Grubhub CEO Suggests That Employees Who Agree With Trump's Rhetoric Should Resign

Via pinterest.com

The CEO of Grubhub, a publicly traded food delivery company that also includes Seamless and Menupages, sent a company-wide email on Wednesday inviting employees to resign if they agreed with the some of the demeaning and hateful rhetoric that marked Donald Trump&;s presidential campaign.

Matt Maloney, CEO and co-founder of the Chicago-based company, which has a $3.16 billion market capitalization and more than 1,000 employees, is a Hillary Clinton supporter. In the email, Maloney noted his shock and concern for the safety of his employees during Trump&039;s presidency.

“Further I absolutely reject the nationalist, anti-immigrant and hateful politics of Donald Trump and will work to shield our community from this movement as best as I can. As we all try to understand what this vote means to us, I want to affirm to anyone on our team that is scared or feels personally exposed, that I are everyone else here at Grubhub will fight for your dignity and your right to make a better life for yourself and your family here in the United States.

If you do not agree with this statement then please reply to this email with your resignation because you have no place here. We do not tolerate hateful attitudes on our team.”

Earlier in the email, Maloney wrote that Trump would have been fired for some of his comments on the campaign trail if he had been a Grubhub employee. “While demeaning, insulting and ridiculing minorities, immigrants and the physically/mentally disabled worked for Mr. Trump, I want to be clear that this behavior — and these views, have no place at Grubhub. Had he worked here, many of his comments would have resulted in his immediate termination,” Maloney wrote.

The subject of the email, which was obtained by Fox News, was: “So…that happened…what’s next?” Maloney previously told Fox News that “almost 20 percent” of his employees personally thanked him for the message. “I am not embarrassed by it,” he said.

Via Grubhub

In response to questions from BuzzFeed News about the legality of the email and whether Maloney was concerned about alienating employees who may be among the 59.9 million voters who cast their ballot for the Republican nominee, a spokesperson for Grubhub pointed to a recent blog post from Maloney explaining his intentions.

“I want to clarify that I did not ask for anyone to resign if they voted for Trump,” he said in the blog post, pasted in full below. “I would never make such a demand. To the contrary, the message of the email is that we do not tolerate discriminatory activity or hateful commentary in the workplace, and that we will stand up for our employees.”

Inclusion and Tolerance in the Workplace

This year’s presidential election was undoubtedly divisive and left many of our employees feeling concerned. In response, I wrote a company-wide email that was intended to advocate for inclusion and tolerance — regardless of political affiliation — during this time of transition for our country.

Some of the statements in my email have been misconstrued. I want to clarify that I did not ask for anyone to resign if they voted for Trump. I would never make such a demand. To the contrary, the message of the email is that we do not tolerate discriminatory activity or hateful commentary in the workplace, and that we will stand up for our employees.

Grubhub welcomes and accepts employees with all political beliefs, no matter who they voted for in this or any election. We do not discriminate on the basis of someone&039;s principles, or political or other beliefs.

I deeply respect the right of all citizens to vote for the candidate of their choice. In fact, I offered extra flexibility on Tuesday and encouraged all our employees to go vote. There is a place for all points of view at Grubhub. We value diverse perspectives and believe those perspectives help to create a better product and a better workplace culture.

Grubhub’s leadership team has worked for years to create a culture of support and inclusiveness. I firmly believe that we must bring together different perspectives to continue innovating. We are better, faster and stronger together, and so is America.

Posted by Matt Maloney, Grubhub CEO

Quelle: <a href="Grubhub CEO Suggests That Employees Who Agree With Trump&039;s Rhetoric Should Resign“>BuzzFeed

The AT&T Merger Will Be A Big Test Of Trump’s Promises

Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images

Donald Trump was clear when he promised to block the proposed AT&T-Time Warner merger last month, describing the purchase as “a deal we will not approve in my administration because it&;s too much concentration of power in the hands of too few.” But without knowing who President-elect Trump will choose to lead the Justice Department and the agency’s antitrust division, it’s unclear if the campaign pledge will serve as a negotiating tactic or the deal’s death knell.

