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Eminem is going to be a grandfather

FILE - Eminem performs during "Live From Detroit: The Concert at Michigan Central," June 6, 2024, in Detroit. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

(AP) Eminem killed off his alter ego Slim Shady with his latest album, but he’s making way for a new nickname: Grandpa.

The rapper announced his daughter Hailie Jade is pregnant through a touching music video that is a tribute to their relationship. Home videos dating back to 1999 and photos of the father-daughter duo, along with videos from her May wedding, are underscored by the emotional song “Temporary” in the video released Thursday.

In one clip of a recent home video, his daughter hands Eminem a jersey with the name “Grandpa” emblazoned on the back with the number 1. She also hands him ultrasound photos, and he looks shocked.

The social media influencer confirmed the news of her pregnancy hours after the video was released Thursday, with an Instagram post. “Mom & dad est. 2025,” she captioned the post.

FILE – Eminem performs during “Live From Detroit: The Concert at Michigan Central,” June 6, 2024. PHOTO: AP

Representatives for Eminem, 51, did not immediately return requests for comment.
“Temporary,” from Eminem’s latest album, “The Death of Slim Shady (Coup de Grâce),” is written as a comforting message to his daughter after he dies. “I’m watchin’ you right now, baby girl, I vow/I will protect you, your guardian angel,” he sings on the track, which was released in July.

The “Lose Yourself” artist has always had a soft spot for his daughter, frequently mentioning her in his songs and even writing full tributes to her like “Hailie’s Song” and “Mockingbird.”

In “Mockingbird,” a fan favorite, Eminem sings, “What Daddy always tell you? Straighten up, little soldier,” a lyric he calls back to in “Temporary.”

Jade is Eminem’s sole biological daughter, whom he had with his ex-wife Kim Scott. He also adopted two of Scott’s daughters from previous relationships.

Crude stable after Israel-Iran surge, Hong Kong stocks resume gains

A file photo of barrels for storing oil. - FREEPIK

HONG KONG (AFP) – Oil prices stabilised Friday after soaring on fears about the Middle East crisis as investors await Israel’s response to Iran’s missile attack, while shares in Hong Kong resumed their rally on a mixed day for equity markets.

Speculation about Israel’s response to the scores of missiles fired at it on Tuesday has stoked concern that the region could erupt into a wider conflict that incorporates Iran.

Crude has risen around 10 percent since that launch owing to fears of a hit to supplies, while China’s recent drive to reignite its vast economy has the potential to cause a surge in demand.

Both main contracts rocketed around five percent Thursday when US President Joe Biden said he was “discussing” possible Israeli strikes on Iranian oil sites in retaliation for Tehran’s missile barrage on Israel.

They later settled back and were slightly higher in early Asian trade.

As Israel continues to carry out air and ground attacks in Lebanon targeting Hezbollah, Iran, which arms and funds the militant group, said it would step up its response in the event of a retaliation.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is expected to elaborate on Iran’s thinking in a sermon at the main weekly Muslim prayers in Tehran on Friday, his first in nearly five years.

Still, IG market analyst Tony Sycamore said it was unlikely Iran’s oil would be targeted owing to the fact it could rekindle inflation just as global central banks fight to bring it down.

“Instead, Israel is more likely to target critical weapons factories and military installations, similar to actions taken in April,” he wrote.

“In the aftermath, there is hope for a return to the shadow conflict that has been ongoing between Israel and Iran’s regional proxies since the 7 October Hamas attack.”

He added that if the crisis did escalate into a direct confrontation, “there’s a risk that Iranian oil (four percent of global supply) could be cut off by embargos or military actions”.

“The potential loss of Iranian supply might be offset by the return of Libyan oil and increased Saudi production, as voluntary supply cuts are set to expire on 1 December,” he said.

On equity markets, Hong Kong was back on the front foot after retreating for the first time Thursday since China last week unveiled a raft of economy-boosting measures that has seen investors flooding back to the market.

The stimulus – mainly targeting the property sector – has seen stocks in the city and mainland China enjoy a blistering run of more than 20 per cent on hopes that Beijing can finally reignite growth.

There were also gains in Tokyo at the end of a rollercoaster week dictated by a volatile yen after the election of Shigeru Ishiba as prime minister.

The yen initially surged to less than 142 per dollar on the news owing to Ishiba’s previous support for Bank of Japan interest rate hikes, but it sank later in the week to more than 147 after he said the country was not yet ready for a third increase this year.

