Kushner's Brother Goes From The Women’s March To The White House

Twitter /Benjamin Freed, Instagram / Joshua Kushner, / Via Twitter: @brfreed

Joshua Kushner — younger brother of senior White House advisor Jared Kushner, brother-in-law of Ivanka Trump, and founder of a $2.7 billion healthcare startup whose business is linked to the Affordable Care Act — vigilantly avoided the spotlight during the presidential election. But this weekend, he unexpectedly popped into public view.

On Saturday, Kushner was photographed amid Women&039;s March protesters in Washington, D.C. and on Sunday he made a rare, if enigmatic, nod to the Trump administration by posting to Instagram of a picture of himself and his brother standing below a photograph of John F. Kennedy at the White House.

A source close to Kushner told BuzzFeed News: “Josh was at the White House with his family today to watch his brother being sworn in. Yesterday, he took a quick walk near his hotel, and someone took a picture of him.” However, according to The Washingtonian, Kushner, a lifelong Democrat who has donated to Democratic candidates, told fellow attendees at the Women&;s March that he was there “observing.” The photograph shows Kushner in a crowd of demonstrators wearing pink pussy hats in protest of President Donald Trump.

Josh Kushner&039; political position is particularly relevant because his healthcare startup, Oscar Health, was built around the Affordable Care Act that President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to repeal. On the eve of the inauguration, Oscar tried to reassure members with a blog post promising to “be in touch” if any legislative changes impact their coverage. Both Jared and Josh were listed as “ultimate controlling persons” in Oscar&039;s holding company in filings from 2013, but later filings show that Jared Kushner was removed as a controlling person in 2014. Oscar has another tie to the Trump administration: billionaire Peter Thiel, now a highly influential member of Trump&039;s transition team, is an investor in Oscar.

As a startup investor and founder, Kushner&039;s ties to Trump put him in an difficult position within the tech industry, which was often vocal in its opposition of Trump&039;s presidential campaign. In the comments of Kushner&039;s Instagram post, Refinery29 founder Philippe von Borries wrote: “Looking to you to advocate and influence the progressive values you stand for. It&039;s great to see that you were at the March and I hope you will be a force for equality.”

Quelle: <a href="Kushner&039;s Brother Goes From The Women’s March To The White House“>BuzzFeed

Twitter CEO Explains Bungled @Potus Transition

People had complained that Twitter forced them to follow Donald Trump&;s @POTUS account.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey took to the platform he created Saturday morning to explain the glitches with the transition from former President Barack Obama to President Donald Trump on the official @POTUS account.

In a series of tweets, Dorsey said the transition was scheduled to begin at noon ET on Friday. Users who followed the POTUS account before noon were to be set to follow both POTUS and POTUS44. But that didn&;t quite happen. Some users who followed POTUS44 were mistakenly set to also follow POTUS. Meanwhile, some people who had explicitly unfollowed POTUS prior to the transition from Obama to Trump were incorrectly made followers again.

Dorsey said the issue affected about 560,000 people, and he formally apologized for it. This was a mistake, it wasn&039;t right, we own it, and we apologize,” he said. “No excuses.


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Quelle: <a href="Twitter CEO Explains Bungled @Potus Transition“>BuzzFeed

People Are Saying That Twitter Forced Them To Follow Trump's @POTUS Account

As soon as President Donald Trump was sworn in as the 45th President, he got a new Twitter handle: @POTUS. Meanwhile, Barack Obama&;s presidential tweets and followers followed him over to @POTUS44.

It was a highly choreographed social media transition. The idea was that the people who had been following @Potus would now find themselves following both it, and the new @Potus44 account.

But later in the day, Twitter users started complaining that for some reason, they had found themselves following @POTUS and seeing President Trump&039;s tweets in their feeds — even if they said they&039;d unfollowed the account purposefully before the hand off, or had never followed it at all.

It wasn&039;t immediately clear why people were seeing Trump&039;s tweets — but many of them weren&039;t happy about it.

The apparent glitch also seemed to extend to the Vice President&039;s and First Lady&039;s Twitter accounts.

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was telling users that the company was looking into the issue and that feeds would eventually catch up.

Twitter&039;s support team also said they were trying to get to the bottom of the issue.