This spring, former Trump Campaign Chair Paul Manafort explained that Trump’s proposal to ban Muslims from entering the country was a negotiation tool rather than an earnest plan. “He operates by starting the conversation at the outer edges and then brings it back towards the middle,” Manafort said in May. “Within his comfort zone, he’ll soften it some more.” Some of Trump’s supporters have absorbed that logic too, expecting from the next President not so much a literal wall between the United States and Mexico as the spirit of tougher immigration enforcement.

And so with the AT&T merger, President Trump’s words on the campaign trail will be tested against his deeds in the White House. BTIG analyst Rich Greenfield told BuzzFeed News that it’s an open question whether Trump’s stance on the deal was a politician’s posturing or a hard and fast policy position. “Is he a traditional Republican — laissez-faire — or is he a populist?” Greenfield said. “Politicians often say things on the campaign trail that never pan out in reality. I don’t think we have any way of knowing.”

“Politicians often say things on the campaign trail that never pan out in reality. I don’t think we have any way of knowing.”

As part of the proposed deal, AT&T must pay Time Warner $500 million if regulators halt the marriage. Analysts will closely watch for who Trump will appoint to lead the Department of Justice and the Federal Communications Commissions, which is the government’s chief telecom regulator.

One source who has worked on previous media mergers pointed to Trump’s professed pragmatism to predict how he might evaluate the acquisition; he is all about the “the Art of the Deal,” the person said, referring to Trump’s 1987 best selling book. Rather than take Trump’s unequivocal rejection of the merger as a sign of things to come, the source noted that his aggressive stance could force AT&T to cut a better deal for American consumers.

But critics of mega-mergers like Sen. Elizabeth Warren have criticized the government’s approval of such deals, even when companies agree to special conditions in order to minimize harm to customers. Advocates and lawmakers say firms can violate these conditions, which are generally difficult to enforce.

Todd O’Boyle, director of the Media and Democracy Project at Common Cause, told BuzzFeed News that even if you take Trump’s comments at face value, the Justice Department would still have to build its own legal case to challenge the AT&T merger. “On the one hand, Mr. Trump was very critical of the merger when it was announced; on the other hand, regulators will still have to go through a process and come to a conclusion,” he said.

Other observers have suggested that Trump’s opposition to the AT&T deal has more to do with a vendetta against the news media (Time Warner owns CNN) than with a reinvigorated approach to antitrust enforcement. In his opposition to network neutrality, and his clashes with some of the tech industry’s biggest players like Amazon’s Jeff Bezos and Apple’s Tim Cook, analysts have suggested that the Trump presidency could swing in favor of incumbent telecom giants over the tech titans of Silicon Valley, a group seen as largely untouched under Obama’s watch.

While the Clinton campaign joined Congressional Republicans in saying AT&T’s proposed merger deserves a close look, the Democratic nominee did not vow to block it, as Trump did.

AT&T tried to make the best out of Trump’s unexpected victory. The company referred BuzzFeed News to a statement from its CFO John Stephens. “From a company perspective, we really look forward to working with President-elect Trump and his transition team,” he said.

Quelle: <a href="The AT&T Merger Will Be A Big Test Of Trump’s Promises“>BuzzFeed

After Trump, Soul-Searching In Silicon Valley

Peter Thiel walks off stage at the Republican National Convention

Jim Watson / AFP / Getty Images

Venture capitalist Dave McClure was sitting before a crowd at a tech conference Wednesday morning trying to act as though Donald Trump hadn’t just been elected President of the United States.

But in the midst of a panel on whether ego is the biggest reason for failure, McClure, a founding partner at 500Startups, jumped out of his seat to talk about the election results. When the moderator asked McClure to tie it back to technology, he pivoted from anger to something closer to anguish, calling social networks built by Silicon Valley “a propaganda medium” that “assholes like Trump” use to get in office. “We provide communication platforms for the rest of the fucking country and we are allowing shit to happen just like the cable news networks, just like talk radio,” he said. By the time McClure asked the crowd to stand up and “make a goddamn difference,” they gave him a standing ovation.

“Sometimes I feel like we’re just a bunch of nerds who don’t know how to play the game,” McClure said later in an interview with BuzzFeed News, sounding quieter and more circumspect than he had on the conference stage.