It was around 146.50 on Friday.

Singapore, Seoul and Manila rose, though Sydney, Wellington, Taipei and Jakarta edged down.

Investors are now awaiting the release of key US jobs data later in the day, which they hope could provide an idea about the Federal Reserve’s thinking on whether or not to cut rates again this month, and if so by how much.

 

South Korea adoptees’ emotional searches for birth families

Maja Andersen, top, an adoptee visiting from Denmark to search for her birth family, holds the hands of Sister Christina Ahn at Star of the Sea orphanage in Incheon, South Korea, Monday, May 20, 2024, during her visit to look for documents in hopes of finding her family. She stayed at the facility until her adoption at seven months old. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)
Photos of adoptees participating at the Overseas Korean Adoptees Gathering are displayed on a large screen during the conference in Seoul, South Korea. PHOTO: AP

SEOUL (AP) – They began a pilgrimage that thousands before them have done. They boarded long flights to their motherland, South Korea, to undertake an emotional, often frustrating, sometimes devastating search for their birth families.

These adoptees are among the 200,000 sent from South Korea to Western nations as children. Many have grown up, searched for their origin story and discovered that their adoption paperwork was inaccurate or fabricated. They have only breadcrumbs to go on: grainy baby photos, names of orphanages and adoption agencies, the towns where they were said to have been abandoned. They don’t speak the language. They’re unfamiliar with the culture. Some never learn their truth.

“I want my mother to know I’m okay and that her sacrifice was not in vain,” says Kenneth Barthel, adopted in 1979 at six years old to Hawaii.

A flyer of Kenneth Barthel, who was abandoned in the area as a child and later adopted to Hawaii at six years old. PHOTO: AP

He hung flyers all over Busan, where his mother abandoned him at a restaurant. She ordered him soup, went to the bathroom and never returned. Police found him wandering the streets and took him to an orphanage. He didn’t think much about finding his birth family until he had his own son, imagined himself as a boy and yearned to understand where he came from.

He has visited South Korea four times, without any luck. He says he’ll keep coming back, and tears rolled down his cheeks.

Some who make this trip learn things about themselves they’d thought were lost forever.
In a small office at the Stars of the Sea orphanage in Incheon, South Korea, Maja Andersen sat holding Sister Christina Ahn’s hands. Her eyes grew moist as the sister translated the few details available about her early life at the orphanage.

She had loved being hugged, the orphanage documents said, and had sparkling eyes.
“Thank you so much, thank you so much,” Andersen repeated in a trembling voice. There was comfort in that – she had been hugged, she had smiled.
She’d come here searching for her family.

“I just want to tell them I had a good life and I’m doing well,” Andersen said to Sister Ahn.
Andersen had been admitted to the facility as a malnourished baby and was adopted at 7 months old to a family in Denmark, according to the documents. She says she’s grateful for the love her adoptive family gave her, but has developed an unshakable need to know where she came from. She visited this orphanage, city hall and a police station, but found no new clues about her birth family.

Maja Andersen, an adoptee visiting from Denmark to search for her birth family. PHOTO: AP

Still she remains hopeful, and plans to return to South Korea to keep trying. She posted a flyer on the wall of a police station not far from the orphanage, just above another left by an adoptee also searching for his roots.

Korean adoptees have organized, and now they help those coming along behind them. Non-profit groups conduct DNA testing. Sympathetic residents, police officers and city workers of the towns where they once lived often try to assist them. Sometimes adoption agencies are able to track down birth families.

Nearly four decades after her adoption to the US, Nicole Motta in May sat across the table from a 70-year-old man her adoption agency had identified as her birth father. She typed “thanks for meeting me today” into a translation program on her phone to show him. A social worker placed hair samples into plastic bags for DNA testing.

But the moment they hugged, Motta, adopted to the United States in 1985, didn’t need the results – she knew she’d come from this man.

Jang Dae-chang hugs his daughter, Nicole Motta, and her family at the Eastern Social Welfare Society in Seoul. PHOTO: AP

“I am a sinner for not finding you,” he said.

Motta’s adoption documents say her father was away for work for long stretches and his wife struggled to raise three children alone. He told her she was gone when he came back from one trip, and claimed his brother gave her away. He hasn’t spoken to the brother since, he said, and never knew she was adopted abroad.

