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Clawdbot is the new AI techies are buzzing about — and it’s renewing interest in the Mac Mini

If your techie friend is texting a lobster, here’s why.

Clawdbot is an open-source AI agent that works around the clock and can connect to many common consumer apps. Users have asked their Clawdbots to organize their schedules, monitor vibe-coding sessions, and build new AI employees.

It’s scored some high-profile fans, from Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan to multiple Andreessen Horowitz partners. Many have praised it, others have meme’d it, and some have warned people about potential security concerns.

What is Clawdbot?

You can spot Clawdbot by its friendly lobster mascot.

Founded by Peter Steinberger, Clawdbot is an AI agent that manages “digital life,” from emails to home automation. Steinberger previously founded PSPDFKit.

In a key distinction from ChatGPT and many other popular AI products, the agent is open source and runs locally on your computer. Users then connect the agent to a messaging app like WhatsApp or Telegram, where they can give it instructions via text.

Clawdbot was named after the “little monster” that appears when you restart Claude Code, Steinberger said on the “Insecure Agents” podcast. He formed the tool around the question: “Why don’t I have an agent that can look over my agents?”

“I already did the whole startup thing,” Steinberger said. “I’m just here to have fun.”

Clawdbot runs locally on your computer 24/7. That’s led some people to brush off their old laptops. “Installed it experimentally on my old dusty Intel MacBook Pro,” one product designer wrote. “That machine finally has a purpose again.”

Others are buying up Mac Minis, Apple’s 5″-by-5″ computer, to run Clawdbot. Logan Kilpatrick, a product manager for Google DeepMind, posted: “Mac mini ordered.” It could give a sales boost to Apple, some X users have pointed out — and online searches for “Mac Mini” jumped in the last 4 days in the US, per Google Trends.

https://trends.google.com/explore?q=Mac%20Mini&date=today%201-m&geo=US

But Steinberger said buying a new computer just to run the AI isn’t necessary.

“Please don’t buy a Mac Mini,” he wrote. “You can deploy this on Amazon’s Free Tier.”

Engineers and AI heads seem to love it

The Mac Mini buy-ups have spawned dozens of memes.

One founder wrote that his “meal prep” was a fridge full of Mac Minis and Monster energy drinks. An engineer joked that his Mac Mini had quit his job and divorced his wife. Another founder prophesied a wave of Mac Mini returns in two weeks.

As for Clawdbot, many techies were excited by the agent’s capabilities.

One founder asked it to make him a dinner reservation; when it couldn’t complete the task via OpenTable, it used its ElevenLabs skill to call the restaurant. “AGI is here and 99% of people have no clue,” he wrote.

Others were less impressed. One founder called it a “generational psyop,” joking that it took him 6 texts to get a calendar invite.

Clawdbot seems to be at least moderately popular. Steinberger posted on X that he had 89 GitHub pull requests — and that venture capitalists were flooding his inbox.

What’s the worry?

Is Clawdbot the future of agents? Some onlookers seem skeptical.

First, the setup process can be technical. A16z partner Olivia Moore described the process, from terminal commands to API keys. “For most consumers (or even prosumers), the learning curve is likely too steep,” she wrote.

Then there’s the security question. You are giving an AI agent almost unlimited access to your digital life and passwords, after all.

Rahul Sood, a former Microsoft exec who founded its investment arm, wrote that Clawdbot turned text messages into “attack surfaces” and had “zero guardrails by design.” He advised using it carefully.

One hacker described Clawdbot as hiring a “brilliant” butler who later opened your home to the public, allowing a stranger to read your diary.

Steinberger responded to these security concerns by outlining some guardrails users could employ, including reading the security document and avoiding adding Clawdbot to group chats.

How much should we hand over our digital lives to AI? A16z partner Justine Moore warned against being the “guy who automated his entire life with ClawdBot.”




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Man uses $4,999 autonomous snow blower to clear his driveway during winter storm: ‘I’m inside sipping a coffee’

Forget robotaxis — a man and his robo-snow blower were the envy of X during the weekend’s winter storm.

More than 250 million Americans are thawing out after a massive winter storm swept the country with freezing temperatures and heavy snowfall.

Tom Moloughney, however, stayed inside. He watched a nearly 230-pound robot clear his long New Jersey driveway, documenting the process in a video posted to his X account.

Moloughney is a certified techie, host of the State of Charge YouTube channel and a senior editor at InsideEVs. He’s been reviewing a $4,999 autonomous snow blower from robotics company Yarbo.

The storm dumped about six inches of snow in Moloughney’s town over 24 hours, according to the National Weather Service. It was the perfect opportunity to give the bot a whirl.

“This is going to be a great test to see if this robot can handle a 6,000 sq.ft. driveway during a major winter storm,” Moloughney wrote on X. “I’m inside sipping a coffee while it’s doing its job and so far so good!”