That kind of self-flagellation doesn’t always go over so well with technocrats. But Trump’s victory has forced a moment of reckoning for Silicon Valley, where luminaries overwhelmingly supported Clinton. Two of the industry’s most successful products, Twitter and Facebook, were harnessed by a leader who has stood against their creators’ professed values of tolerance and inclusion. As the electoral votes began stacking up Tuesday night, Silicon Valley stalwarts publicly grappled with the disconnect between boom times in their own backyard and backlash from Trump’s voter base.

Former employees of Twitter and Facebook, in posts on those platforms, had candid — and even regretful — conversations about the role these technologies played in Trump’s victory. “What did we build?” a former Twitter engineer asked. “A machine that turns polarization into $,” another former Twitter engineer replied. A third Twitter alum tweeted, “At bare minimum, I regret not knowing about the extent of harassment problem during my time + not doing enough to stop it.”

In a post on Facebook, Bobby Goodlatte, a former product designer for Facebook who left the social network in 2012, sparked a similar discussion. He said Facebook’s news feed had fueled “highly partisan, fact-light media outlets” that “propelled Donald Trump into the lead.” As BuzzFeed News has reported, Facebook during the election cycle became a hotbed for highly partisan fake “news.”

Sam Altman, president of the parent company behind Y Combinator, also said that social media had contributed to the sense that there are two parallel countries “that each think the other side is completely crazy and wrong and dangerous. This is something that tech makes worse and not better” by allowing people to “segregate into a shared-view universe and read what they want to read.” Altman explained, “I bet many of those Trump voters view [the opposition] with the same repulsion.”

Before Tuesday, when the possibility of a Trump presidency seemed more like a thought experiment than an impending reality, Silicon Valley had already begun to acknowledge some self-doubt. The spectre of Trump’s popularity clouded the stage at Vanity Fair’s recent New Establishment summit, for example. “You have an energized base who feels their future is being robbed from them by technology, by innovation,” Aaron Levie, the CEO of the data storage company Box, told BuzzFeed News between panels a couple weeks ago. “I am starting to think the Valley has more responsibility to think about these issues.” On the sense of fear that surrounds automation, he added, “We certainly don&;t experience it in the Valley.”

But as Clinton’s concession became an inevitability, engineers and tech investors — usually a self-assured bunch — turned grave. Ben Matasar was the former Twitter engineer whose question hit a nerve among some of his former colleagues.

In response to questions from BuzzFeed News, a Facebook spokesperson said: “While Facebook played a part in this election, it was just one of many ways people received their information – and was one of the many ways people connected with their leaders, engaged in the political process and shared their views.” A spokesperson for Twitter offered the following statement: “We believe that everyone on Twitter should feel safe expressing diverse political opinions, but behavior that harasses, intimidates, or uses fear to silence another person’s voice should have no place on our platform. Scapegoating social media for an election result ignores the vital roles that candidates, journalists, and voters play in the democratic process.”

The internet, of course, has long provided a safe haven for hate and harassment. Ellen Pao, the former interim CEO of Reddit, told BuzzFeed News that the creators behind social networking platforms sometimes segregate users as a way to manage conflict that arises from clashing world views. But that approach has bred dangerous echo chambers. “There are never any alternative ideas that are considered and so the opinions shared get stronger and stronger and more radical,” she explained.

Pao has been a champion for diversity in Silicon Valley ever since her high-profile gender harassment lawsuit against the venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins. Before she resigned from Reddit in July 2015, Pao fought a similarly uphill battle trying to foster positive interaction on the site, where she hoped to eventually host a presidential debate. Her idea was to set up debates between the most reasonable voices from groups with opposing world views, such as atheist and religious sub-Reddits. “The goal was to start to bridge these communities, so there was less of an ‘I hate you, let me start shit-posting and making your sub-reddit unable to function then you’re going to come after my sub-reddit’ dynamic.” The idea never got off the ground.

Karla Monterroso, vice president of programs for the nonprofit Code 2040, blamed online radicalization on the industry that builds the platforms, not its users. It’s “a direct result of a lack of diversity in the creation of those spaces. If you do not have people who have levers of power within your company that would be impacted by spaces in which people are getting radicalized, then you&039;re not going to get that kind of feedback,” she told BuzzFeed News. Code2040 is dedicated to fostering opportunities for Black and Latino engineers in tech and has received donations from corporations like Google, whose workforce this year was only 2 percent black, 3 percent hispanic and 31 percent female.