Motta’s adoption file leaves it unclear whether the brother had a role in her adoption. It says she was under the care of unspecified neighbors before being sent to an orphanage that referred her to an adoption agency, which sent her abroad in 1985.

She studied his face. She wondered if she looks like her siblings or her mother, who has since died.

“I think I have your nose,” Motta said softly.

They both sobbed.

US dockworkers to head back to work after tentative deal

(FILES) Dockworkers gather at the Bayport Container Terminal in Seabrook, Texas, on October 1, 2024. US dockworkers will return to work after a three-day strike at East and Gulf Coast ports ended on October 3 after the union and port operators reached a tentative deal on pay and extended the current contract to January 15, both sides said. (Photo by Mark Felix / AFP)

WASHINGTON (AFP) – US dockworkers will return to work after a three-day strike at East and Gulf Coast ports after the union and port operators reached a tentative deal on pay and extended the current contract to January 15, both sides said on Thursday.

The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) had launched a work stoppage early Tuesday after negotiations with the United States Maritime Alliance (USMX), which represents shipping companies and terminal operators, hit an impasse.

The strike – which involved 45,000 workers, according to the ILA – paralyzed 36 ports from Maine to Texas, which handle an array of goods from food to electronics.

But Thursday evening, the two sides announced in a joint statement that they had “reached a tentative agreement on wages and have agreed to extend the Master Contract until January 15, 2025 to return to the bargaining table to negotiate all other outstanding issues.

“Effective immediately, all current job actions will cease and all work covered by the Master Contract will resume.”

Dockworkers at the Bayport Container Terminal in Seabrook, Texas. PHOTO: AFP

The statement did not offer terms of the deal, but The Wall Street Journal, citing sources close to the matter, said USMX had proposed a 62 per cent salary increase over six years, which allowed the deal to be reached.

The strike was the first walkout by the union since 1977 after negotiations stalled over union demands for significant wage increases and protection against automation-related job loss.

US President Joe Biden – who had been under pressure to intervene in negotiations to keep ports open, but had demurred citing respect for collective bargaining rights — celebrated the suspension of the strike late Thursday.

“I want to thank the union workers, the carriers, and the port operators for acting patriotically to reopen our ports and ensure the availability of critical supplies for Hurricane Helene recovery and rebuilding,” Biden said in a statement.

“Collective bargaining works, and it is critical to building a stronger economy from the middle out and the bottom up.”

Outside the White House, Biden added: “They’ve got the next 90 days, they are going to settle everything.”

Republican former president Donald Trump, who is seeking to take back the Oval Office, had blamed Biden for the crisis, saying Tuesday in Milwaukee: “He should have worked out a deal.”

Crisis averted 
Analysts had cautioned that a lengthy strike could pose a major headwind to the US economy as the presidential election grows near on November 5, leading to shortages of some items and lifting costs at a time when inflation has been moderating.

Shipping companies forced to re-route their vessels had planned to apply surcharges for each container: USD1,000 each for German shipping company Hapag-Lloyd, and between USD800 and USD1500 for France’s CMA CGM, according to German logistics platform Container xChange.

Analysts at TD Cowen said Danish giant Maersk was ready to charge up to USD3,780 extra per container to cover its strike-related costs.

Oxford Economics had estimated that the strike would dent US gross domestic product by USD4.5 billion to USD7.5 billion per week, with the overall impact depending on how long the strike lasts.

But Capital Economics said fears about the economic impact of the strike were “overdone,” in part because recent shocks to the supply chain have made businesses more aware of the need to bake in precautionary measures.

The strike arrived at a politically precarious time, just one month before the election, but the tentative agreement relieves the political pressure.

National Retail Federation chief Matthew Shay called the tentative deal and the decision to end the current strike “good news for the nation’s economy”.

“It is critically important that the International Longshoremen’s Association and United States Maritime Alliance work diligently and in good faith to reach a fair, final agreement before the extension expires,” Shay said in a statement.

“The sooner they reach a deal, the better for all American families.”

 

Malaysia’s ferry museum to open by year-end

The iconic Penang Ferry Museum being towed from Bagan Dalam Slipway to SPCT. PHOTO: THE STAR

GEORGE TOWN (ANN/THE STAR) – The Penang Ferry Floating Museum, housed in the decommissioned ferry Pulau Pinang, is set to open by the end of the year at Tanjung City Marina, bringing the iconic ferry back to life as a historical attraction.