Videos Moloughney posted during the storm showed the Wi-Fi-connected machine clearing snow from his long driveway, a walkway, and the curved area in front of his two-car garage. When its battery ran low, the robot returned on its own to a charging pad, recharging for about an hour and a half before heading back out into the freezing temperatures.

According to Yarbo’s website, the autonomous snowblower can clear snow up to 12 feet of snow, throw it as far as 40 feet, and operate in temperatures as low as minus 13 degrees Fahrenheit.

“It will continue to do that until the driveway is completely done twice,” Moloughney updated viewers on X during the storm. “I’ll then send it out again and continue to do so until the snow stops.”

Still, the robotic helper hasn’t been flawless, according to Moloughney. The reviewer said the machine required extensive digital setup before the storm and struggled to establish GPS connectivity in parts of his driveway. During a previous storm, he said hail fell before the snow, leaving a sheet of ice the robot couldn’t remove. And, during a previous storm, hail fell before the snow, leaving a sheet of ice covering his driveway before the bot cleared the snow.

Moloughney and Yarbo did not respond to Business Insider’s requests for comment.

Despite the hiccups, Moloughney said the robot worked through the night as the final flakes fell, calling its performance “kicking ass.”

You can watch the reviewer’s unboxing of the robo-snow blower in the video below.




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Aditi Bharade

Why Starbucks is letting Brian Niccol use the company plane for more personal travel

Starbucks is getting CEO Brian Niccol to use the company jet for all his travels — and removing his quarter-million travel budget cap.

In a Monday filing, the Seattle-based coffee chain said that it was changing its agreement on how much Niccol could use the company’s private jet for his personal travel. And the main reason for this change is to ensure Niccol’s safety.

Before September, Niccol’s use of the Starbucks plane for non-work reasons was subject to an annual cap of $250,000, and if he exceeded that amount, he had to reimburse the company, the Monday filing wrote.

But after September, the board removed the $250,000 annual cap and replaced it with a “more frequent quarterly review of Mr. Niccol’s personal flights by the chair of the Compensation Committee,” per the filing. Starbucks has not imposed a new maximum spending limit.

“This change was driven by the security study’s recommendation that Mr. Niccol use Company aircraft for all air travel, including personal travel, and the Company’s ongoing monitoring of Mr. Niccol’s security situation,” the filing wrote.

A Starbucks spokesperson said the company’s board recently decided to enhance security measures for Niccol, following a review of threats and risks to the chief executive.

Following the review, the board has made it a requirement to use private aircraft for all his travels, the spokesperson added.

Last year, Starbucks was hiring for a pilot to fly its private Gulfstream jets. In the job listing, the company said it would pay the pilot a salary between $207,000 and $360,300.

The filing also wrote that Niccol was paid about $31 million in compensation in 2025, a drop from the $95.8 million he was paid in 2024. His 2024 compensation was boosted by $90.2 million in stock awards he received as part of his signing contract.

Niccol started at the company in September 2024, moving over from Chipotle. He has helmed the chain’s “Back to Starbucks” turnaround plan, an effort to turn around several quarters of poor results because of a declining customer experience.

His offer letter in August 2024 showed that Starbucks had permitted him to use the company jet to commute from his home in California to the company’s headquarters in Seattle. In July last year, Business Insider learnt that Starbucks had set up a satellite office close to Niccol’s residence in Newport Beach.




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7 of the most interesting quotes from Anthropic CEO’s sprawling 19,000-word essay about AI

Dario Amodei still has a lot to say.

On Monday, the Anthropic CEO dropped an over 19,000-word essay entitled “The Adolescence of Technology” on the future of AI on Monday, opining on everything from his fellow CEOs to feudalism, and even the Unabomber.

Best known for his warning that AI could eliminate up to 50% of entry-level white-collar jobs in the next 1 to 5 years, Amodei has tangled with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and the Trump White House over his views.

Here are seven of the most alarming and surprising quotes.

‘This is a serious civilizational challenge’

Amodei remains optimistic about AI overall, but his essay detailed “an intimidating gauntlet that humanity must run” to reap the benefits of AI without letting the breakthrough technology destroy the world.

“I believe if we act decisively and carefully, the risks can be overcome — I would even say our odds are good. And there’s a hugely better world on the other side of it,” he wrote. “But we need to understand that this is a serious civilizational challenge.”

AI development can’t be stopped, Amodei wrote, a conclusion even some of AI’s skeptics share. The financial and security benefits are just too massive for the private and public sectors to pass up.

It’s why winning the AI race and doing so in an ethical way is so critical, he concludes.

‘This is like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and then bragging that the missile casings are made by Boeing’

Jensen Huang hasn’t changed Amodei’s mind on China.

“A number of complicated arguments are made to justify such sales, such as the idea that ‘spreading our tech stack around the world’ allows ‘America to win’ in some general, unspecified economic battle,” Amodei said. “In my view, this is like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and then bragging that the missile casings are made by Boeing and so the US is ‘winning.'”