BuzzFeed News has reached out to Twitter for comment.

Quelle: <a href="People Are Saying That Twitter Forced Them To Follow Trump&039;s @POTUS Account“>BuzzFeed

Trump Begins Tweeting From @POTUS After Obama Hands It Over

President Donald Trump didn&;t waste any time putting the @POTUS Twitter account into action. Trump gained access to the account after taking the oath of office Friday, and used it shortly afterward to tweet a link to the text of his inaugural address.

The @POTUS account, along with a number of other social media accounts created under the Obama administration, were peacefully transferred to the Trump administration in the first such social handover of its kind. To carry out the transition, Twitter added a “44” to the end of the Obama administration&039;s accounts, and spawned new @POTUS, @FLOTUS, @VP, @WhiteHouse and @PressSec accounts, duplicating their followers.

Twitter says the Trump administration&039;s accounts will retain all the Obama administration&039;s accounts followers. But the migration process takes some time. As of this writing, the new @POTUS account has around 7 million followers, while @POTUS44 has 14 million.

A prolific tweeter, Trump hasn&039;t discarded his @realDonaldTrump account. He&039;s tweeted 10 times from it as president. Meanwhile, he posted just single tweet from @POTUS. Prior to taking office, Trump regularly tweeted criticism of the media, political opponents and public figures who took stands against him. Whether he continues this pattern will be a main point of intrigue in the early days of his administration that promises to contain plenty.

As for Barack Obama? He&039;s back on Twitter using his old @BarackObama handle with its 80 million followers.

The transition of presidential Twitter accounts was not an entirely seamless one. Early in the day the background photo featured on Trump&039;s @POTUS account was a Getty shot of Barack Obama&039;s 2009 inauguration. It was not a vestige of the Obama-era account, and was replaced later in the day.

And, for a short time, Vice President Mike Pence&039;s tweets from @VP were protected.

All the issues now appear to have been resolved, and the peaceful transition of social media power is complete.

Quelle: <a href="Trump Begins Tweeting From @POTUS After Obama Hands It Over“>BuzzFeed

The New White House Website Says Almost Nothing About Tech

Prior to today&;s presidential inauguration, the official website of the president, Whitehouse.gov, was reset to reflect the new occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.: Donald Trump. And while the largely barebones new site features language related to the new administration&039;s energy, defense, trade, and job growth policies, it features scant information related to technology, a sector that directly affects all four.

There are only two direct mentions of issues germane to the internet or technology: One, in the “Making Our Military Strong Again” subsection, is some boilerplate about the importance of cyberwarfare:

Cyberwarfare is an emerging battlefield, and we must take every measure to safeguard our national security secrets and systems. We will make it a priority to develop defensive and offensive cyber capabilities at our U.S. Cyber Command, and recruit the best and brightest Americans to serve in this crucial area.

The second comes at the end of the biography page of first lady Melania Trump, and concerns her campaign against cyberbullying:

Mrs. Trump cares deeply about issues impacting women and children, and she has focused her platform as First Lady on the problem of cyber bullying among our youth.

That cyberwarfare and cyberbullying are the only two mentions of the internet or technology on the White House page is somewhat ironic, given revelations about Russian interference in the presidential election, and the scores of pro-Trump trolls that plagued social media during the campaign.

There is no mention of automation —acknowledged by economists as a major threat to American jobs — or specific policies important to Silicon Valley, including the status of visas for high-tech workers, and a proposed one-time tax holiday on repatriation of foreign income to encourage big tech firms to bring money back into the US.

Quelle: <a href="The New White House Website Says Almost Nothing About Tech“>BuzzFeed

People Are Protesting Outside Uber HQ Because Travis Kalanick Met With Trump

Travis Kalanick, Uber&;s chief executive

Money Sharma / AFP / Getty Images

People are blocking off the entrance to Uber’s headquarters in San Francisco on the morning of Donald Trump’s inauguration in protest of the company’s collaboration with incoming president. Travis Kalanick, Uber’s chief executive, joined Trump’s roster of advisers on business and tech last month.

When Kalanick was named as one of Trump&039;s advisers, he told BuzzFeed News in a statement that “I look forward to engaging with our incoming president and this group on issues that affect our riders, drivers and the 450+ cities where we operate.”