Curator Siti Faridah Hani Damsi revealed that over 70 per cent of repair work and 90 per cent of refurbishment has been completed. The ferry, which was towed from the Bagan Dalam slipway to Swettenham Pier Cruise Terminal (SPCT) on Thursday, will be anchored at the terminal before its final relocation to the museum’s permanent home at the marina.

The iconic Penang Ferry Museum being towed from Bagan Dalam Slipway to SPCT. PHOTO: ANN/THE STAR

The journey was scheduled to end at 3pm but the ferry arrived earlier than expected due to improved weather conditions, despite initial concerns over stormy skies.

Once fully restored, the Pulau Pinang ferry will be transformed into a museum, featuring exhibits, souvenir shops, a café, and designated photography spots, offering visitors a glimpse into Penang’s maritime heritage. The project is being handled by Printhero Merchandise (M) Sdn Bhd, chosen for its experience in managing retail outlets at notable sites such as Penang Hill, Muzium Negara, and Muzium Perak.

Asia-Pacific nations evacuate citizens amid Middle East tensions

File photo of an aerial view of Beirut, Lebanon. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

(ANN/STRAITS TIMES) – Asia-Pacific nations, including the Philippines, Indonesia, and Australia, are swiftly moving to evacuate thousands of citizens as tensions in the Middle East escalate.

Clashes between Israel and Iran, alongside Tehran-backed Hezbollah and Hamas, have intensified.

On October 2, officials confirmed efforts to secure chartered flights for citizens while Beirut’s airport remains operational. South Korea has already dispatched a military plane to assist with repatriation.

File photo of an aerial view of Beirut, Lebanon. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

The Philippine government plans to evacuate over 1,200 Filipinos from Lebanon, part of the 11,000 who have sought assistance. However, repatriation efforts have been delayed due to exit clearances and flight cancellations caused by explosions in Lebanon. Migrant Workers Undersecretary Bernard Olalia indicated the government is also exploring alternative routes through Damascus in case of a Beirut airport closure.

So far, around 430 Filipino migrant workers and 28 dependents have been evacuated. Singapore, in its updated travel advisory, urged citizens to leave Lebanon immediately via commercial flights, warning them to avoid protests and large gatherings.

Indonesia, with approximately 159 citizens in Lebanon, has already facilitated the return of 25 people. Indonesian embassies across the Middle East are coordinating evacuation efforts, while President Joko Widodo has emphasized prioritising citizens’ safety.

South Korea has followed suit, deploying a military aircraft for evacuation and calling for international cooperation to restore stability in the region. Similarly, Australia has secured flights for 580 citizens and urged the remaining 15,000 Australians in Lebanon to leave as soon as possible.

Governments worldwide are urging citizens to evacuate Lebanon while routes remain open, underscoring the gravity of the situation. As Dutch Ambassador to Lebanon Frank Mollen put it, “Go while you still can.”

Hera spacecraft to probe asteroid deflected by defence test

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with the Crew Dragon Resilience capsule sits on Launch Complex 39A at Kennedy Space Center ahead of the Polaris Dawn Mission due to launch on August 27 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on August 26, 2024. The mission crew will carry out the first ever private spacewalk. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA / AFP)

PARIS (AFP) – Europe’s Hera probe is tentatively scheduled to launch Monday on a mission to inspect the damage a NASA spacecraft made when it smashed into an asteroid during the first test of Earth’s planetary defences.

In a scene that sounds straight out of science fiction, the spacecraft deliberately crashed into the pyramid-sized asteroid Dimorphos in 2022, roughly 11 million kilometres from Earth.

The fridge-sized impactor used in the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) successfully knocked the asteroid well off its course.

This demonstrated that the idea worked – humanity may no longer be powerless against potentially planet-killing asteroids that could approach in the future.

But much about the impact remains unknown, including how much damage was done and exactly what the asteroid was like before it was hit.

So the European Space Agency said it was sending Hera to the asteroid to conduct a “crime scene investigation” in the hopes of learning how Earth can best fend off asteroids that pose a threat.

The spacecraft is scheduled to blast off on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral in the US state of Florida on Monday.

‘Anomaly’ could delay launch 
However an “anomaly” involving a Falcon 9 rocket during the launch of SpaceX’s Crew-9 astronaut mission on Saturday could potentially delay the launch date, the ESA’s Hera project manager Ian Carnelli said at a press conference.

