there are certainly some marvellous panoramic shots of the Highlands.

Cox himself plays Sandy, the glowering chief of a hugely profitable family-owned distillery which provides employment for the entire locality, and run by the fiercely competent Jess (Shirley Henderson). Sandy effectively inherited the job from his late father, a stern disciplinarian remembered in traumatised flashback scenes – for this role, Brian Cox has drolly cast his son Alan Cox.

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‘We took clothes, a blanket and a dog’: the people displaced by a dam 50 years ago, but still fighting for justice

The Avá-Guarani community have received little recognition of the destruction of their land by the Itaipu dam on the Paraguay-Brazil border

When the Indigenous leader Teodoro Alves was a young child in his community of Ocoy-Jacutinga, on the border between Paraguay and Brazil, a river ran through it. The Paraná River, which rises in Brazil and flows south through Paraguay to the Río de la Plata between Argentina and Uruguay, once structured the lives of Avá-Guarani people along its banks.

That continuity, Alves says, was broken in the 1970s with the construction of the Itaipu hydroelectric dam, which submerged their lands and displaced hundreds of families. “I saw the Paraná River before the Itaipu dam was closed. Now I see an immense lake. The river died completely. It died with the Avá-Guarani people,” Alves says.

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Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

De Wet betaalbare huur moet worden afgeschaft

Soms denk je dat ‘L’engloutie’ een verstilde thriller is, dan weer een sprookje of spookverhaal

Keri werd bedreigd en bespuugd door een onbekende man en Nienke werd in haar gezicht geslagen

Uit onderzoek blijkt dat jonge vrouwen zich vaker onveilig voelen in de openbare ruimte. Keri (30) en Nienke (30) delen hun ervaring met straatintimidatie en geweld. „Ik viel met mijn achterhoofd op straat. Eventjes zag ik sterretjes.”


Bankentuchtrecht ligt plat: de rechters leggen hun werk neer

Een eed en tuchtrecht moeten sinds de kredietcrisis het imago van bankiers opvijzelen. Maar de tuchtrechters leggen nu het werk neer. Ze vinden dat de banken het tuchtsysteem marginaliseren.

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Ancient Excel bug comes out of retirement for active attacks

Vuln old enough to drive lands on CISA's exploited list

While Microsoft was rolling out its bumper Patch Tuesday updates this week, US cybersecurity agency CISA was readying an alert about a 17-year-old critical Excel flaw now under exploit.…