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  • A multistory building collapse in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi kills at least 6 people

    A multistory building collapse in Pakistan’s port city of Karachi kills at least 6 people

    KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) — A multistory building collapsed Friday in Pakistan’s southern port city of Karachi, killing at least six people and injuring several others, officials said.

    Rescuers were using heavy machinery to search for several survivors believed to be trapped under the debris, said Javed Nabi, a government administrator.

    Residents said the building was located on a narrow street, making it difficult for rescue teams to bring in additional heavy equipment. Television footage showed rescuers removing the rubble and evacuating nearby buildings as a precaution.

    Building collapses are common in Pakistan, where construction standards are often poorly enforced. Many structures are built with substandard materials, and safety regulations are frequently ignored to cut costs.

    In June 2020, an apartment building collapsed in Karachi, the capital of southern Sindh province, killing 22 people.


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  • Zurich to acquire BOXX, boosting its cyber protection capabilities – Zurich Insurance Group

    1. Zurich to acquire BOXX, boosting its cyber protection capabilities  Zurich Insurance Group
    2. Zurich acquires BOXX Insurance  Coverager
    3. Zurich to buy Canadian cyber insurtech  businessinsurance.com
    4. Zurich Insurance Group AG entered into an agreement to acquire BOXX Insurance Inc.  MarketScreener
    5. Daily Digest: Top news from July 3  Insurance Insider US

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  • Heavy Load Surcharge Revision (HWS) – Far East Asia to West Coast South America (C1E)

    In order to keep providing you with our global services, Maersk is revising the Heavy Load Surcharge for 40 Non-operated reefer containers from Far East Asia (Excluded Taiwan China) to West Coast South America, Central America and Caribbean (Excluded Puerto Rico and Colombia), effective price calculation date 12th Jul 2025.

    The new tariff levels are as follows:

    *Far East Asia countries include Brunei, China, Hong Kong China, Indonesia, Japan, Cambodia, Mongolia, South Korea, Laos, Myanmar, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan China, Thailand, and Vietnam
    **West Coast South America, Central America and Caribbean countries include Antigua and Barbuda, Anguilla, Netherland Antilles, Aruba, Barbados, Bermuda Island, Bolivia, Bonaire Sint Eustatius and Saba, Bahamas, Belize, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Curacao, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Grenada, French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras, Haiti, Jamaica, St Kitts-Nevis, Cayman Islands, St Lucia, Martinique, Montserrat, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Peru, St Pierre and Miquelon, Puerto Rico, Suriname, El Salvador, Sint Maarten, Turks and Caicos, Trinidad and Tobago, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Venezuela, Virgin Islands (Br.)

    When Verified Gross Mass (VGM) exceeds the weight threshold, Heavy Load Surcharge will be triggered. The Verified Gross Mass (VGM) is the weight of the cargo including dunnage and bracing plus the tare weight of the container carrying this cargo.

    Heavy Load Surcharge will be applicable to all Ocean products including contract products, SPOT, Maersk Go, and others.

    • The above rates are also subject to other applicable surcharges, including local charges and contingency charges.
    • These rates are unaffected by, and do not affect, any tariff notified, published, or filed in accordance with local regulatory requirements.
    • For trades subject to the US Shipping Act or the China Maritime Regulations, quotations or surcharges that vary from the Maersk Line tariff shall not be binding on Maersk Line unless included in a service contract or service contract amendment that has been filed with the Federal Maritime Commission (FMC) or the Shanghai Shipping Exchange, as applicable.

    If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to our local representatives on Maersk.com.

    We appreciate your business and look forward to continuing working with you in the future.

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  • Diogo Jota: What we know about the death of the Liverpool soccer star and his brother

    Diogo Jota: What we know about the death of the Liverpool soccer star and his brother



    CNN
     — 

    The soccer world is in mourning following the death of Liverpool and Portugal star Diogo Jota in a car crash in Spain early on Thursday morning. He was 28.

    His brother, André Silva – who was also a professional footballer – also died in the accident at the age of 25.

