logo
Selena Gomez is one of Forbes' richest self-made women, Rihanna falls on list

Selena Gomez is one of Forbes' richest self-made women, Rihanna falls on list

USA Today2 days ago

Selena Gomez is one of Forbes' richest self-made women, Rihanna falls on list
Show Caption
Hide Caption
Taylor Swift's no longer the youngest self-made billionaire
Taylor Swift was once the youngest self-made woman billionaire at 35. The new record holder, according to Forbes, is Lucy Guo, 30, the co-founder of Scale AI.
unbranded - Entertainment
Forbes has released its annual list of the country's richest self-made women, with new and returning stars who made the cut.
The magazine's list, ranking the 100 wealthiest women in America, saw newcomer Selena Gomez make the list, largely due to her stake in cosmetics company Rare Beauty, which she launched in 2020 and is valued at $1.3 billion. Gomez's net worth is estimated at $700 million, and she is one of 16 celebrities to earn a place on the list. (In September, Bloomberg declared Gomez a billionaire, estimating her fortune at $1.3 billion.)
Other stars on the list include Kim Kardashian, her sister Kylie Jenner, Oprah Winfrey, Beyoncé, Reese Witherspoon and Rihanna. The Bajan billionaire took a 30% slide on the list this year, Forbes reports, due to flat sales at Fenty Beauty and her lingerie brand, Savage X Fenty.
This story is developing.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk's xAl is training voice models with zombie-apocalypse chats, plumbing fails, and life on Mars, leaked docs show
Elon Musk's xAl is training voice models with zombie-apocalypse chats, plumbing fails, and life on Mars, leaked docs show

Business Insider

time3 hours ago

  • Business Insider

Elon Musk's xAl is training voice models with zombie-apocalypse chats, plumbing fails, and life on Mars, leaked docs show

What would you take from your house if there were a zombie apocalypse? What type of person would you like to live on Mars with? These are some of the questions being used to train AI voice models for Elon Musk's xAI, alongside everyday topics about DIY plumbing and trip planning, documents obtained by Business Insider show. Freelancers for data-labeling company Scale AI are being paid to record conversations with other contractors about things like colonizing Mars — a goal of Musk's — and superheroes, in a bid to make xAI's voice models sound less like a robot and more like a real person. As of April, Scale AI was running at least 10 generative AI projects for xAI, according to an internal dashboard seen by BI. The dashboard lists over 100 AI training projects for xAI and other clients, including Apple, Google DeepMind, and Meta. Scale AI's work comes as companies across the industry are pushing to make their bots more conversational and human-like to help compete for users who might pay for their premium versions. Scale AI and xAI did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider. Inside 'Project Xylophone' Business Insider obtained four Scale AI documents — two sets of project instructions, a set of instructions for reviewers who check submissions, and a conversation topic guide — that outline how 'Project Xylophone' works for xAI. The documents do not state which xAI model is being trained. In late February, Musk announced the beta rollout of a voice mode for Grok, the company's only publicly known AI model. The Scale AI project dashboard shows contractors working on Project Xylophone are asked to record short conversations, focusing on 'audio quality and natural fluency.' They are especially encouraged to join if they have experience with voice acting. The dashboard says the project is aiming for 'engaging scripts, great voice acting, and high quality audio.' Scale's dashboard is not accessible to contractors, who may not know who the client is. For Project Xylophone, gig workers located around the world can pick from hundreds of conversation topics about ethics, philosophy, business, and travel, and record answers in a variety of languages for a few dollars per task. It splits the work between an invite-only project called 'Conversations,' which gig workers do in three-person teams, and 'Grasslands,' which they do solo. 'Conversations' teams are asked to set up realistic conversations with each other over Zoom. Contributors take turns asking questions from a prompt spreadsheet, which was active earlier this week. The sheet includes more than 700 conversation starters on a wide variety of topics, including postapocalyptic survival tactics, planning trips to India, and managing anxiety and panic attacks. 'If you were designing the 'culture' for the first Mars settlement, what Earth tradition would you definitely want to recreate, and what would you be excited to leave behind forever?' reads one prompt. BI found that about 10% of the conversation prompts in the document we reviewed are science fiction-related. Examples of suggested conversation starters from the Scale AI documents What's a 'villain' in your daily life that you wish a superhero team could swoop in and fix for everyone? If the zombie apocalypse hit tomorrow, what's the first thing you'd grab from your house before making a run for it? Imagine you're the mission psychologist for a Mars colony—what personality type or quirky trait would you secretly hope to find in your fellow colonists? What's the most memorable plumbing disaster you've experienced as a homeowner—and did you try to fix it yourself or immediately call for help? Do you remember the first time you had to ask for more money or better benefits? What was going through your head? Other questions are about the US political and judiciary systems, but the set does not include hot-button political issues. In the 'Conversation' arm, instructions for 'good' conversations are explicit: 'The recording must sound extremely natural, as if you were having a casual conversation with a friend. This includes being emotional, having varied intonations, and interrupting each other! Please avoid sounding like an interview.' In the 'Grasslands' arm, solo workers are asked to create unscripted, natural-sounding recordings in their native language. Each worker is given a conversation type and subcategory, and is told to let the conversation flow, in any setting they like, with background noise encouraged. There are dozens of subcategories, like 'Socratic questioning' and 'reflective storytelling,' 'courtly love scenarios,' 'hero-villain confrontations,' or 'collaborative puzzle-solving,' sometimes with different accents, sound effects, or invented linguistic patterns required. Fast and accurate Three Scale AI contractors, who asked not to be named because they signed nondisclosure agreements, said that projects are assigned to contractors based on their skill sets. Two of the contractors said that payment for the Grassland project, which was assigned to contractors based on their location and language expertise, started with $3 per task, and was cut to $1 per task roughly a month later. Contractors have five minutes to complete each task, and each task is one recording. Once contractors have recorded an audio file, they upload it to a Scale AI contributor platform and transcribe it manually, with the Grasslands document asking for filler words such as 'uh' to be left in. 'If someone has a slight pause, we should include a comma, even if grammatically that comma is incorrect,' one of the contractors told BI. Large language models require vast amounts of quality data to improve. Recreating real-world scenarios, such as natural-sounding conversations between people, is one way to generate suitable data to feed into those models. Training Grok Project Xylophone is an example of a larger push by AI companies to inject personality into their AIs and stand out in an increasingly crowded space. BI reported last month that Meta ran a project via Scale AI asking gig workers training its AI to adopt different personas, such as 'a wise and mystical wizard" or a "hyper-excited music theory student." OpenAI's Sam Altman said in late April that the latest GPT-4o had become 'too sycophant-y and annoying,' prompting a reset to make its replies more natural. xAI has marketed Grok as a politically edgier chatbot compared to what Musk has called 'woke' rivals, with training methods that sometimes lean heavily on right-wing or contrarian views, BI previously reported. Alongside xAI's outsourced work, the company has hundreds of in-house 'AI tutors' and plans to hire thousands more, BI reported in February, showing the huge human effort involved in training AI. xAI has also ramped up its efforts to control Grok's unpredictable side. New hires are 'red teaming' Grok, stress-testing it for unsafe or policy-violating replies, especially on controversial topics and in 'NSFW' or 'unhinged' modes, BI reported in April. The safety push follows high-profile incidents, including a feature in March that allowed users to prompt Grok to use racial slurs, and, most recently, unprompted responses about 'white genocide' in South Africa. xAI blamed the latter issue on an unauthorized prompt modification. The company promised stricter code review and around-the-clock monitoring.

