CNN: How millions of jobless Americans can afford to ditch work
https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/15/economy/labor-force-retirement-great-resignation/index.html
CNN: How millions of jobless Americans can afford to ditch work
https://www.cnn.com/2021/12/15/economy/labor-force-retirement-great-resignation/index.html
The Future of Bitcoin is Threatened by Quantum Computers Can Bitcoin keep up with quantum computing?
https://futurism.com/bitcoins-security-quantum-computers
ossible, but the system does have weak points quantum computers could exploit.
For their paper, Aggarwal and his colleagues examined how quantum computers could break through Bitcoin’s security in two ways: by mining more than classical computers can and by cracking Bitcoin’s cryptographic keys.
If a miner controls more than 50 percent of the computational power on a blockchain network, they can use that majority control for malicious activity. The researchers found that the application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) currently used by most cryptocurrency miners should be able to maintain a speed advantage over quantum computers for the next 10 years, so miners likely won’t be able to use quantum systems for nefarious purposes in this manner for at least a decade.
As for cracking today’s cryptographic keys, part of Bitcoin’s security protocol involves every bitcoin owner possessing two encryption keys: a private one and a public one. The latter can be easily generated using the former, but the reverse is far more difficult. An owner’s signature is verified without revealing the private key using a technique called elliptic curve signature scheme.
While conventional computers don’t possess the necessary computational power to derive a private key from a public key, quantum computers could do it rather easily. “The elliptic curve signature scheme used by Bitcoin…could be completely broken by a quantum computer as early as 2027,” Aggarwal and his colleagues wrote.
This security threat isn’t unique to Bitcoin. Just about everything on the internet and every computer system with a modicum of security uses the same cryptographic principles. To that end, quantum computers put anything using today’s encryption methods at risk.
“[T]here is little doubt that the power of quantum computing could be used to ‘crack’ current encryption methods,” William Hurley, the chair of the Quantum Computing Standards Workgroup of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), told Futurism.
“Encryption methods like RSA are based on the simple premise that factoring large numbers is computationally unattractive,” said Hurley, who has previously written about the threat quantum computers pose to today’s encryption methods. “RSA and other encryption methods essentially make it so time and resource intensive that it becomes undesirable to invest in breaking the encryption. With the advent of quantum computers, the factoring of these two large numbers now becomes more of a reality.”
Quantum computers could potentially become so powerful they require their own kind of cryptography, but that doesn’t mean Bitcoin and today’s encryption methods must be scrapped entirely. With some reworking, they could be made more secure.
For starters, Hurley suggests doubling or tripling the length of cryptographic keys. “Doubling the length of the encryption key is even more effective in a symmetric encryption scheme,” he said. “Quantum computers could use Grover’s Algorithm to break symmetric keys in quadratic time, but that’s not nearly fast enough to overcome a longer key.”
According to MIT Technology Review, Bitcoin doesn’t have any plans to revise its current security protocols just yet, but with usable quantum computers still a decade or two away, cryptocurrency platforms have time to reconsider their encryption methods.
“It’s easy to romanticize quantum computing. And while the technology is closer than you think, it’s not magic,” said Hurley. “It will not be the end of encryption, as many propose.”
Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/250577/domestic-market-share-of-leading-us-airlines/
American, JetBlue seek dismissal of antitrust lawsuit tied to partnership https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/22/american-jetblue-seek-dismissal-of-antitrust-lawsuit-tied-to-partnership.html
Achieving semiconductor independency is ‘not doable,’ EU competition chief says https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/29/eu-vestager-independent-semiconductor-production-isnt-doable.html
CNBC: Sitting out the season: A record number of Americans say they won’t be buying holiday gifts this year
Rolls-Royce says its all-electric aircraft is the world’s fastest after it tops 387 mph https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/19/rolls-royce-says-its-electric-aircraft-hit-a-top-speed-of-387-mph.html
Rolls-Royce | Spirit of Innovation - the world's fastest all-electric aircraft https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kd-RDX1IjuM
In the United States, most petroleum is consumed in transportation https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=40752
(Unverified source) How the United States Uses Oil https://alternativeenergy.procon.org/how-the-united-states-uses-oil/
Hertz says Tesla’s already started delivering cars even though Musk says there’s no signed deal yet https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/02/hertz-says-teslas-already-started-delivering-cars-despite-musk-tweet.html
Hertz - Rent a Tesla https://www.hertz.com/blog/electric-vehicles/tesla/?gclsrc=aw.ds&&gclid=CjwKCAiAs92MBhAXEiwAXTi250E0zmqAALrRDr_jwPcMxwRtH6zeDooqXFChBJGDaYIRsN-IJdBYWBoCGbkQAvD_BwE
— Biden, interview at CNN Town Hall, Oct. 21
“Seventeen Nobel laureates spontaneously — Nobel laureates in economy — sent me a letter three weeks ago saying it will also reduce, not increase inflation.”
