News
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T-Mobile CEO John Legere in talks to take over top job at WeWork
According to management professor Tim Hubbard Legere could bring the leadership chops to WeWork that Neumann lacked in an article for MSN Money.
MSN Money -
How to budget with a spouse: An expert advises six couples—and you
Forbes cited Emily Garbinsky's research on the spending habits of couples with a joint account in an article about how to budget with a spouse.
Forbes -
Emerson may be latest to adopt shorter board terms as accountability measure
An article for the St. Louis Times-Dispatch referenced a study by Dean and finance professor Martijn J. Cremers and his co-researchers which found that staggered boards created value for firms “engaged in innovation and where stakeholder relationships matter more." Eighty-seven percent of large companies had gone to one-year board terms by 2017, and Emerson has joined the trend.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch -
Expert says ‘Twitter spies’ committed espionage but broke no federal privacy laws, because there are none
Two Twitter employees used their access at the social media giant to gather sensitive and nonpublic information on dissidents of the Saudi regime. According to IT, Analytics & Operations professor and director of the MSBA program Mike Chapple, the global nature of social media makes user data an attractive target for foreign intelligence agencies.
Shannon Roddel -
2 Ex-Twitter Employees Charged With Spying For Saudi Arabia
NPR interviewed ITAO's Mike Chapple, who says Twitter should have known that its employees were working for a foreign power.
NPR -
US: Saudis Recruited Twitter Workers to Spy on Critics
The New York Times published comments by ITAO professor and director of the MSBA program Mike Chapple in an article about the recent data breach at social media giant Twitter by employees.
New York Times -
Saudis recruited Twitter employees to spy on critics, prosecutors say
Professor of IT, analytics and operations and director of the MSBA program Mike Chapple commented on the unmasking of users by two Twitter employees on behalf of a foreign government in a USA Today article. According to Chapple Twitter failed to follow the basic IT security principle of granting employees the minimum level of access to perform their duties.
USA Today -
US: Saudis recruited Twitter workers to spy on critics
IT, Analytics and Organization professor and Academic Director of the MSBA program Mike Chapple commented in an MSN Money article about Twitter's response to the data breach by two Twitter employees. According to Chapple user data should be accessible by the smallest number of employees possible.
MSN Money -
US: Saudis recruited Twitter workers to spy on critics
AP News covered the recent discovery that Twitter employees exposed user data to a foreign government, which was completely avoidable according to comments by ITAO professor and director of the MSBA program Mike Chapple.
AP News -
Bond mutual funds may hold riskier holdings than reported, NBER study finds
Findings by a U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research team led by finance professor Huaizhi Chen reveals approximately 30% of fixed-income mutual funds contain ‘misclassified’ holdings. In a piece for Market Watch, Chen explains how and why the misreporting happened.
Market Watch