Monterroso described the state of political discourse online as both a symptom and consequence of the industry’s homogeneity. “It reinforces to me why it&039;s so important that these companies be places where inclusion lives — because they&039;re creating the rules by which people engage in the 21st century.”

This narrative of soul-searching and doubt was not what many tech titans expected to wake up to — especially considering that 2016 was the year the industry broke with tradition to publicly flex its political muscles.

Hours before last night’s election results started pouring in, Altman told BuzzFeed News that he would be wracked with regret, “if there was anything I could have done and didn’t and then Trump won tomorrow morning.” Altman, in addition to railing against Trump in blog posts and on Twitter, co-founded a nonprofit called VotePlz to help young people figure out the voting process.

In some cases, tech’s sense of culpability was short-lived, quickly replaced by defensiveness as introspection became less contrarian and more commonplace. “I don’t think [Twitter or Facebook are] to blame at all,” Keith Rabois, an investor at Khosla Ventures, told Bloomberg TV on Wednesday. “What technology does and has done for 30 years is remove the role of gatekeepers and intermediaries.”

Even McClure, the venture capitalist who spoke out at the tech conference Wednesday, shrugged off the idea that Silicon Valley was feeling guilty, per se, despite bearing some responsibility. “I don’t think I sat idly by,” he said, noting that he raised $80,000 for his group Nerdz 4 Hillary, which pledged to “defeat Emperor Palpatine (Donald Trump).” Altman told BuzzFeed News that he raised “single digit millions” from about six or seven donors for VotePlz.

McClure, for his part, is an industry stalwart. Before launching 500Startups, a globe-trotting early-stage investment firm that has backed more than 1,500 companies, including Twilio and MakerBot, he worked for Founders Fund, the rarified Silicon Valley venture capital firm started by Peter Thiel, where he invested in Lyft and Twilio.

“We’ve been building a set of tools for humans to play around with and use and those tools are pretty widely adopted,” said McClure, but despite the fact that some platforms have more users than most countries, businesses are not held the same scrutiny as politicians. “So maybe there does need to be a little more accountability. How are the tools being used for the good of humanity, not just how they’re being used to make a buck?”

Caroline O&039;Donovan contributed reporting to this post.

Quelle: <a href="After Trump, Soul-Searching In Silicon Valley“>BuzzFeed

Azure big data services host Ask Me Anything session

The big data teams on Azure will host a special Ask Me Anything session on /r/Azure, Thursday, November 17, 2016 from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm PST.

What&;s an AMA session?

We&039;ll have folks from the Azure big data engineering teams available to answer any questions you have. You can ask us anything about our products, services or even our teams!

Why are you doing an AMA?

We like reaching out and learning from our customers and the community. We want to know how you use big data in the Azure cloud and how your experience has been on Azure Data Lake, HDInsight, Data Factory and Stream Analytics services. Your questions provide insights into how we can make the service better. If this AMA session turns out to be useful, we may start doing this on a regular schedule.

Who will be there?

You, of course! We&039;ll also have PMs and Developers from the Azure Data Lake, HDInsight, R Server, Data Factory and Stream Analytics teams participating throughout the day.

Have any questions about the following topics? Bring them to the AMA.

Azure Data Lake Analytics, U-SQL
Azure Data Lake Store
Azure HDInsight
Microsoft R Server on HDInsight or standalone
Azure Data Factory
Azure Stream Analytics
Spark, Hadoop, HBase, Storm, Interactive Hive (LLAP), Jupyter, Zeppelin, Livy on HDInsight

Why should I ask questions here instead of StackOverflow, MSDN or Twitter? Can I really ask anything?

An AMA is a great place to ask us anything. StackOverflow and MSDN have restrictions on which questions can be asked while Twitter only allows 140 characters. With an AMA, you’ll get answers directly from the team and have a conversation with the people who build these products and services.

Here are some question ideas:

What is HDInsight?
What is the difference between Data Lake Analytics and Store?
What is the meaning of U in U-SQL?
How can I build my R regression model on 2 TB dataset?
What are the pros/cons of using Spark R vs R Server?
What is the easiest way to find driver logs of my Spark app?
What are the “gotchas” of geo-replication in HDInsight HBase?

Go ahead, ask us anything about our public products or the team. Please note, we cannot comment on unreleased features and future plans.