In November, Nvidia announced a partnership with Anthropic that includes an investment of up to $10 billion in the AI startup. The news sparked speculation that tensions between Amodei and Huang might be cooling.

Whatever the status of their relationship, Amodei is resolute that it is a horrendous decision to allow US companies to sell advanced chips to China.

“China is several years behind the US in their ability to produce frontier chips in quantity, and the critical period for building the country of geniuses in a data center is very likely to be within those next several years,” Amodei wrote. “There is no reason to give a giant boost to their AI industry during this critical period.”

‘Many people have told me that we should stop doing this, that it could lead to unfavorable treatment’

Amodei would like his critics to see the scoreboard.

Anthropic’s leader hasn’t tried to curry favor with the White House, nor has he vocally embraced President Donald Trump’s AI policies to the same degree as his rival CEOs. Amodei’s outspoken call for AI regulation even led David Sacks, Trump’s AI czar, to publicly rebuke him.

None of it has changed Amodei’s view that the AI industry “needs a healthier relationship with government — one based on substantive policy engagement rather than political alignment.”

“Many people have told me that we should stop doing this, that it could lead to unfavorable treatment, but in the year we’ve been doing it, Anthropic’s valuation has increased by over 6x, an almost unprecedented jump at our commercial scale,” he wrote.

Of all of his hopes, this one appears the unlikeliest. Already, AI CEOs have formed dueling super PACs ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

‘It is sad to me that many wealthy individuals (especially in the tech industry) have recently adopted a cynical and nihilistic attitude that philanthropy is inevitably fraudulent or useless’

The tech elite made AI, and they should help society grapple with its fallout, he wrote in the essay. Amodei has long called on governments to prepare for mass job displacement. In one of the most eyebrow-raising parts of the essay, Anthropic CEO detailed what his fellow billionaires and companies must do.

Beyond philanthropy, Amodei said companies need to be “creative” in how they stave off layoffs.

In the long term, he wrote, “It may be feasible to pay human employees even long after they are no longer providing economic value in the traditional sense.”

‘Some AI companies have shown a disturbing negligence towards the sexualization of children’

One of the biggest themes of Amodei’s essay is the risk that AI companies themselves pose. It’s a conclusion that he admits is “somewhat awkward” for him to reach. As an example, he points to the roiling topic of the sexualization of children. While he does not name xAI directly, Grok is facing investigations in multiple countries over the non-consensual sexualization of images of real people.

“Some AI companies have shown a disturbing negligence towards the sexualization of children in today’s models, which makes me doubt that they’ll show either the inclination or the ability to address autonomy risks in future models,” he wrote.

Overall, he expressed skepticism that AI companies will sacrifice profit for broader societal good. “Ordinary corporate governance,” Amodei wrote, is ill-equipped to address his worries.

Amodei said that fears that AI models may defy orders and perhaps even try to eliminate humanity are complicated by bad actors in the industry who aren’t as transparent about the risks they are seeing in their models.

“While it is incredibly valuable for individual AI companies to engage in good practices or become good at steering AI models, and to share their findings publicly, the reality is that not all AI companies do this, and the worst ones can still be a danger to everyone even if the best ones have excellent practices,” he wrote.

‘Models are likely now approaching the point where, without safeguards, they could be useful in enabling someone with a STEM degree but not specifically a biology degree to go through the whole process of producing a bioweapon’

Amodei doesn’t see the largest risks to humanity coming from AI pursuing total domination, but rather in what AI could enable humans to unleash.

Amodei described his fears that AI is lowering the barrier of entry necessary to make killer biological weapons. His greatest concern is that AI could provide the step-by-step know-how that could eventually enable even an average person to produce a bioweapon.

AI companies, Amodei said, need to ensure they create sufficient backstops to block such inquiries, including by making it difficult for hackers to jailbreak models. Adding such security is expensive, Amodei said, noting that these measures are “close to 5% of total inference costs” for some of the companies’ models.

“I am concerned that over time there may be a prisoner’s dilemma where companies can defect and lower their costs by removing classifiers,” he wrote. “This is once again a classic negative externalities problem that can’t be solved by the voluntary actions of Anthropic or any other single company alone.”

‘I would support civil liberties-focused legislation (or maybe even a constitutional amendment)’

Amodei is one of the AI industry’s most vocal proponents of AI legislation. While Meta and Microsoft supported a federal preemption of state-level AI laws, Anthropic supported AI transparency bills in California and New York that are now law.

Throughout the essay, Amodei outlined multiple areas for future legislation, including industry-wide transparency requirements like those at the state level. Even he concludes that new laws might not be enough.

“The rapid progress of AI may create situations that our existing legal frameworks are not well designed to deal with,” he wrote.

It’s why Amodei said he would go so far as to support a constitutional amendment. The US has not amended the Constitution since 1992, when the over two-century-long battle to add a limitation on congressional pay finally passed the 38th state legislature.

“I would support civil liberties-focused legislation (or maybe even a constitutional amendment) that imposes stronger guardrails against AI-powered abuses,” he wrote.