The ESA is hoping to receive approval by Sunday from the US Federal Aviation Administration, NASA and SpaceX, Carnelli said.

The launch window for the mission will remain open until October 27.

Once launched, Hera is planned to fly past Mars next year and then arrive near Dimorphos in December 2026 to begin its six-month investigation.

An asteroid wider than a kilometre – which could trigger a global catastrophe on a scale that wiped out the dinosaurs – is estimated to strike Earth every 500,000 years or so.

An asteroid around 140 metres wide – which is a little smaller than Dimorphos but could still take out a major city – hits our home planet around every 20,000 years.

Most of these celestial objects come from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Almost all those bigger than a kilometre wide are known to scientists, and none are expected to threaten Earth in the next century.

There are also no known 140-metre asteroids on a collision course with Earth – but only 40 percent of those space rocks are believed to have been identified.

Although asteroids are one of the least likely natural disasters to strike the planet, people now have the “advantage of being able to protect ourselves against them”, the Hera mission’s principal investigator Patrick Michel said.

Loose rubble ‘defies intuition
Dimorphos, which is actually a moonlet orbiting its big brother Didymos, never posed a threat to Earth.

After DART’s impact, Dimorphos shed material to the point where its orbit around Didymos was shortened by 33 minutes – proof that it was successfully deflected.

Analysis of the DART mission has suggested that rather than being a single hard rock, Dimorphos was more a loose pile of rubble held together by gravity.

“The consequence of this is that, instead of making a crater” on Dimorphos, DART may have “completely deformed” the asteroid, Michel said.

But there are other possibilities, he said, adding that the behaviour of these low-gravity objects is little understood and “defies intuition”.

The 363-million-euro (USD400 million) mission will be equipped with 12 scientific instruments and two nanosatellites.

The Juventas nanosatellite will aim to land on Dimorphos, which would be a first on such a small asteroid. It will use radar to probe deep inside the asteroid and a gravimeter to measure its gravity.

From farther away, the Milani nanosatellite will use cameras and other instruments to study the asteroid’s composition and assess DART’s impact.

Once its job is done, the team on the ground hopes that Hera can land gently on Dimorphos or Didymos, where it will spend the rest of its days.

 

EU court set for key Diarra ruling which could shake up transfer market

Football

PARIS (AFP) – An EU court will on Friday deliver its verdict in the case of former French footballer Lassana Diarra against FIFA, a potentially landmark decision which could shake up the football transfer system.

The court of justice of the European Union (CJEU) will decide whether a player can unilaterally terminate his contract, sparked by a dispute between Diarra and his former club Lokomotiv Moscow a decade ago.

“In a way, the Lassana Diarra affair is the Bosman 2.0 affair,” said Diarra’s Belgian lawyer Jean-Louis Dupont, who was also involved in the 1995 case of footballer Jean-Marc Bosman.

The Bosman ruling allowed players to move to another club at the end of their contract without a transfer fee being paid and also ended quotas on foreign players at clubs.

“If this judgement reflects the conclusions of the advocate general of the CJEU, the current FIFA transfer system will have come to an end,” said Dupont, arguing that the rules which prevented Diarra from finding a new club “violate the free movement of workers”.

Dupont pointed to the conclusions rendered on April 30 by the court’s top legal advisor, Maciej Szpunar, according to whom FIFA rules “limiting the ability of clubs to recruit” would be contrary to the principle of free competition within the EU.

Other legal experts familiar with the case are more measured and do not foresee a “Lassana Diarra judgement” of the magnitude of the Bosman ruling which revolutionised the transfer market in Europe.

The Diarra saga goes back 10 years.

In August 2014, Lokomotiv terminated the midfielder’s contract citing contractual breaches by the player. The Russian club also sought 20 million euros (USD22m) compensation from Diarra.

Diarra, now 39, refused and requested that Lokomotiv pay him compensation.

He was eventually ordered to pay his former club 10 million euros by FIFA, a fine that was upheld by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Diarra also received a backdated 15-month suspension.

Legally trapped 
According to FIFA regulations, if a player terminates his contract unilaterally and “without just cause”, he must pay compensation which includes his remuneration and benefits until the end of his contract.

And a purchasing club could be affected by compensation.

For his part, Diarra requested six million euros from world football governing body FIFA, on the grounds that its transfer rules had prevented him from playing during most of the 2014-2015 season.

