News

On the face of it, the AI world is all about the race between the US and China. But beneath the surface, it is fast becoming ...
As companies race to adopt AI, they’re sidelining the very people trained to spot red flags—and the consequences could be ...
Jim Slusher is taking some time off. The following is a reprise of his column from Feb. 4, 2000. One of my favorite journalism war stories dates back more than two decades but ...
ADEOLA OJO in this piece explores a common issue in Nigerian legal system; the concept of charge and bail and why despite the fact that their line of operations is against the ethics of the legal ...
Does anyone pay with cash anymore, or actually have the money in their bank account? Credit card debt is now $1.1 trillion. There is even a credit card just for automotive repairs! With those ...
Reverse pros on the importance of including seniors in mortgage industry plans Fairway’s Dan Ventura and Longbridge’s Chris Mayer talk about serving the increasingly dominant senior ...
That’s the opportunity—and the challenge—of modern marketing. AI may be the engine, but data is the fuel. And to win in a world of disappearing identifiers and rising expectations, brands must invest ...
Most B2B brand and marketing experts agree that a solid positioning statement and brand story are critical to the success of a business. Those initial elements serve as a compass for all ...
Compliance Week's Aaron Nicodemus sat down with Kim Faulkner, Chief Ethics & Compliance Officer at Colgate-Palmolive, to discuss the importance of ethics and compliance at the company.
North Dakota Ethics Commission Has No Authority to Punish Officials Violating Ethics Laws, State Leaders Argue Voters created an ethics watchdog agency seven years ago. But officials keep pushing ...
In the closing hours of the Illinois General Assembly’s spring session, Senate President Don Harmon tried to pass legislation that would have wiped clean a potential multimillion-dollar fine ...
Games As fans reject Switch 2 game-key cards, former Nintendo marketing leads say it's unlikely that physical games will ever "100% go away," because "they realize the importance of that" ...