“As a company we&039;re committed to working with government on issues that affect riders, drivers and the cities where we operate. Just as we worked with the Obama Administration, we&039;ll work with the Trump Administration, too,” Uber said in a statement.

Other companies have faced similar protests leading up to Trump&039;s inauguration. About 60 people protested outside Palantir Technologies, whose board member Peter Thiel is a top adviser to Trump, on Thursday to pressure the company to be more transparent about how it would use its databases to potentially help the Trump administration. Many tech companies, including Uber, have said they would not aid in building a “Muslim registry” – something Trump has signaled support for during his campaign.

Uber confirmed that it told staff to work from home or other offices until the entrance to HQ is no longer blocked by protesters.

Quelle: <a href="People Are Protesting Outside Uber HQ Because Travis Kalanick Met With Trump“>BuzzFeed

Mark Zuckerberg Sues To Force Hawaii Families To Sell Land Passed Down For Generations

Chad / Via Flickr: supercooper; Manu Fernandez / AP

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has filed lawsuits against hundreds of Hawaii families who retain rights to small parcels of land within the vast estate he purchased on Kauai for close to $100 million.

Zuckerberg bought 700-acres on the island of Kauai in 2014, after purchasing several multi-million dollar condos on Oahu the year before. Within the large property on Kauai are more than a dozen small parcels of land that were partitioned during the 1850s and have been passed down for generations by local families.

In order to enhance his privacy, Zuckerberg has brought lawsuits aimed at finding and forcing these descendants to sell their land at a court auction to the highest bidder. (Zuckerberg has already worked on making his corner of paradise secluded by building a 6-foot-wall around it, which drew ire from many of his neighbors.)

Facebook / Via Facebook: zuck

Before land in Hawaii was divided in 1845, Hawaiians did not have private land ownership. Between 1850 and 1855, common people in Hawaii were granted land titles for places that they already had been living or working on for generations. Many, however, did not make claims for the land as the rules were complicated and they had no context to understand why it was important to have a title to land.

For the small fraction that did successfully claim land, it amounted to less than 1% of all of Hawaii. Now, individual descendants of those who did claim land might only be entitled to a very small fraction or may not even be aware of their rights to the land.

Zuckerberg said in a Facebook post Thursday that stories written about his property in Hawaii have been “misleading,” and that he hopes to make sure “smaller partial owners get paid their fair share too.” By filing a quiet title action, Zuckerberg does aim to find all land owners, but once they have been notified of their claims, a judge will likely order the land to be sold at public auction.

Since Zuckerberg is one of the world&039;s richest people, it&;s clear he will be able to outbid anyone in Hawaii who tries to contest his actions.

Facebook / Via Facebook: zuck

“For most of these folks, they will now receive money for something they never even knew they had. No one will be forced off the land,” Zuckerberg said.

Keoni Shultz, a partner at the Honolulu law firm Cades Schutte representing Zuckerberg companies in the litigation, said this is a common procedure.

“Quiet title actions are the standard and prescribed process to identify all potential co-owners, determine ownership, and ensure that, if there are other co-owners, each receives appropriate value for their ownership share,” Shultz said in a statement to BuzzFeed News.

BuzzFeed News reached out to Facebook and Shultz for more information but representatives were not willing to talk on the record about the matter.

The actions that Zuckerberg is taking to acquire the land is not uncommon in Hawaii, still for many people it serves as another example of ways that Native Hawaiians continue to be moved out of Hawaii by those with more money.

A Native Hawaiian Law primer published with the assistance of the University of Hawaii has stated the use of quiet title laws to force land sales has reduced Native Hawaiian landownership.

“The amount of land held by Native Hawaiians rapidly declined after Western contact. Quiet title and partition lawsuits, or actions, are other mechanisms by which Native Hawaiians continue to be divested of their interest in ancestral lands,” the primer said.

“Partition by sale in particular is highly problematic for the Native Hawaiian community because it severs a family’s connection to ancestral land,” it added.