    Jota married his long-term partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he has three children, less than two weeks before the crash.

    The incident occurred around 12:30 a.m. local time on the A-52 road in Zamora, northwestern Spain, and was caused by a “burst tire while overtaking,” the country’s Guardia Civil said on Thursday. The vehicle that Jota and his brother were in left the road and subsequently caught fire, officials said. It is not known which brother was driving the car, which Spanish media reported was a Lamborghini.

    The authorities identified the remains based on documents recovered at the scene of the accident, as well as the car’s license plate, CNN Portugal reported. Further forensic testing at a morgue in Zamora confirmed the brothers’ identities, according to CNN Portugal.

    For investigation, the remains were moved to the nearby town of Puebla de Sanabria, a source close to the sub-delegate of the Spanish government in Zamora told CNN. The players’ family was present in Puebla de Sanabria on Thursday afternoon to finalize the administrative requirements which allow the remains to be released and returned to Portugal, CNN Portugal reported.

    A source from the Government Sub-delegation in Zamora told PA that the crash is being investigated as “a possible speeding incident.”

    A wake for Jota and André Silva’s family began on Friday morning at a church in the brothers’ hometown of Gondomar, near Porto, the church told CNN. It added that the doors at the Igreja Martiz de Gondomar will open to the public on Friday afternoon.

    A funeral is set to take place on Saturday at 10 a.m. local time (5 a.m. ET), the church said.

    Jota played an important role in the Liverpool team which lifted the Premier League trophy just over two months ago, equaling the English record of 20 top-flight titles. He featured in 26 of the club’s 38 league games, scoring six goals and providing four assists. In total, he scored 65 goals across five years on Merseyside, also winning one FA Cup and two EFL Cups.

    Jota was part of the Portugal national team which won the Nations League in June this year, having also won the competition in 2019.

    André Silva played for Futebol Clube de Penafiel in the Liga Portugal 2, the country’s second division. In total, he scored 12 goals and contributed 10 assists in 105 matches at full and youth level throughout his career.

    Tributes from the soccer world came flooding in throughout Thursday. Portuguese great Cristiano Ronaldo wrote that his compatriot’s death “does not make sense,” while former Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp, who signed Jota for the club in 2020, offered “prayers, thoughts and power” to Jota and André Silva’s family.

    Current Liverpool manager Arne Slot also paid his respects, writing: “When the time is right, we will celebrate Diogo Jota, we will remember his goals and we will sing his song. For the time being, we will remember him as a unique human being and mourn his loss. He will never be forgotten.”

    Tributes also came in from beyond soccer, from the likes of NBA star LeBron James and the United Kingdom’s Prince William, who said he was “deeply saddened.”

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  • The five-star Sony A80L is tempting at under £1000, but I’d go for this better OLED TV deal instead

    The five-star Sony A80L is tempting at under £1000, but I’d go for this better OLED TV deal instead

    Whenever we spot a deal on the excellent Sony A80L, we want to make sure you’re the first to know about it. Thanks to a new deal, you can pick up the five-star 55in A80L at Amazon for only £949.

    That’s a huge saving over its original £2399 price when we first tested it two years ago. But we don’t recommend buying it.

    The Sony might be one of the best OLED TVs on the market and a What Hi-Fi? Award winner, but right now we think you should go for the LG C4 instead. Not only is the LG TV newer and better, but it’s also the same price.

    You can snap up the LG C4 55-inch TV right now for only £949 at Amazon. It’s not the lowest price we’ve ever seen, but even at this price we think it’s an OLED TV deal that’s too good to miss.

    We’ve reviewed a fair few LG C4 models — and each one has been a total pleasure. We gave both the 65-inch LG C4 and 48-inch LG C4 five stars in our reviews, so it’s safe to say that when it comes to the 55-inch model, you won’t be disappointed in what you get.

    LG’s C-series of step-down OLED TVs are solid performers, no matter the size. And for the 55-inch, you’re getting a stunning upgrade from LG’s C3 that includes four HDMI 2.1 ports, a lack of HDR10+ but support for the far more important Dolby Vision, HLG and standard HDR10 formats.