Join us! We&039;re looking forward to having a conversation with you!
Quelle: Azure

Read Tim Cook's Email To Apple Employees After Donald Trump's Election

Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

Apple CEO Tim Cook broadcast an all-hands memo to U.S. Apple employees Wednesday evening calling for unity amid the uncertainty inspired by Donald Trump&;s upset presidential win.

In the memo, obtained by BuzzFeed News, Cook — in a nod to one of the most divisive presidential races in American history — tells Apple employees that “the only way to move forward is to move forward together.” And he reasserts Apple&039;s commitment to social progress and equality.

Cook does not mention Trump — who has publicly threatened Apple over the course of the past year — by name. Nor does he write that Trump&039;s behavior during his presidential campaign was antithetical to Apple&039;s position on diversity and equality. Instead, he simply says: “Our company is open to all, and we celebrate the diversity of our team here in the United States and around the world — regardless of what they look like, where they come from, how they worship or who they love.”

You can read Tim Cook&039;s full memo below.

Team,

I’ve heard from many of you today about the presidential election. In a political contest where the candidates were so different and each received a similar number of popular votes, it’s inevitable that the aftermath leaves many of you with strong feelings.

We have a very diverse team of employees, including supporters of each of the candidates. Regardless of which candidate each of us supported as individuals, the only way to move forward is to move forward together. I recall something Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said 50 years ago: “If you can’t fly, then run. If you can’t run, then walk. If you can’t walk, then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.” This advice is timeless, and a reminder that we only do great work and improve the world by moving forward.

While there is discussion today about uncertainties ahead, you can be confident that Apple’s North Star hasn’t changed. Our products connect people everywhere, and they provide the tools for our customers to do great things to improve their lives and the world at large. Our company is open to all, and we celebrate the diversity of our team here in the United States and around the world — regardless of what they look like, where they come from, how they worship or who they love.

I’ve always looked at Apple as one big family and I encourage you to reach out to your co-workers if they are feeling anxious.

Let’s move forward — together&;

Best,

Tim

Quelle: <a href="Read Tim Cook&039;s Email To Apple Employees After Donald Trump&039;s Election“>BuzzFeed

Instagram Keeps Forcing People To Relive Election Day

Instagram: @dacyyee

For some Instagram users, scrolling through their feeds after the election results felt a bit like time travel.

When some people opened the app last night and this morning, they saw optimistic posts about casting historic votes for Hillary Clinton with their daughters by their sides at the top of their feeds — at the same time as or even after the election was being called in favor of Donald Trump.

Instagram introduced a new algorithm in March to organize feeds according to what people might be most interested in looking at, rather than chronological order.

The scenario shows how Instagram&;s algorithm left it behind on the news on a day when people were glued to social media as election results poured in. It also reflects how social media has increasingly become a partisan echo chamber that affirms it users&039; beliefs while shielding them from opposing viewpoints.

Quelle: <a href="Instagram Keeps Forcing People To Relive Election Day“>BuzzFeed

Twitter COO Adam Bain Is Leaving The Company

Twitter COO Adam Bain announced his departure today, dealing a major blow to a company whose business is already weathering serious turbulence.

Bain, a six year Twitter veteran, said in a tweet, “I let Jack know that I am ready to change gears and do something new outside the company,” adding: “I have nothing but love for this unbelievable company & product.”

Twitter last week laid off around 350 people — about 9% of its workforce — following an unsuccessful attempt to sell itself to a list of suitors that includes the likes of Disney and Salesforce. Bain&;s organization, which includes sales and marketing, suffered the worst of it.

Despite Twitter&039;s trouble growing its user base, Bain built a sales organization that now brings in over $2 billion a year in the face of intense competition. Once considered a top candidate for the CEO job, Bain is so admired at Twitter that employees rallied around him in 2015 using the hashtag .

Anthony Noto, Twitter&039;s chief financial officer, was appointed COO. He will serve in both positions until the company finds a new CFO.

Developing …

Quelle: <a href="Twitter COO Adam Bain Is Leaving The Company“>BuzzFeed

Alt-Right Internet Trolls Are Already Emboldened By Trump's Victory

Paul J. Richards / AFP / Getty Images

Despite relatively small numbers, by most estimates, the alt-right, a group of almost entirely anonymous posters without a leadership structure, emerged as a potent online force over the past year. As the presidential campaign wore on and minorities, journalists, and Clinton supporters were subjected to an unending campaign of insults, harassment, false information, and horrifying images — it was hard to know how much worse it could get.