Quelle: <a href="Mark Zuckerberg Sues To Force Hawaii Families To Sell Land Passed Down For Generations“>BuzzFeed

Immigrants In Tech Wonder If Trump Will Make Their Problems Worse

David J. Phillip / AP

Attending the same college that Google CEO Sundar Pichai went to was Nisha’s first step out of the poor neighborhood in India where she grew up. After graduating with a degree in computer science, she landed an internship at a tech company in California and, later, a job.

For Nisha — that’s not her real name, she asked to remain anonymous because the company she works for doesn’t allow employees to talk to journalists — that first job wasn’t just a gateway to a career in tech, but also to a visa, and the beginning of a permanent life in the United States. “Do I regret coming to the US?,” Nisha told BuzzFeed News. “Not at all.”

But now, like many high-skilled immigrants working in tech — especially those from India — Nisha finds herself in a situation far more tenuous than she anticipated when she moved to the U.S. six years ago. Immigrants in Nisha’s position, — she moved here at a time when President Barack Obama’s ambitious immigration agenda promised to resolve the bureaucratic speedbumps around high-skilled immigration — are now facing an incoming Trump administration that has threatened to crack down on legal immigration. Already in the midst of a decade-long wait for a green card, they’re wondering whether forthcoming policy decisions will make their lives in the United States more difficult — or impossible.

“I&;ve made peace the with the fact that I probably won&039;t get a green card in my lifetime,” Nisha said.

Currently, 65,000 visas for high-skilled workers — known as H-1Bs — are allotted each year. While engineers come from all over the world to work in the US tech industry, a particularly large number come from India. But a much smaller number of Indians are granted green cards, and this has caused a decades-long backlog in the system.

Since the election, Madhuri Nemali, an immigration attorney who specializes in small businesses hiring foreign workers, has been hoping to avoid telling her clients “it’s going to get worse than it already is.”

“I don’t want to have to do that,” she said. “But I’m thinking I&039;ll probably have to based on the rhetoric from last year.”

An engineer at Cisco who asked to remain anonymous has been waiting for a green card for five years. He’s optimistic that the recent gathering of tech CEOs at Trump Tower will mean more immigrant-friendly policies under the new administration. But even so, he plans to return to India within the next five years, where’s he’s confident that, given his resume, he’ll find a job with a US company. Many — including Google, Apple, Facebook, Intel and Cisco — have campuses In India now.

“I don’t see a possibility unless something drastic happens with regards to green card regulations,” he said. “It’s been an excruciating process.”

How Trump’s administration plans to handle immigration policy for high-skilled workers remains, on the eve of his inauguration, more or less a mystery. After declaring last year that he would “end forever” the use of high-skilled immigrant workers as cheap labor, Trump later hedged, acknowledging that we “need highly skilled people in this country.” His administration is actively considering reforms for the program, with Reuters reporting that meetings with tech CEOs have nudged the president elect further in favor of the program. The high-skilled immigration program does have a legitimate gray market fraud problem, which regulators have recently begun to crack down on. Meanwhile, Republican Congressman Darrell Issa has recently reintroduced legislation that would limit skilled immigration to the U.S..

One anonymous engineer who’s three years into his green card wait described how, for immigrants in Silicon Valley, everyday financial decisions around taxes, 401Ks, and stock options, are more complicated because of the precariousness of their positions. “Everything else all along was bad — but at least it was predictably bad,” he said.

Already, this engineer explained, things like becoming a startup founder are more or less off limits to him because of what investors perceive as unnecessary risk. Now, the possibility of further job insecurity and economic stability is exacerbating those frustrations. For example, immigrants who lose their jobs have thirty days to find a new one or leave the country, a predicament that would be much worse if the economy dips and major tech companies initiated hiring freezes, as they did during the 2008 recession. “If the economy goes south, the housing market will go down as well. In a month, you might have to do a fire-sale of your house because you might never be able to enter the US again to sell it,” he said.

Current visa holders are hoping new regulations won’t impact immigrants who are already here. But given the current climate, they’re not rushing to encourage friends and family back home to join them. Avinash Conda, an engineer and immigration reform advocate, said he recently cautioned a cousin planning to get his masters in the US against the idea, at least for now. “My suggestion for now is stay tight, at least for another year,” Conda said. “Let the president walk in, and see what happens — on April 1st, how many applications are filed — what are the new laws being passed, and we’ll have to take it from there.”