    And for gamers, it’s a fantastic offering. Most noteworthy is the support for 4K/144Hz signals and full Nvidia G-Sync VRR certification. Sure, that’s hardcore gaming territory, but they’re helpful no matter your ability and dedication.

    Add to that support for 4K/120Hz, VRR, and ALLM across all four of its HDMI 2.1 sockets; Dolby Vision gaming; HGiG for more accurate HDR game performance; and the Game Optimiser menu for quick access to gaming features – and you’re looking at one of the best gaming TVs on the market.

    When it comes to picture quality, we praised the 65-inch model for: “Big improvements to brightness and sharpness [that] make for an image with lots of pop and dynamism, and the rich tone and vibrant colours are a delight—but LG has tempered all of this with realism, consistency, and authenticity.”

    So, waste no time in taking this great LG C4 deal to the checkout for £949 at Amazon. But hurry, this deal won’t stick around forever.

    MORE:

    These are the best TV deals for 2025

    Our picks of the best 55-inch TVs

    We rate the best gaming TVs available right now

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  • The details of Jane Street’s alleged ‘sinister scheme’ in India – Financial Times

    The details of Jane Street’s alleged ‘sinister scheme’ in India – Financial Times

    1. The details of Jane Street’s alleged ‘sinister scheme’ in India  Financial Times
    2. Jane Street barred from Indian markets as regulator freezes $566 million over Nifty 50 manipulation claims  CNBC
    3. Jane Street Curbed in India Markets After Alleged Illegal Gain  Bloomberg
    4. Top gainers and losers today July 4: Sensex, Nifty 50 in red, Trent biggest laggard, BSE, Nuvama shares react to SEBI’s action on Jane Street  BusinessLine
    5. How Jane Street Netted Rs 43,000 Crore In India By Gaming Index Options  ABP Live English

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  • Multi-Account Support, Broadcast Credit Trials, and Group Status Tools Are All Coming to WhatsApp on iOS

    Multi-Account Support, Broadcast Credit Trials, and Group Status Tools Are All Coming to WhatsApp on iOS

    WhatsApp is testing a wave of new features on iOS, and one of the most anticipated is finally on its way. After months of development and hints in earlier builds, iPhone users will soon be able to switch between multiple WhatsApp accounts without logging out or using a second device or app.

    As per WBI, the feature, spotted in TestFlight version 25.19.10.74, is still in development, but the direction is clear. A new section in WhatsApp’s settings will let users add a second account using a phone number or QR code. From there, switching between profiles will take just a tap. Each account stays separate, chat history, notifications, settings, all distinct, so personal and work conversations won’t overlap.

    A small banner appears when the switch is made, confirming the active account. Profile photos and account names will be listed in one place, making it easier to know which inbox you’re working with. For users juggling dual SIMs or eSIM plans, this setup should eliminate the need for multiple apps or workaround setups.

    There’s more. WhatsApp is also building a notification system to support these changes. When a new message arrives on a secondary account, the alert includes the sender’s name along with the account it belongs to. Tapping the notification takes you straight to the right message, without having to backtrack or check which profile is active.

    While multi-account switching may grab the headlines, WhatsApp is rolling out other features aimed at specific user needs, especially on the business side, starting from Android device.

    One update introduces limits on the number of broadcast messages that can be sent per month. The restriction varies by account type or region and is designed to encourage more scalable tools like channels or status updates, rather than bulk messages. Businesses that rely on broadcasts won’t be cut off entirely, though. WhatsApp plans to offer a limited trial period where eligible accounts can access monthly message credits for free.

    During the trial, which runs for six months, participating businesses will get a fixed number of broadcasts each month. There’s no payment required during this window, and businesses can use the credits to test the feature without risk. Once the trial ends, they’ll have the option to subscribe for more, or shift toward alternative tools.

    This credit system won’t be offered to everyone. WhatsApp may roll it out regionally or limit access based on account history or eligibility criteria. And since it’s still in the works, the company can pull or change the program without notice, even for businesses already enrolled.