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Sam Altman.

Sam Altman said OpenAI was planning to ‘dramatically slow down’ its pace of hiring


Florian Gaertner/Photothek via Getty Images

  • Sam Altman said that AI would “dramatically slow down” how quickly OpenAI hires.
  • Altman said the company will “hire more slowly but keep hiring.”
  • Altman’s comments came after a year when job growth stalled and hit young job seekers hard.

Sam Altman is addressing AI’s impact on the workforce, including on OpenAI’s hiring practices.

During a live-streamed town hall event on Monday, catered mainly toward developers, the OpenAI CEO said that AI has changed how quickly the company expands its head count, but the company is not in a hiring freeze and is nowhere close to doing away with human employees entirely.

“We are planning to dramatically slow down how quickly we grow because we think we’ll be able to do so much more with fewer people,” said Altman in response to a participant who asked if AI has changed OpenAI’s interview process of potential candidates.

“What I think we shouldn’t do, and what I hope other companies won’t do either, is hire super aggressively, then realize all of a sudden AI can do a lot of stuff, and you need fewer people, and have to have some sort of very uncomfortable conversation,” Altman added. “So I think the right approach for us will be to hire more slowly but keep hiring.”

Altman’s comments come amid the “Great Freeze” and concerns that job creation in America has lost momentum. The unemployment rate in November 2025 climbed to its highest level since 2021, while job openings have fallen 37% from their peak in 2022, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Business Insider previously reported that, while in 2022 there were roughly two job openings for every unemployed worker, by September 2025 that ratio had fallen to one. Workers who have been jobless for at least 27 weeks also now make up about a quarter of all unemployed Americans.

Based on data from the US Census Bureau, young workers have been hit especially hard by the hiring slowdown. The unemployment rate for Americans ages 20 to 24 reached 9.2% in August and September, the highest level since the recovery from the pandemic recession.




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Dominick Reuter

Hundreds of Target employees urge the company to keep ICE out of stores. Read the letter to leadership.

Target employees are pushing the company to take a firmer stand against ICE.

In a letter emailed to management on Friday, employees called on Target to “do the right thing” and bar federal immigration authorities from its stores. The letter, viewed by Business Insider, was signed by 284 employees, many of whom said they were residents of Minnesota, where Target is headquartered.

“Target’s continued inaction in the face of the current administration puts all of us at risk of more harm in our workplaces and represents a moral failure to protect those in our community,” said the letter, which included current CEO Brian Cornell and incoming CEO Michael Fiddelke as recipients.

A day after the letter was sent, federal agents shot and killed a second Minneapolis resident, Alex Pretti, further complicating tensions between protesters and the Trump administration.

The letter also highlights the January 7 death of Renee Good after her encounter with immigration authorities in Minneapolis. No charges have been filed in connection with Good’s death, and Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has said there is currently no basis for a criminal civil rights investigation. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the officer fired in self-defense, while Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has called for a transparent investigation.

Target has made several public moves since the letter was sent, including joining a statement with more than 60 other Minnesota businesses calling for de-escalation. Cornell also met with local faith leaders on Thursday to discuss the situation.

On Monday, Fiddelke sent a video message to staff that did not mention Trump or ICE by name, but said “the violence and loss of life in our community is incredibly painful.”

The Minneapolis-based retailer employs roughly 7,000 corporate employees at its headquarters offices, among its 440,000 employees across the US and around the world. The company also operates roughly 50 stores in the Twin Cities market.

The letter from employees highlighted Target’s scaled-back LGBTQ+ Pride collection, its wind-down of certain DEI initiatives, and its donation to Donald Trump’s inauguration fund as examples of how the company has “abandoned its community” in recent years.

Some of the demands may be outside Target’s legal ability to fully address, such as the calls on Target to block immigration authorities from its properties.

Corporate immigration attorney John Medeiros told the AP last week that law enforcement officers are typically allowed to operate in publicly accessible areas of retail businesses, like parking lots and sales floors.

Guidance from the Minnesota Attorney General’s office says employees should not interfere with agents’ lawful activities at their places of business, but neither are workers required to answer questions or tell agents whether a certain person is on the premises.

In a memo last week, chief HR officer Melissa Kremer said Target “does not have cooperative agreements with any immigration enforcement agency.”