Others reported telling loved ones back home to consider getting an education in Canada, where tech companies have big offices and it’s easier to get residency. “The job opportunities aren’t as good as in the US, but are still pretty good,” said one anonymous tech worker.

Nisha, the engineer who went to the same college as Google’s CEO, shares the same concerns. If the worst should happen, she’s confident her employer could move her to an office somewhere in Europe, or Canada — or even back to India. But she’s also worried that moving away from headquarters in Silicon Valley, where “all the interesting stuff that attracts people” gets done. A move like that could delay her career goals — possibly forever.

“If I move back right now, it’s sort of a dead end for me,” she said. “But I grew up next to a slum in India. I’ve seen way more difficult times than anything that could possibly happen now.”

Quelle: <a href="Immigrants In Tech Wonder If Trump Will Make Their Problems Worse“>BuzzFeed

Trump-Linked Insurance Startup Tells Members That Obamacare Is OK For Now

Josh Kushner speaks onstage at the Wall Street Journal Magazine&;s “Innovator Of The Year” Awards 2013.

Dimitrios Kambouris / Getty Images

The election seemingly made life complicated for Oscar Health. The insurance startup’s business model is based on the Affordable Care Act that President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to repeal. Yet one of its founders is the brother of Trump adviser and son-in-law Jared Kushner, and Peter Thiel, another Trump adviser, is an investor.

Oscar hasn’t said much about the ACA since November. But on the eve of Trump’s inauguration, the New York startup published a blog post that sought to reassure members that their ACA coverage would remain intact for now. It also noted it’s seen a spike in members researching birth control — which many women fear may no longer be covered if Congressional Republicans succeed in repealing the health care law.

In the post, which was previewed by BuzzFeed News and published on Oscar’s website Thursday evening, Dr. Harry Ritter, vice president of care delivery, wrote that searches for birth control on the site’s internal search engine for care options, known as the Care Router, were “up 300%.” This figure refers to the number of search queries over the first two weeks of January versus the last two weeks of December, a spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.

Ritter noted that Oscar covers a variety of FDA-approved birth control methods, from diaphragms to pills and IUDs, and urged members to consult their doctor. “If you need help finding one in Oscar’s network, do a search and filter based on your preferences,” he wrote, adding, “Or just call your Oscar concierge, and we’ll help you find someone great.”

Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of President-elect Donald Trump, with his wife Ivanka on November 18, 2016.

Spencer Platt / Getty Images

Ritter also wrote, “Our plans cover birth control benefits in compliance with the Affordable Care Act. To date, there have been no changes that impact your 2017 coverage. If any legal changes impact you, we will be in touch to make sure you have all the facts and understand your options.”

Prior to Thursday, Oscar’s last blog post was Nov. 17, in which its co-founders both lamented the health care law’s flaws and praised the law for allowing the business to get started.

The increased interest in birth control isn’t surprising. Since the election, other online startups that prescribe and ship birth control have seen a flurry of sign-ups as they fielded concerns from female customers.

Oscar Health

But Oscar — which serves people who became eligible for insurance under the ACA — isn’t your average health care network.

Joshua Kushner co-founded the startup in 2012; his brother, Jared, is Trump’s son-in-law and newly appointed White House senior adviser. Oscar, which was most recently valued at $2.7 billion, has backing from a venture capital firm led by Thiel — who is also a member of Trump’s transition team. Meanwhile, Congressional Republicans have actively been moving to repeal the ACA. And Tom Price, Trump’s health secretary pick, both supports the repeal and opposes the law’s requirement that insurers cover birth control at no cost to customers.

Publicly at least, Oscar executives don’t see any reason to be concerned. Chief policy and strategy officer Joel Klein told Backchannel this month that the Kushner coverage is an “amusing media story” and that “what happens on health care is going to happen.” Oscar executives have said that starting in the first quarter of 2017, they plan to start selling to &;small companies in addition to individuals.

Oscar serves 135,000 members across New York, Long Island, Los Angeles, the Bay Area, Orange County, San Antonio, and Dallas.

Quelle: <a href="Trump-Linked Insurance Startup Tells Members That Obamacare Is OK For Now“>BuzzFeed