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Will Tesla Be Banned in California? And More

Will Tesla Be Banned in California? And More

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LSBF Singapore Campus Contributes Thought Leadership to National Dialogue on Electric Vehicles
LSBF Singapore Campus Contributes Thought Leadership to National Dialogue on Electric Vehicles

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

LSBF Singapore Campus Contributes Thought Leadership to National Dialogue on Electric Vehicles

SINGAPORE, July 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Dr. Roy Yap, Head of the School for Business and Law at LSBF Singapore, was featured on Channel 8 News (3 June 2025) in a prime-time segment discussing the evolving electric vehicle (EV) insurance landscape and what it means for risk profiling, consumer protection, and insurers' responsibilities in a green economy. "The rise of EVs in Singapore is not just about infrastructure or adoption. It raises important questions about how we insure, regulate, and protect consumers in a fast-changing landscape," said Dr. Roy Yap. Dr. Roy Yap explored how the shift toward EVs introduces new considerations in risk assessment, policy coverage, and regulatory safeguards, urging stakeholders to rethink legacy systems in light of technological change. Watch the original feature (Channel 8 News, Chinese with subtitles): If you're exploring angles on green mobility, insurance innovation, or talent readiness, media enquiries and interview requests with Dr. Roy Yap are welcome. About London School of Business & Finance (LSBF) The London School of Business & Finance (LSBF), founded in 2003 and a member of the Global University System (GUS), serves over 25,000 students across more than 40 countries. With campuses in key cities including the UK, Singapore, and Malaysia, LSBF has expanded its international footprint, particularly in Asia. LSBF Singapore campus offers over 100 programmes in business, finance, law, hospitality, and technology, and collaborate with reputable universities to provide internationally recognised qualifications. LSBF holds EduTrust certification, partners with organizations like Grab, Deloitte and ISCA, and is an ACCA Approved Learning Partner. In recognition of its future-focused approach to education, LSBF was honoured with the Singapore Business Review's International Business Award in Education for two consecutive years – 2024 and 2025. These accolades reaffirm LSBF's commitment to delivering quality, industry-aligned education that empowers aspiring professionals globally. View original content to download multimedia: SOURCE London School of Business & Finance Singapore Campus Sign in to access your portfolio

Zero: US Immigration Crackdown Is Bad for Climate Tech
Zero: US Immigration Crackdown Is Bad for Climate Tech

Bloomberg

time3 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Zero: US Immigration Crackdown Is Bad for Climate Tech

Everywhere you look, it seems like bad news for climate tech. Investments are down, the US government has cut incentives and startups are running out of cash. But venture capitalist Vinod Khosla is still bullish, even though the One Big Beautiful Bill has cut an estimated $500 billion in green spending. This week on Zero, Akshat Rathi speaks with Khosla to find out when we can expect to see fusion, whether he's reconsidering investing in the US and why he still thinks the best clean tech is yet to come.

Washington Post TikTok Star Dave Jorgenson Is Going Solo
Washington Post TikTok Star Dave Jorgenson Is Going Solo

Forbes

time3 hours ago

  • Forbes

Washington Post TikTok Star Dave Jorgenson Is Going Solo

Dave Jorgenson, who launched The Washington Post's TikTok presence in 2019, has announced he's ... More leaving the paper to start his own media venture. Dave Jorgenson, the face of The Washington Post on the paper's TikTok account and its YouTube channel, is leaving the newspaper after eight years to launch his own video news company — a move that represents both a bet on his personal brand and another blow to a newsroom that's pretty much in a constant state of flux these days. 'Dear Jeff Bezos,' Jorgenson says, addressing the owner of the newspaper, in a voiceover for a minute-long video he posted to YouTube on Tuesday. 'If you're reading this, you already know. I'm leaving The Washington Post and starting my own company." From TikTok star to startup founder Jorgenson, who helped bring the Post into the Gen Z era with his sketch-driven TikToks and short explainers about politics, business, and culture, announced that he's stepping away from the paper to launch Local News International, a new venture that aims to mix news and comedy in the style of Comedy Central's The Daily Show. The idea is to do more of what he made a name for himself for at the Post — meeting audiences where they are, and continuing to do so with wit as well as an editorial voice that feels human. This time, without the cachet (and baggage) of a 147-year-old news institution behind him. 'I think we're well positioned to reach an audience that can't make sense of the current news landscape,' Jorgenson told me when I reached him Tuesday afternoon. 'I'm often reminded — from user comments — that I'm their first source to any given news story. For that reason, I take my news format of being silly but informative very seriously.' Importantly, he's not going to be doing this alone, either. He's bringing two colleagues with him: Micah Gelman, the Post's former head of video (Jorgenson's former boss), and Lauren Saks, his deputy. Both were instrumental in building the Post's digital video presence and are now co-founders at LNI Media, where they'll work on brand partnerships and overall strategy while Jorgenson focuses on content. It goes without saying: This is the latest blow to the Post, where CEO Will Lewis' vision and a sweeping round of buyouts has triggered high-profile departures — including not just Jorgenson, but also WP Ventures head Krissah Thompson. Jorgenson, in fact, described the paper's strategy as basically directionless in an interview with The New York Times, saying, 'I'm just not convinced they have the best road map right now.' That critique comes at a time when the Post is already facing significant challenges — including everything from subscription losses to leadership shakeups and internal friction over editorial priorities. As Pamela Alma Weymouth, granddaughter of the legendary former publisher Katharine Graham, recently wrote in The Nation, 'If The Washington Post goes dark under Bezos, then we lose more than a legend. We lose the very thing that makes America a democracy.' In many ways, Jorgenson has been the most visible avatar of the Post's ongoing modernization for the last several years. As I wrote for Forbes back in 2021, the paper celebrated hitting 1 million TikTok followers at that time, thanks largely to Jorgenson's output that included producing up to 10 TikToks a week combining hard news with absurdist humor. That pacge helped the paper build what, to some observers, felt like a surprising degree of cultural relevance on platforms otherwise dominated by things like influencers and dance trends. Now, he's taking that same ethos to Local News International, where he hopes the audience will follow. 'I'm really excited to work with brands that fit our ethos,' Jorgenson told me. 'Doing this with people I trust — Lauren and Micah — makes that part even more exciting. They can take the wheel there while I focus on the content.' Jorgenson's personal TikTok and YouTube followings are still relatively small – roughly 92,000 and 100,000, respectively – compared to The Washington Post's millions. But his bet is clear: That in a fractured media world, personality, tone, and trust matter more than legacy or even scale.

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