Read the full letter from employees here:

TO: Target Leaders
FROM: Concerned Team Members
Date: Fri, Jan 23rd, 2026
Subject: Urgent Actions to Protect our Communities from ICE
We, the undersigned, are writing this letter to express solidarity with our neighbors, guests, and team members targeted by the violence perpetrated by agencies like ICE, and demand urgent action from the Target Enterprise and its leadership.
Target’s previous acts have left many rightfully concerned for its integrity. Target abandoned its community with its scale back of its Pride collection, year after year, and its winding down of DEI initiatives across the Enterprise. Then, Target went beyond mere “business decisions” when it directly funded the current administration through its $1 million donation to Donald Trump’s inauguration officially stating “We work with elected officials at all levels of government to provide the best retail experience for the more than 2,000 communities we’re proud to serve”, despite the fact that Target has never previously donated to an inauguration. On the contrary, the current ICE invasion lays bare the contempt the current administration has for the communities Target lives in as starkly shown with the cold blooded murder of our neighbor Renee Good (in which, ICE denied her accessible, lifesaving care after she had been shot by Jonathan Ross) or Trump’s threats to invoke the insurrection act against a population of peaceful protesters.
In the face of this tyranny, continued silence from our leaders will never make us safer, as already evidenced by ICE’s kidnapping and assault of two Target Richfield employees who were both minors and citizens. Target’s continued inaction in the face of the current administration puts all of us at risk of more harm in our workplaces and represents a moral failure to protect those in our community.
Despite its previous failures, Target still has ample opportunity to do the right thing. In line with the demands of community leaders like ICE Out MN and ISAIAH, we, the undersigned, demand the following immediate actions from our leaders:
  1. Issue a public statement from the leadership team and enterprise to call for an immediate end to the ICE “surge” into MN and for ICE to leave the state.
  2. Exercise Target’s Fourth Amendment right to its maximum and keep ICE out of Target stores, properties, and parking lots;
    1. Update training and policy to enable team members such as AP and Corporate Security to trespass, de-escalate, and remove any ICE agents operating illegally without a judicial warrant.
    2. Publicly post signage denying entry into Target properties to immigration authorities.
  3. Cut current and future funding from Target and its affiliates to the current administration and any causes that support ICE and its occupation of the Twin Cities.
  4. Follow the recommendations of local community leaders in what Target can do to help heal the damage our previous inaction has brought, as well as future steps of what Target can do to support our communities going forward.
If Target takes these steps, it will find that it will not be in this fight alone: The city of Minneapolis already has a separation ordinance to keep ICE off of its property and prevent collaboration between MPD and ICE and has opened litigation to challenge the current admistration’s illegal use of force; Costco and other companies have set the example of how for-profit companies can stand their ground in this administration; Over a hundred faith leaders have come together and have arranged to meet with Target leaders to advocate for our neighbors (and they continue to fight, even as Target leaders fail to take their urgent concerns and reschedules their meeting); On Saturday, at least tens of thousands of residents took to the streets at Powderhorn Park and Lake Street to demand ICE out of the Twin Cities; And now, on the date that this letter is sent, residents and workers across the Twin Cities are joining in protest in solidarity with local labor unions that have organized a day of “no work, no school, no shopping” for the 23rd , where the Twin Cities community is showing its collective power to fight back effectively against the rise of authoritarianism.
Strength comes in open solidarity, and the leaders of Target still have the chance to do the right thing. The Twin Cities and Target Team Members already stand together, but leadership must act now.
Signed, 275+ Members of the Target Team

Have a tip? Contact Dominick Reuter via email at dreuter@businessinsider.com or call/text/Signal at 646.768.4750. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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Expedia says it’s cutting some roles as it assesses skills needed for the future and simplifies its structure

  • Expedia is cutting jobs, the company confirmed to Business Insider.
  • Expedia said it’s focusing on skills needed for the future and simplifying its structure.
  • The scope of the cuts was unclear, but several affected employees posted about it on LinkedIn.

Expedia is cutting some roles as it looks toward the skills needed for the future, the company confirmed to Business Insider on Monday.

“We are eliminating roles as well as opening some new roles as we remain disciplined about assessing the skills we need for the future,” an Expedia Group spokesperson said in a statement. “We are also simplifying our structure and reducing organizational layers to move faster and with more accountability. These are not easy decisions, and we are grateful for the contributions of our colleagues who are impacted.”

It’s unclear how many people were affected or which divisions the cuts occurred in.

Several Expedia employees posted about being laid off on LinkedIn on Monday.

“After a decade of proudly working at Expedia, my role has been impacted due to organizational changes,” Natasha Morosov Pereira, an operations improvement manager, wrote, adding, “While this transition wasn’t expected, I’m grateful for everything I’ve learned and optimistic about what’s ahead.”

Also on Monday, over a dozen Expedia employees shared the same message on LinkedIn promoting openings at the travel booking company: “Expedia Group currently has OVER 250 roles open! Let’s transform travel together.”

Expedia joins several other companies that have cut roles in 2026, including Citi and T-Mobile.

Like Expedia, many companies cutting roles this year and last have cited an effort to flatten organizational structures and move faster in order to prepare for the future.

Have a tip? Contact this reporter via email at kvlamis@businessinsider.com or Signal at @kelseyv.21. Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely.




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Nike plans to cut 775 employees in a push to accelerate automation

  • Nike plans to cut 775 jobs at its distribution centers in Tennessee and Mississippi.
  • The layoffs aim to streamline operations amid supply chain and tech enhancements.
  • Companies, including Amazon and HP, have cited tech advancements among the reasons for recent layoffs.

