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Tesla To Remain Public, Elon Musk Says
Less than a month after suggesting he might take the electric car maker private, CEO Elon Musk says "most of Tesla's existing shareholders believe we are better off as a public company." -
U.S. And China Impose Fresh Tariffs As Trade War Escalates
The U.S. imposed 25 percent tariffs on $16 billion of Chinese goods overnight, and China matched them. The two have slapped tariffs on a total of $100 billion of each other's goods in two months. -
Details Of Uber Harassment Settlement Released
Dozens of women and minorities who said they were harassed while working as engineers at Uber filed a class-action lawsuit. Hundreds of people also sued for discrimination claims. -
8 Fast-Food Companies Agree To End 'No-Poach' Agreements Under Threat Of Lawsuit
Washington state's attorney general says Applebee's, Church's Chicken, Five Guys, IHOP, Jamba Juice, Little Caesars, Panera and Sonic will stop using agreements that limit workers from changing jobs. -
Cannabis Producer Gets $4 Billion Investment From Beer Company
The giant influx of cash from Constellation Brands is the largest strategic investment in the cannabis market to date. It nearly quadruples the alcohol company's stake in Canopy Growth to 38 percent. -
Post Office To Be Ousted For A CVS, Say Charlestown Mall Owners
Whether the post office will find another space in the Bunker Hill Mall or relocate to another property remains to be seen. -
IMHO: Voting By Smartphone
Jim Braude gives his thoughts on another way to increase voter turnout, especially among younger voters: smartphone voting. -
Shortage Of Truckers Could Hit Massachusetts Consumers
The national shortage of truck drivers could eventually hit Massachusetts especially hard because trucks deliver 93 percent of the goods consumed in the state. -
Tribune Media Spikes Merger Deal With Sinclair, And Sues Its Former Suitor
Tribune CEO Peter Kern said Thursday that the deal unraveled because Sinclair chose to follow a strategy that was only in its own self-interest. -
Jack Dorsey Explains Why Twitter Didn't Block Alex Jones, Bucking Big Tech Trend
YouTube, Apple and Facebook banned outlets for the conspiracy theorist this week in what Jones called a "purge." Twitter's CEO said the company wouldn't "succumb and simply react to outside pressure."