As a result of the dispute clubs were not rushing to recruit Diarra. Belgian side Charleroi rescinded their contract offer, afraid of the possible legal and financial consequences.

The former France international, who went on to join Marseille in 2015, decided to take the matter to court, supported by the global players’ union, FIFPro.

After several twists and turns, the Belgian court, whose jurisdiction FIFA contested, asked a so-called “preliminary” question to the CJEU in 2022.

In essence the question was – are the regulations on the status and transfer of players compatible with EU competition law and free movement?

According to advocate general Szpunar, the provisions applied by FIFA “are likely to discourage and dissuade clubs from hiring the player for fear of a financial risk”.

“Limiting the ability of clubs to recruit players necessarily affects competition between clubs on the market for the acquisition of professional players,” the Polish lawyer argued.

If the CJEU were to follow this line of argument, players could leave their club without fear of being legally trapped afterwards.

Capped 34 times by France, Diarra also played for Chelsea, Arsenal, Portsmouth and Real Madrid before ending his career at Paris Saint-Germain in 2019.

AI bubble or ‘revolution’? OpenAI’s big payday fuels debate

The OpenAI logo is displayed on a cell phone with an image on a computer monitor generated by ChatGPT's Dall-E text-to-image model, Dec. 8, 2023, in Boston. lya Sutskever, one of the founders of OpenAI who was involved in a failed effort to push out CEO Sam Altman, said he's starting a safety-focused artificial intelligence company. Sutskever, a respected AI researcher who left the ChatGPT maker last month, said in a social media post on Wednesday, June 19, 2024 that he's setting up Safe Superintelligence Inc. with two co-founders. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) – Fear of missing out has rocketed the value of artificial intelligence companies, despite few signs as to when the technology will turn a profit, raising talk of AI overenthusiasm.

The mystery deepens when it comes to predicting which generative AI firms will prevail, according to analysts interviewed by AFP.

ChatGPT-maker OpenAI secured USD6.6 billion in a funding round that propelled its valuation to an eye-popping USD157 billion, sparking new worries there is an AI bubble poised to burst.

“We are in the bubble where all the vendors are running around saying you have to deploy it as the latest digital transformation move,” independent tech analyst Rob Enderle of Enderle Group said of generative AI.

“I expect this ugly phase for the next two to three years, but then things should settle.”

To the critics, buyers don’t really understand the technology, and the market needed for it to thrive is not mature yet.

Enderle also contended that investors are pouring money into generative AI companies with the mistaken notion we are close to technology that has computers thinking the way humans do, called general artificial intelligence.

That “holy grail” won’t show up until 2030 at the earliest, he said.

‘Revolution’ is here 
Industry titans Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft have thrown their weight behind the technology, entering into partnerships and pushing out products to accelerate adoption.

But the tech giants are spending big to provide sometimes flawed features that for now cost them more than they take in from users.

The huge investments in OpenAI shows that Big Tech is willing to sink “substantial cash into a company that’s dealing with significant operation losses,” Emarketer analyst Grace Harmon said of the OpenAI funding round.

There’s a “lingering fear of underinvesting in AI and losing out…even if investments are not guaranteed to provide returns,” she said.

Dan Ives, a Wedbush Securities analyst, is one of Wall Street’s biggest believers in generative AI’s importance and compared ChatGPT’s emergence to an “iPhone moment” that will see one trillion dollars in spending during the next three years.

An “AI Revolution is not just at our doorstep, but is actively shaping the future of the tech world,” he said after OpenAI’s historic fund-raise.

Wall Street for now stands firmly with Ives and has sent the stock price of AI-chasing tech giants to record levels since ChatGPT burst on the scene in late 2022.

Nvidia, the AI-chip juggernaut, in June briefly became the world’s biggest company by market valuation amid the frenzy.

But according to media reports, OpenAI will lose $5 billion this year on sales of $3.7 billion.

The company told investors the pain will be short-lived and that revenue will rise exponentially, hitting a whopping $100 billion in 2029.

More than poems? 
The question is whether people will pay for generative AI services such as Microsoft’s CoPilot that depends on OpenAI technology, said Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi, who pushed back against the idea of an AI bubble.

“Consumers are going to start going beyond the write-the-poem-for-me stuff,” Milanesi said.

“It will become part of our lives and we will depend on it, because we will be forced to.”