Rihanna-Approved London Designer Supriya Lele on Her Collaboration With Mango
Rihanna-Approved London Designer Supriya Lele on Her Collaboration With Mango

Vogue

time14 hours ago

  • Vogue

Rihanna-Approved London Designer Supriya Lele on Her Collaboration With Mango

Worn by Rihanna, seen on the cover–and in the pages–of British Vogue (Yasmin Finney wore an azure minidress for the December 2022 issue), Supriya Lele's trajectory has reached far beyond her London studio. And after a hiatus from the London Fashion Week schedule, the British-Indian designer now has hit another milestone: a collaboration with Mango, launching 5 June. 'Hopefully this will be the beginning of a slow reintegration in whatever way feels right,' Lele tells Vogue of working with the Spanish retailer as the first partner of the Mango Collective, a platform 'dedicated to celebrating the creativity and innovation of niche designers.' The union will introduce a new customer to the Supriya universe and, in turn, project her namesake brand to a global audience–a worthy opportunity in this testing fashion landscape. Amounting pressure on Supriya and her London cohort has presented an array of impossibilities in recent years: 'It's so sad that we're in a position where everybody is having to skip out, step back,' she says of her London Fashion Week pause. It's no small feat to be an independent brand right now. 'I love making collections–that's why I love what I do,' she explains of returning to the process of building an idea into a full look. And the Mango collab followed the same tried-and-tested method she uses each season: starting with research and conjuring a direction, then fittings with a model and her stylist, Jane How. 'We have the same brain,' she says of How, who first loaned looks when Supriya was showing with the capital's renowned incubator, Fashion East. Amidst core archive silhouettes revived from previous seasons–including body-flossed waist cut-outs, swaddling silhouettes and sheer, conceal-reveal fabrications–Supriya was able to bring her longtime visions for shoes, bags and jewellery to life. She was in constant dialogue with Jane and her friends about what people would want to wear. 'I like every single piece. There's not a piece in there I don't like or that I wouldn't wear. I'd wear every single one,' she asserts. From London, they went to the Mango HQ in Barcelona, where they worked closely with the design team and created a commercial collection, while retaining Supriya's unique 'identity and aesthetic.' 'Everything that I've done has always been about the visual language and the way that it's presented–and that's so important to me,' she explains of the 'sensitivity' that the team had towards the finer details, such as swing tags and the size of the font inside the shoes. Despite the refined attention to detail, the overall journey was straightforward and decisions were made fast– something that Supriya credits to her adaptability as a brand founder. 'You're a manager, you're HR… I'm like, 'can I do my accounts on the bus?'' she laughs. 'Then there's a fancy dinner and I'm wondering… 'what am I going to wear?''. London-based designer, Supriya Lele. Courtesy of Mango Spain also provided the backdrop for the accompanying campaign. Supriya tapped Johnny Dufort (who just shot Billie Eilish for British Vogue's May 2025 cover) to capture the looks in both the studio and outdoors with a nighttime skyline in the background. (This is where the collection's title, 'A Summer Reverie' comes in.) 'It's so fresh and visually arresting,' she says.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store