Sportswear giant Nike is set to cut hundreds of jobs as it consolidates its US distribution center operations.

The company said it plans to let go of 775 employees across Tennessee and Mississippi, citing efforts to “streamline” operations. Nike operates warehouses in both states.

“We are sharpening our supply chain footprint, accelerating the use of advanced technology and automation, and investing in the skills our teams need for the future,” Nike said in a statement to Business Insider on Monday.

The move is a part of CEO Elliott Hill’s larger comeback plan, known as the “win now” strategy, which aims to return Nike’s revenue to growth. Hill took over the sportswear giant in October 2024 as it faced significant challenges, including declining sales and increased pressure from rivals.

Nike made previous cuts in 2024 and last year, reducing its corporate workforce by 1% in 2025 as part of its realignment plan under Hill. The senior leadership team also saw a shake-up in 2025, with Nike eliminating the chief technology officer and chief commercial officer roles, among other changes.

In its statement, Nike said it’s taking steps to move faster, serve consumers better, and reduce the complexity of its operations footprint. The company had about 77,800 employees worldwide as of May.

The latest cuts come as concerns that AI will replace human workers grow stronger, with companies like HP and Amazon citing AI-related efficiency as a factor in recent workforce reductions. A recent study by researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that AI’s skills overlap with over 11.7% of the US labor market.

The company said it expects the reduction to support its “path back to long-term, profitable growth.”




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Influencers convinced me I needed to build an igloo for my kids. The results made this snow day bearable, and it was free.

Years ago, we bought a geodesic climbing structure for my three kids, who were all under 5. We thought it would keep them entertained all year long without our supervision, but the reality could not be more different. The structure sat untouched through the seasons.

On Sunday, while preparing for the massive snowstorm that was headed toward Maine, Instagram fed me a reel of a couple building an igloo with the same climbing structure we have. I sent it to my husband, who came running from the room next door and said, “We have to do this!”

It turned out to be a hit with the kids, and it was surprisingly easy to pull off.

We used sheets to make it eco-friendly

The video I watched showed the first step to making the igloo is wrapping the perimeter of the climbing structure tightly with plastic wrap.


Man covering structure with a sheet

The author used bed sheets instead of serenwrap.

Courtesy of the author



We opted for a more eco-friendly option and decided to use king-size bed sheets. My husband had the idea to soak them in water first so they wouldn’t blow away in the strong wind as we were prepping the igloo. We soaked them in a tub and carried them outside quickly. The temps in Maine were in the teens, so we had to drag the sheets across the climbing dome quickly. I was actually surprised at how quickly the sheets hardened in the cold air. We just wrapped the ends of the sheet around a pole and didn’t need anything else to secure it in place.

We covered the entire structure, leaving one small triangle so the kids could crawl in and out of it, and had the rest of the dome totally covered.

I didn’t want to get my hopes up

We had tried something similar years earlier, and the sheets never hardened enough to stay on the dome. I didn’t want to get my hopes up this time around, so we left the sheets and walked over to a friends’ house to play before the snow.


Kids inside a climbing dome

The author had low expectations for the results.

Courtesy of the author



We were back home when the storm had already started, and we could see snow accumulating on the dome. I really wanted to check on it regularly because I was worried the weight of the snow would collapse the igloo’s roof. But I’m from Argentina, and I don’t do well in negative temperatures, so I let it be and decided to check it in the morning.

We woke up to tons of snow and a perfect igloo

We got absolutely dumped with snow overnight; it was the biggest snowstorm I’ve experienced since moving to Maine 6 years ago. And to my surprise, the igloo worked.


Woman inside igloo

The igloo turned out to be great for everyone.

Courtesy of the author



Immediately, my kids were excited to climb inside, even exclaiming that it was way warmer in the igloo than outside it. They called over friends and neighbors, and they all played inside the igloo while I worked and my husband snowblowed around our house.

It’s the first time that I copied something from a viral reel or TikTok video, and it really paid off. And the best part is that it costs us nothing.

Next time we get a snowstorm warning, I at least know which sheets to pull out ASAP so we can start building quickly.




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‘Absolutely shameful’: Business and tech leaders react to the latest fatal ICE shooting

Business leaders spoke about federal immigration officers’ latest fatal shooting over the weekend.

  • Federal immigration officers shot and killed Alex Pretti, 37, in Minneapolis on Saturday.
  • The killing elicited sharp reactions from Americans, including business and tech leaders.
  • Google DeepMind’s chief scientist said it was “absolutely shameful.”

After a second fatality in confrontations with immigration officers in Minnesota on Saturday, business leaders took to social media to have their say.

Eric Horvitz
Microsoft's chief scientific officer, Eric Horvitz, poses against a window.
Microsoft’s chief scientific officer Eric Horvitz.

Microsoft’s chief scientific officer posted a screenshot of a statement from Alex Pretti’s parents with the caption “Anguish and pursuit of truth” on X on Sunday.