— Biden, speech in Scranton Pa., Oct. 20
“By the way, 15 Nobel laureates in economics released a letter yesterday arguing that exact same point. They said, and I quote — and this is from 15 Nobel laureates in economics — quote, ‘Because this agenda … ‘ — the one I’m talking about, mine — ‘Because this agenda invests in long-term economic capacity and will enhance the ability of more Americans to participate productively in the economy, it will ease long-term inflationary pressures.’ It will ease it.”
— Biden, remarks on the U.S. economy, Sept. 16
This is an example of how a carefully worded sentence can, over time, get morphed into shorthand that might lose some nuance.
In September, back when Biden’s “Build Back Better” plan called for $3.5 trillion in spending on top of a bipartisan infrastructure plan, 15 recipients of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences released a joint letter praising his initiative. (The number later grew to 17.)
“While we all have different views on the particulars of various economic policies, we believe that key components of this broader agenda are critical — including tax reforms that make our tax system more equitable and that enable our system to raise the additional funds required to facilitate necessary public investments and achieve our collective goals,” the letter said. “Because this agenda invests in long-term economic capacity and will enhance the ability of more Americans to participate productively in the economy, it will ease longer-term inflationary pressures.”
With inflation a growing concern for many Americans, the last line was a political gift for the White House. (It has also been cited by other Democrats.) Biden read that line verbatim in his first reference to the letter. But then over time, his references to the letter have morphed into something that might suggest to listeners the plan would reduce inflation now, not the potential for inflation in the future.
Moreover, Biden’s plan has changed significantly. The bipartisan infrastructure plan remains in place — it just needs to pass the House — but the rest of the spending proposal has been pared back to $1.75 trillion. The tax changes lauded in the letter — higher taxes on the wealthy and corporations — have been largely dropped. Lawmakers may even tinker with a 2017 tax provision that limited the deduction of state, local and property taxes in a way that would benefit the wealthy.
So the Fact Checker sent an email to every signer, asking two questions:
1. Does the “longer-term inflationary pressures” phrase mean the Biden plan would reduce inflation?
2. Have the changes in the proposal affected how you view the plan’s impact on long-term inflationary pressures?
We have heard from six signers so far and have collected their responses below. We will update this as we hear from more. The names are listed in the order in which the signers are listed in the letter. None of the responses indicated that any signer was backing away from the letter — but some indicated that the proposed changes have lessened the potential impact on inflationary pressures.
Joseph Stiglitz, professor, Columbia University
Because this agenda invests in long-term economic capacity and will enhance the ability of more Americans to participate productively in the economy, it will ease longer-term inflationary pressures.
This simply means what it says: it will have positive “supply side effects” which reduce inflationary pressures.
My judgment was that in the earlier version, with almost all of the additional spending “paid for,” the net demand side effects were likely to be minimal. Obviously, without detailed knowledge of the final package, it's not possible to do a precise overall assessment. One needs to look at both what taxes/revenue measures have been taken out, what spending measures have been taken out, and to what extent it continues to be paid for.
From the reports that I’ve seen, the statement is likely to be still true, though with the scaling down of the measures, the magnitudes of the effects are reduced.
Peter Diamond, professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The key part of the prior sentence is: public investments.