But for now, the generative AI business model is tough, since data center and computing power costs dwarf revenue, according to analysts.

Still, Milanesi doesn’t think the tech industry is getting carried away with generative AI.

“How this shakes out is the way to think about it, not so much the bubble bursting and everyone losing out,” Milanesi said.

“It’s a bit of a Darwin situation where the survival of the fittest is happening,” she said.

And while there is more excitement about generative AI than real proof of its success, the technology is moving exceptionally fast.

“Investors are not sure what the destination is, but everybody is jumping on the boat and they don’t want to be left behind,” Enderle said.

“That typically ends badly,” he said.

Man Utd’s Ten Hag faces make-or-break trip to Aston Villa

Manchester United's Dutch coach Erik Ten Hag speaks to Manchester United's English forward #10 Marcus Rashford (R) during the UEFA Europa League 1st round day 2 between FC Porto and Manchester United at the Dragao stadium in Porto on October 3, 2024. (Photo by MIGUEL RIOPA / AFP)

MANCHESTER (AFP) – Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag desperately needs a reversal in his side’s Premier League fortunes on Sunday against an Aston Villa team on a high after beating Bayern Munich in the Champions League.

Liverpool, Arsenal and Manchester City will all be confident of three points heading into the international break, with last season’s top three setting the pace once more.

But at the bottom, all three promoted sides are yet to register a win, with Ipswich hoping to pile more pressure on new West Ham boss Julen Lopetegui.

AFP Sport picks out three things to look out for this weekend in the Premier League.

Manchester United’s coach Erik Ten Hag. PHOTO: AFP

Flying Villa meet struggling Man Utd
Aston Villa relived their greatest-ever night on Wednesday as Jhon Duran fired them to a 1-0 win over Bayern Munich – a repeat of the result in the 1982 European Cup final.

By contrast, United are going through another severe slump in their 11-year spiral since last becoming English champions.

The Red Devils sit 13th, having won just two of their opening six league games of the season, to put Ten Hag’s future firmly in the spotlight once again.

The Dutchman survived an internal review after an eighth-placed finish last season — United’s lowest in the Premier League era.

Hopes that an FA Cup win and another transfer splurge would lead to better things have so far proved misplaced as United have been schooled at home by Liverpool and Tottenham.

On Thursday, Ten Hag needed an injury-time goal from Harry Maguire to salvage a 3-3 draw with Porto in the Europa League.

Villa’s resurgence under Unai Emery began with a 3-1 win over United in the Spaniard’s first match in charge in November 2022.

Ten Hag can ill afford a repeat, which would leave his superiors with two weeks to stew over whether the time has come for a managerial change at Old Trafford.

West Ham’s wobble
West Ham are another club yet to show results from a heavy recruitment drive during the summer transfer window.

The Hammers brought in German international striker Niclas Fuellkrug, last season’s Championship player of the year Crysencio Summerville and experienced Premier League defenders Max Kilman and Aaron Wan-Bissaka.

But they have lost their opening three home league games of the season for the first time in the club’s history, putting Lopetegui under pressure just months into his reign.

The Spaniard has admittedly had a tough run of fixtures, with Villa, Manchester City and Chelsea the three sides to win at the London Stadium this season.

But those excuses end on Saturday when newly promoted Ipswich are the visitors, looking to turn positive performances into a first Premier League win for 22 years.

Since losing to Liverpool and City in a baptism of fire, Kieran McKenna’s men have drawn four games.

Top three set the pace
Liverpool pushed City and Arsenal in a three-way title race until the final weeks of last season when the wheels came off, denying Jurgen Klopp a glorious Anfield send-off.

There has been no hangover after the German’s departure, with Arne Slot becoming the first Liverpool manager to win eight of his first nine games in charge.

The Reds are top of the Premier League and off to a perfect start in the Champions League and League Cup.

“It says a lot about how Jurgen left this club, the squad I inherited, how much work-rate the players put in and how much my staff members are helping me to get these results,” said the Dutchman.

“But again, I am hoping to do more special things than only be remembered for eight wins out of the first nine.”

Liverpool can open up a four-point lead at the top, for a few hours at least, when they travel to winless Crystal Palace for Saturday’s lunchtime kick-off.

Arsenal and City begin the weekend just one point back.

The Gunners are strong favourites to beat winless Southampton at the Emirates, but City face a tough test against Fulham, who sit sixth after just one defeat in their opening six games.