Horvitz also wrote on X, “Values, service, and character,” in response to a video posted by CBS News of Pretti reading a final salute to a veteran.

Yann LeCun
Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun talks to an audience and stands against a black background.
Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun

Former Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun replied “Murderers” to footage of the shooting circulating on Saturday. He has since reposted anti-ICE tweets and pushed back against users who criticize his stance.

LeCun has regularly shared posts critical of the Trump administration on social media.

Paul Graham
Paul Graham is pictured in conversation with Charlie Rose.
Almost a year out from his viral essay, Paul Graham reflected on the difference between going “founder mode” and micromanaging.

Paul Graham, cofounder of startup accelerator Y Combinator, wrote in a post on X on Saturday: “If someone had predicted before the last election that if Trump won, federal officers would be shooting Americans in the streets, he’d have been dismissed as an alarmist.”

Chris Olah

Anthropic cofounder Chris Olah wrote on X that he typically doesn’t comment on politics, but recent events “shock the conscience.”

“My deep loyalty is to the principles of classical liberal democracy: freedom of speech, the rule of law, the dignity of the human person. I immigrated to the United States — and eventually cofounded Anthropic here — believing it was a pillar of these principles,” he wrote, adding: “I feel very sad today.”

CEOs of major Minnesota-based companies
A woman walksi n front of a Target store

The Minnesota Chamber of Commerce distributed a letter on Sunday signed by more than 60 CEOs of Minnesota-based companies, including professional sports teams.

Among the signatories were Target CEO Michael Fiddelke, 3M CEO William Brown, Allianz Life Insurance Company CEO Jasmine Jirele, Cargill CEO Brian Sikes, General Mills CEO Jeff Harmening, and UnitedHealth Group CEO Stephen Hemsley, among many others.

The letter called for an “immediate de-escalation of tensions” and for state, local, and federal officials to “work together to find real solutions.”

“In this difficult moment for our community, we call for peace and focused cooperation among local, state, and federal leaders to achieve a swift and durable solution that enables families, businesses, our employees, and communities across Minnesota to resume our work to build a bright and prosperous future,” the letter says.

Khosla Ventures partners disagree

The shooting divided leaders even within the same VC firm. Khosla Ventures’ Keith Rabois posted on X “no law enforcement has shot an innocent person. illegals are committing violent crimes everyday.” Rabois is a self-proclaimed contrarian whose political opinions have courted controversy in recent years.

Two colleagues — Ethan Choi and Vinod Khosla — disagreed with Rabois on X. Khosla described the video of Pretti’s death as “macho ICE vigilantes running amuck empowered by a conscious-less administration.”

Choi said Rabois’ post did not represent the VC firm’s view. “What happened in Minnesota is plain wrong. Don’t know how you could really see it differently. Sad to see a person’s life taken unnecessarily,” Choi wrote.

Bill Ackman
Bill Ackman.

The hedge-fund billionaire, who supported Trump in the 2024 election, called for calm in an X post on Saturday. Ackman said that the United States had reached a point where “there are only two sides to every issue and every incident.”

“Individuals are ‘convicted’ of serious crimes in the headlines, by politicians appealing to their base, and ultimately in the minds of the public, or they are exonerated, before all of the facts are in and a detailed investigation has been completed,” he wrote. “This is not good for America.”

Two hours later, in another post on X, Ackman laid the blame on Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz.

“It is almost as if the governor of Minnesota called for protesters to intervene in ICE enforcements in an incendiary manner,” he said, tagging Walz. “Inciting the people to rise up against law enforcement is guaranteed to end badly, and now we have seen the tragic consequences.”

Ackman later donated $10,000 to a GoFundMe set up for Pretti’s family after being asked to do so in a post on X by Shannon Watts, the founder of Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America.

Ackman wrote in a reply on X: “Done. That said, I don’t agree with the gofundme that he is an American hero, but his loss is tragic for him and his family.”

Reid Hoffman
Reid Hoffman at a conference with mic in hand

Like Ackman, billionaire LinkedIn cofounder Reid Hoffman is perpetually online, posting frequently on social media. The Democratic donor has been largely quiet this weekend, though he has reposted comments from other people, including one that called ICE “out of control.”

In another post that Hoffman amplified, an X user called out “chronically online tech leaders” for suddenly falling quiet. Another X user called on business and tech leaders to use their platform to stand up to the Trump administration and its immigration enforcement tactics, to which Hoffman replied, “It’s time for all Americans to do so.”

James Dyett

James Dyett, the head of global business at OpenAI, called on leaders in the tech and business communities to use their influence to criticize the Trump administration’s immigration policies.

“There is far more outrage from tech leaders over a wealth tax than masked ICE agents terrorizing communities and executing civilians in the streets,” Dyer wrote on X. “Tells you what you need to know about the values of our industry.”

Jeff Dean
Jeff Dean stands in front of Google logo

Jeff Dean, Google DeepMind’s chief scientist, wrote in response to a video of the shooting circulating on X: “This is absolutely shameful.”