Investments in physical and human capital raise potential output. Actual inflation depends on multiple factors, including demand relative to supply (the item referred to in the letter). Many other elements are involved, making it hard to separate out the size of the impact on inflation of any one element.
If by reduce inflation you mean inflation would be lower than otherwise, that is consistent with the statement. If you mean that inflation will go down in the period after the bills are passed, that is not an implication of these slow-working effects.
Out of a context, “reduce inflation” has both meanings — lower than otherwise and going down.
Eric S. Maskin, professor, Harvard University
I don’t know enough about the bill as it now stands to comment on whether it is likely to ease inflationary pressure.
Christopher Sims, professor, Princeton University
The package would still reduce “longer-term inflationary pressures,” even with some of its revenue-raising measures reduced, because of the supply-side effects it lists. But in the medium term, there are demand-side sources of inflationary pressure as well.
A version of the Biden package including some substantial and politically difficult revenue-raising measures would probably not add to medium-term inflationary pressures. Cutting revenue-raising components out of the Biden package increases the medium-term pressures.
This would make the Fed’s job more difficult and might therefore raise the risk (relative to the risk with the original Biden package) of either a more extended period of above-target inflation or of a recession. But the risk to the economy of not passing this legislation, thereby reinforcing the view that our institutions can’t act to deal with our central economic problems, is much greater.
Sir Angus Deaton, professor, Princeton University
I think the letter means what it says which is clear enough. I don’t know what “it would reduce inflation” means. Certainly not in the next few months. The package would do more without the giveaways to the wealthy, but would I still sign for a compromise package? Probably.
Daniel McFadden, professor, University of California at Berkley
The Nobel letter talks about long-run pressure on inflation, and opines that improving the nation’s infrastructure, both physical and human capital, will reduce this pressure. This is sound and uncontroversial economics — increasing supply and capacity reduces the bottlenecks that fuel inflationary surges.
The inflation we are seeing right now seems to be coming primarily from supply and coordination issues across the world economy as we emerge from the covid pandemic, and to some degree from the pent-up demand coming from wealth accumulation during the pandemic, but not substantially from overall excess demand.
There is a risk, however, that the current surge will morph into more general inflationary expectations. Increasing current government deficits by a shakily financed BBB could add to this. The responsible public policy is to push forward with the infrastructure bill and BBB program, but tie initiation of investments authorized in these bills to financing that is consistent with managing current inflationary pressure.
CNBC: Airlines are gearing up for a busier — and costlier — holiday season as fuel prices rise https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/15/airlines-are-gearing-up-for-a-busier-and-costlier-holiday-season-as-fuel-prices-rise.html
CNBC: U.S. consumer prices jump 6.2% in October, the biggest inflation surge in more than 30 years https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/10/consumer-price-index-october.html
Inflation, consumer prices for the United States https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FPCPITOTLZGUSA
Current International Comparison: https://tradingeconomics.com/country-list/inflation-rate
Historical data: https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/inflation-cpi
CNBC: Walmart is using fully driverless trucks to ramp up its online grocery business https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/08/walmart-is-using-fully-driverless-trucks-to-ramp-up-its-online-grocery-business.html
CNBC: Peloton shares collapse as momentum for its at-home fitness equipment slows https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/05/peloton-shares-collapse-momentum-for-its-at-home-fitness-equipment-slows.html
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CNBC: Facebook, Twitter and digital ad stocks drop sharply after Snap earnings
United Airlines CEO says to expect higher fares as jet fuel prices rise https://www.cnbc.com/2021/10/20/united-airlines-ceo-tells-.html
Krispy Kreme CEO says the doughnut chain is exercising ‘discipline’ in its growth plans PUBLISHED TUE, AUG 17 20217:32 PM EDTUPDATED WED, AUG 25 202111:04 AM EDT Kevin Stankiewicz @KEVIN_STANK SHARE Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn https://www.cnbc.com/2021/08/17/krispy-kreme-ceo-says-the-doughnut-chain-is-exercising-discipline-in-its-growth-plans.html