    Another iOS beta (version 25.19.10.76) reveals a feature that’s a little more social i.e., Status updates inside group chats. Instead of tagging a group or manually selecting members for a status, users will be able to post directly to a group’s feed. The update will live for 24 hours, just like regular statuses, and only group members will be able to see it.

    Photos, videos, music clips, and text posts are all supported. Once posted, a group status can be viewed from the Updates tab, the group icon in your chat list, or inside the group itself. Because these updates won’t send tag-based notifications, users can share casually without worrying about alerting everyone in the group each time.

    This addition builds on WhatsApp’s effort to make group interaction more fluid. It keeps updates relevant to the right audience and avoids the friction of manually selecting who sees what. And just like standard messages, group statuses are end-to-end encrypted for privacy.

    These updates, multi-account access, broadcast message credits, and group-specific status sharing, signal a more mature phase for WhatsApp. The app is slowly moving beyond one-size-fits-all communication, offering users more flexibility without sacrificing control. Rollout dates aren’t confirmed, but with features showing up across multiple betas, wider availability may not be far off.

    Read next: Spam-Blocking Is Coming to Messages in iOS 26


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  • Save $500 on this powerful gaming PC with an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D and RX 9070 XT

    Save $500 on this powerful gaming PC with an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D and RX 9070 XT

    If you’re in the market for a powerful gaming PC without completely breaking the bank, the Galaxy V2 just dropped in price by $500 on Amazon, and it comes equipped with an AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D and Radeon RX 9070 XT.

    The Galaxy V2 is a beast on paper, sporting our current number one picks for both the best gaming CPU and best GPU. You might expect an AMD gaming PC like this to come with a cost that would require some serious saving up, but after this $500 discount, the Galaxy V2 can be yours for a very reasonable $1,799.99.

    This gaming PC combines two of AMD’s most powerful gaming components, the Ryzen 7 9800X3D and the Radeon RX 9070 XT. These are supported by 32GB of DDR5 6,000MHz RAM, an 850W Gold-rated PSU, and a 2TB SSD.

    The AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D sits comfortably ahead of its predecessor, the 7800X3D, claiming victory in every gaming test we ran during our review. However, we also found that the 9800X3D is just as impressive in applications, although as an eight-core CPU, it does lose out on this front to the likes of the Intel Core i9 14600K with its 14-core configuration.

    AMD’s secret sauce for the 9800X3D is its 64MB 3D V-cache, which provides the CPU with additional cache and prevents the processor from having to access RAM for data. This is now situated under the CPU cores, as opposed to on top of them, as they had been in the past. This means your CPU cooler now directly cools the CPU cores rather than hitting the V-cache first.

    As for the Radeon RX 9070 XT, it can beat the likes of the RTX 5080 and RTX 4090 in our benchmarks, but falls behind them when ray tracing is introduced. Despite this, its ray tracing performance is still among the best we’ve seen from an AMD graphics card so far.

    One downside of this build is perhaps the high power draw from the GPU and CPU, but the 850W Gold-rated PSU has more than enough juice to handle the system’s demands.

    With the $500 discount bringing the Galaxy V2 down to $1,799.99, this is a great opportunity to snap up a high-spec gaming PC for an incredibly reasonable price. You can purchase yours from Amazon using this link here.

    You can follow us on Google News for daily PC games news, reviews, and guides. We’ve also got a vibrant community Discord server, where you can chat about this story with members of the team and fellow readers.

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  • Fires in Greece’s Crete and near Athens extinguished; two dead in Turkiye | News

    Fires in Greece’s Crete and near Athens extinguished; two dead in Turkiye | News

    No casualties in Greece as fires in southern Crete and the port of Rafina are put out; two die after blaze in western Turkiye.

    A wildfire on the Greek island of Crete that forced the evacuation of 5,000 people has been extinguished, officials say.

    Some 230 firefighters and six helicopters worked at the scene near the resort town of Ierapetra, where residents had to leave their homes and visitors their accommodation on Wednesday evening.

