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as soon as he was out the door, is reportedly looking for a new company to rule. Word on the street is that the company is TikTok. According to a new report from The Wall Street Journal, Kotick approached several investors about forming a consortium of partners to buy TikTok if ByteDance, its Chinese parent company, agrees to or is forced to sell. The former Activision Blizzard chief is said to have pitched the idea to a table of potential investors in recent days, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Kotick has suggested that OpenAI could use TikTok to train its AI models if a potential sale goes through, the Journal reported. Neither OpenAI nor Kotick immediately responded to Gizmodos requests for comment. The former Activision Blizzard chief has reportedly already reached out to ByteDance executive chair Zhang Yiming about selling TikTok. The wildly popular apps future has recently been thrown into limbo after lawmakers advanced a bill last week that would ban TikTok or force its Chinese owners to sell its U.S. division. President Joe Biden, whose
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the bill any day now. That doesnt mean everybodys happy with it, though. Some indigenous grassroots groups feel the voices of the Navajo and Pueblo people who live nearest to the states fossil fuel infrastructure, including in the states northwest corner, werent properly consulted during its drafting. The Energy Transition Act passed the state Senate last week, and the state House passed the bill earlier this week. Its right in line with Grishams 2018 campaign promise for New Mexico to become a leader in the clean energy sector. The states new renewable portfolio standard, per this bill, calls for 40 percent renewables by 2025, 50 percent by 2030, and at least 80 percent by 2050. These targets are right in line with Californias and Hawaiis, the other two states that have passed 100 percent clean energy mandates. This will be a dramatic change of course for the state, which is the third-greatest oil producer in the U.S. as of 2019. In fact, oil production in New Mexico hit a record high of nearly 246 million
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botella stanley g energy transformation will be a big deal for the states indigenous communities. Many of them鈥攆rom different Navajo chapters to different Pueblos鈥攍ive near the oil and gas wells and theres concern about a variety of negative health impacts as a result. On the other hand, some benefit economically