Well, if the first few hours of Donald Trump as president-elect are any indication, the answer is: A lot.

The coalition of trolls and white supremacists that turned many of the internet’s social spaces into toxic cisterns of abuse is showing signs it was emboldened by last night’s historic results. Already, evidence is everywhere that they are now in the process of making the internet an even nastier and crueler place.

Just have a look around:

  • On the Daily Stormer, the neo-Nazi website that is one of the many substations of the movement, editor Andrew Anglin compiled a list of tweets expressing fear about Trump&;s presidency, including some by rape survivors and minorities. The dek: “You can definitely troll these people into suicide.” (Another post on Daily Stormer: “Dear Liberals: This is the Era of Revenge.)
  • On 8chan/pol, one of the kaleidoscopically hateful image boards where the alt-right focus-tests its memes, a poster wrote, “Any Hill-shills you know IRL you should encourage to kill themselves. Everyone and anyone supporting Hillary who crosses your path, and who is in an emotionally fragile state…We need to make mass suicide a thing. We won the battle, now it is time to chase down our enemies and hack them apart. Make it trend, you fucking cuckholds&; .”
  • On the Twitter timeline of the mainstream liberal commentator Peter Beinart, hardly a Twitter warrior, where he has been retweeting responses to his anodyne observations about Trump&039;s low support among Jews. Among them: “Jews are always jews first, in whatever host Nation they are parasitising,” and “you don&039;t have a home nobody wants you. In the ovens u go.”
  • On the jubilant subreddit r/the_donald, a trending post crowed, contra rueful liberals, “WE WOULD HAVE CRUSHED BERNIE TOO, YOU CRYBABY CUCKS&033;
  • On Twitter, the popular and frequently banned alt-right account Ricky Vaughn appeared to hold something of a coming out party, instructing “mainstream media faggots” to DM him for interviews.
  • Also on Twitter, Mike Cernovich — possibly the closest thing the alt-right has to a breakthrough figure — threatened to “do journalism on journalists” and continued to excoriate Ben Shapiro, the former Breitbart editor who the Anti-Defamation League found to be the single most harassed Jewish journalist in the world. “Millions of people want to stay involved. This is a movement. I am not going anywhere, am in discussions on creating something permanent,” he wrote.

Etc, etc, ad nauseam.

In its exuberant escalation of offense-giving, the alt-right seems to feel that its outrageous behavior has been rewarded with a mandate thanks to Trump&039;s victory. The alt-right, which values offensive speech — about race, immigration, religion and gender — as a virtuous assault against polite neoliberal consensus, found an avatar in the president-elect, who ran a successful campaign against the movement&039;s boogeyman, political correctness. Even though the alt-right may not have done all that much to help Trump become the most powerful man in the free world in terms of number of voters it turned out, his victory will — has already — validated its worldview and poured fresh fuel onto its fire.

Given the renewed energy, it&039;s hard to imagine how the situation will do anything but further devolve. Twitter, where the vast majority of nastiness takes place, has shown itself to be as incompetent at managing abuse as it is competent at spreading hate. In a Twitter thread last night, former employees bemoaned creatingTrump&039;s campaign vehicle“; “a machine that turns polarization into $“; and “a gigantic shouting machine. the best there ever was.” And the incubators of this nastiness, places like 4chan and 8chan and smaller forums like therightstuff.biz (which is hosting a live call-in broadcast called the “Daily Shoah” tonight to celebrate “liberal tears”) will simply always exist in some form or another.

And it can probably get worse. Reports leading up to the election found that a relatively small, hyperactive group of alt-right accounts were responsible for most of the abuse attributed to the group. But the most mainstream website to nurture the alt-right, Breitbart.com, gave Donald Trump his campaign&039;s chief executive. And that campaign convinced nearly 60,000,000 Americans to vote for Trump. The trolls have been fed, and fed well. Now they&039;re coming back for more.

Quelle: <a href="Alt-Right Internet Trolls Are Already Emboldened By Trump&039;s Victory“>BuzzFeed