    Reporting from the nearby village of Agia Fotia, Al Jazeera’s John Psaropoulos said there was “no active fire front” by Friday morning. Still, he added, helicopters were operating in the area to ensure there were no flare-ups.

    The fire left forest trees and some olive trees burned but caused no casualties. Two local MPs told Al Jazeera efforts were under way for the return of the people who were evacuated after the blaze broke out.

    Elsewhere in mainland Greece, a fire fanned by strong winds that erupted near the port town of Rafina, about 30km (18 miles) east of the capital, Athens, was brought under control on Thursday evening, authorities said.

    However, firefighting crews remained on alert as winds remained strong.

    The fire, which led to the evacuation of 300 people, destroyed a few houses and vehicles, local mayor Dimitris Markou told public broadcaster ERT.

    It also disrupted ferries to and from tourist islands in the western Aegean Sea.

    Greece has so far been spared the heatwave roasting parts of Europe, particularly Spain, Portugal and France. But starting this weekend, temperatures will rise and reach up to 43 degrees Celsius (109 degrees Fahrenheit) in some areas of the country.

    Firefighters spray water to douse a burning house in Pikermi [Angelos Tzortzinis/AFP]

    Two dead in Turkiye

    Meanwhile, in neighbouring Turkiye, a local forestry worker was killed while trying to contain a fire near the western town of Odemis, while an 81-year-old resident died from smoke inhalation, authorities said.

    These were the first deaths in a series of wildfires that have forced thousands of people to flee.

    Separately, hundreds of firefighters, supported by aircraft and helicopters, were deployed to battle a wildfire near the Aegean coastal town of Cesme, a popular vacation destination about 190km (120 miles) west of Odemis.

    That fire, which began on Wednesday, forced the evacuation of three neighbourhoods and led to road closures. Television footage showed flames racing through dry vegetation on both sides of a highway.

    Over the past week, Turkiye has battled hundreds of wildfires fuelled by strong winds, extreme heat and low humidity.

    The blazes have damaged or destroyed about 200 homes.

    Hot dry weather is not unusual for Greece and Turkiye at this time of year. Devastating summer wildfires are common in both countries, with experts warning that climate change is intensifying conditions.

    Greece fire
    Firefighters gather on a field near an area where a plane drops water over a wildfire that broke out in Pikermi, some 30km east of Athens [Aris Messinis /AFP]

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  • Fears of an AI workforce takeover may be overblown — but it’s still scrambling firms’ hiring plans

    Fears of an AI workforce takeover may be overblown — but it’s still scrambling firms’ hiring plans

    A growing chorus of executives has put white collar workforces on notice: Their jobs are at risk of being wiped out by artificial intelligence.

    Yet above that din is a more complicated picture of how AI is currently affecting hiring.

    Direct evidence of an acceleration in human obsolescence remains scant so far. In a report this week, the job and hiring consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas said cuts spurred by President Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency remained the leading cause of job losses — especially for government, nonprofit and other sectors supported by federal funds — followed by general economic and market conditions.

    Out of 286,679 planned layoffs so far this year, only 20,000 were linked to automation, the firm said — with just 75 explicitly tied to AI implementation.

    “Far less is happening than people imagine,” said Andrew Challenger, senior vice president at the consultancy, referring to the impact of AI on the broader workforce in the U.S. “There are roles that can be significantly changed by AI right now, but I’m not talking to too many HR leaders who say AI is replacing jobs.”

    That belies recent comments made by some of America’s most prominent executives about the impact that artificial intelligence is expected to have. Last month, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy warned that AI would “reduce our total corporate workforce as we get efficiency gains” over time. However, he did not lay out what that time frame might look like. He also said more people would likely be needed to do “other types of jobs,” ones that AI may help generate.

    And while The Wall Street Journal reported comments from Ford CEO Jim Farley this week that AI would replace “literally half of all white-collar workers in the U.S.,” a clip of Farley’s presentation offered more context. The automotive executive was speaking about beefing up America’s blue-collar workforce, and appeared to be repeating the warning about a white-collar wipeout issued by the CEO of the AI company Anthropic — a contention that is still being debated. (A representative for Ford did not respond to a request for comment.)