“Agents of a federal agency unnecessarily escalating, and then executing a defenseless citizen whose offense appears to be using his cellphone camera,” he wrote. “Every person, regardless of political affiliation, should be denouncing this.”

Minneapolis police confirmed that Alex Pretti, who was filming federal agents when they wrestled him to the ground, was legally carrying a gun.

Border Patrol officials said Pretti had threatened them with the gun, but multiple videos of the incident show that agents had already disarmed and subdued Pretti when he was shot.

Jason Calacanis
Jason Calacanis in black tie

Jason Calacanis, a prominent investor and entrepreneur who is these days perhaps most known as one of the hosts of the popular “All-In” podcast, blamed the country’s political leaders in a post on X on Sunday.

“Once again, I will remind everyone that our leaders are failing us,” he wrote. “True leadership would be to calm this situation down by telling these non-peaceful protesters to stay home while recalling these inadequately-trained agents.”

He later posted that “all of this violence” could be avoided by fining businesses that hire immigrants who are not in the country legally.

Ray Dalio
Hedge fund manager Ray Dalio speaks at an event.

Billionaire investor Ray Dalio posted an X article on Monday, reflecting on a book he’d recently written. Current events made Dalio feel like he was “watching a movie that I have seen many times in history,” he wrote.

Minneapolis exhibited signs of stages five and six of his “Big Cycle,” he wrote: the pre-breakdown and breakdown of existing orders.

“The United States is now a tinderbox,” Dalio wrote. “The world saw the killings in Minneapolis of two opponents to Trump’s ICE initiative and is now watching to see which side will back down.”

Garry Tan
Garry Tan is pictured at the 2022 Web Summit
Gary Tan said that some academic entrepreneurship programs are creating “fake” founders like Elizabeth Holmes and Sam Bankman-Fried.

Garry Tan, the CEO of startup accelerator Y Combinator, said in a post on X that the “Minneapolis tragedy is truly sad,” and that he wanted “order and peace.”

The YC CEO, who had faced some criticism for posting about coding in recent days, wrote that he was staying focused on San Francisco, where he has a strong political presence.

“Remind yourself politics is local not national,” he wrote. “I’m going to keep fighting for my city.”

Caitlin Kalinowski

OpenAI’s robotics head, Caitlin Kalinowski, responded on X, citing the Constitution.

The OpenAI staffer referenced the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 5th, and 14th amendments, which include the right to protest and assembly, the right to bear arms, and the right to due process under the law.

Before working at OpenAI, Kalinowski was Meta’s head of AR Glasses Hardware.

David Marcus

David Marcus, cofounder and CEO of crypto payments company Lightspark, wrote on X in response to the incident: “The number of people who can hold two thoughts at the same time is dwindling at a dangerous rate.”

“It’s not because these anti-ICE protests are mostly inorganic and designed to generate this chaos, or that protesters show up with loaded guns that you can’t also be totally appalled by citizens being shot dead on our streets,” added Marcus, who is also a former president of PayPal.

“Let’s just remember we’re all Americans for a second.”

Cristina Cordova

Cristina Cordova, the chief operating officer at Linear, a product management software company, called the incident “indefensible” in a post on X.

“The victim’s legally owned handgun was removed from the scene, and then ICE agents shot him multiple times. It’s far from law enforcement — it’s just murder,” she wrote.

“Those who defend this don’t care about law or order. It’s about money, power, and protecting an executive branch that’s already been bought and paid for.”

Kath Korevec

Kath Korevec, the director of product at Google Labs, has called on X users to support their local immigration organizations.

“I can’t go to Minneapolis. And it’s only a matter of time before they show up in force here in the Bay Area. So here’s what I’m doing to help my neighbors prepare,” Korevec wrote in a post on X on Sunday.

She said in the post that she is researching, donating, and offering help to organizations that support immigrants.

Korevec said that she is calling her “congressmen and women and asking them not to approve ICE funding without major reform to how the organization is run.”

“And I’m paying attention. Not looking away, even when it’s hard,” she added. “If you’re able to do any of this where you live, now is the time.”

Josh Miller

Josh Miller, the cofounder and CEO of The Browser Company, wrote on X that he has been hesitant to speak on politics — but that this moment was no longer political.

“It is about something more fundamental,” he wrote. “It is about what America stands for. Call it morals, call it decency, whatever word resonates most with you.”

Miller wrote that the government “executed a man,” and that he was “deeply sad for his parents.”

Before The Browser Company, Miller sold his startup, Branch, to Facebook. He then left Facebook for the federal government, becoming the White House’s first director of product under former President Barack Obama.

Google DeepMind’s Dean thanked Miller for speaking up. Miller responded: “10 shots in the back of an American citizen who worked as an ICU nurse at the veterans hospital in town. While they knew they were being filmed in broad daylight. And our Secretary of War cheers them on from Twitter. Something is not right.”

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