    Experts say the current era of AI is impacting the job market in more roundabout ways. Many firms are currently under tremendous pressure to cut costs given the generally uncertain economic environment spurred by the heavy cost of Trump’s tariff policy and worries about rising inflation. As a result, some companies are diverting spending that would otherwise be going to hiring more employees and shifting it toward AI software.

    “There’s basically a blank check to go out and buy these AI tools,” said Josh Bersin, CEO of The Josh Bersin Company workforce consultancy. “Then they go out and say, as far as head count: No more hiring. Just, ‘stop.’ So that immediately freezes the job market.”

    Among the most high-profile examples is Shopify, whose CEO told employees they must now prove why they “cannot get what they want done using AI” before asking for more employees and resources.

    “What would this area look like if autonomous AI agents were already part of the team?” Shopify CEO Tobi Lutke wrote in a memo sent to employees in March. “This question can lead to really fun discussions and projects.”

    The chief executive of language learning app Duolingo, Luis von Ahn, issued a similar edict in May, writing that the firm would gradually stop using contractors to do work that AI can handle and that a budget for new employees would only be given “if a team cannot automate more of their work.”

    Enough firms hedging in this way, alongside a wider economic slowdown, may indeed be suppressing overall hiring, especially in business and professional services.

    But those trends do not amount to large-scale replacement of existing workers by AI agents.

    Then there are the firms creating the AI tools themselves — the ones other businesses are ostensibly looking to purchase and deploy to automate their workforces. These AI developers, including Dell, Google parent Alphabet, Facebook parent Meta, Microsoft and Salesforce, have been shedding workers not tied to AI product development and shifting resources toward those who are. If AI is causing job losses, it’s not because it’s doing someone else’s job. It’s because budgets — and demands on the bottom line — are changing.

    The state of hiring at Microsoft is illustrative. Over the past several weeks, the tech giant — whose stock has surged 17% year to date thanks in part to the popularity of its Copilot AI tool — has announced job cuts affecting some 15,000 roles, or about 7% of its workforce.

    In this case, some human replacement does appear to be occurring: CEO Satya Nadella said recently that as much as 30% of the company’s code is now written by AI — something Bloomberg News confirmed in a report showing software engineering roles made up more than 40% of the roughly 2,000 positions cut in one of the recent layoff rounds.

    Yet other analysts indicated the cuts were also likely designed to offset the costs associated with Microsoft’s massive buildout of data centers designed to handle AI computer processing.

    “We believe that every year Microsoft invests at the current levels, it would need to reduce headcount by at least 10,000” in order to make up for its increased capital expenditures, said Gil Luria, a tech research analyst at D.A. Davidson financial group, in an interview with Reuters.

    In a note to clients, analysts with the consultancy Capital Economics said not all mentions of AI by businesses discussing their financial picture should be taken at face value.

    “For some firms, AI is a way to spin job losses driven by poor financial performance in a more positive light,” they wrote.

    AI is also impacting the hiring and recruiting process itself. A galaxy of startups now offers tools that can perform the job of entire HR departments, from scanning resumes to interviewing candidates. At IBM, “a couple hundred” HR workers have been recently replaced by AI agents, CEO Arvind Krishna told The Wall Street Journal in May.

    Yet with those efficiencies, the company was able to hire more programmers and salespeople, he said.

    “While we have done a huge amount of work inside IBM on leveraging AI and automation on certain enterprise workflows, our total employment has actually gone up, because what it does is it gives you more investment to put into other areas,” Krishna said.

    For anyone struggling to find new work, AI is not without blame. But experts say economic factors continue to vastly outweigh the threat from automation.

    “Our research has shown that AI will fundamentally change a whole lot of jobs, some by a lot,” said Svenja Gudell, chief economist at Indeed Hiring Lab. In the case of software developers especially, she said, roles are being completely transformed. “But does it still mean AI took that job? I don’t think so,” she said. “There’s not evidence that it’s fully replacing whole workers, or that the current slowdown can be attributed to it.”

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