Snejina Zacharia, SF ’13
How Snejina Zacharia, SF ’13, built Insurify by turning personal frustration into market innovation.
How Snejina Zacharia, SF ’13, built Insurify by turning personal frustration into market innovation.
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To learn more about how companies can adopt healthier practices, tune into the Overload Twitter Chat on Wednesday, May 6 at 11 a.m. ET. Use the hashtags to ask your questions and share your experiences and ideas on how to combat workplace burnout.
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Academics often use the En-ROADS climate solution simulator with their students, but Dr. Petra Molthan-Hill is getting the tool in front of leaders in the public and private sector.
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Data-based algorithms are personalizing medicine.
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A new book shows that successful firms are using artificial intelligence to complement human workers, not replace them.
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The AI Risk Repository, a database of over 700 risks posed by AI, aims to provide a shared framework for monitoring and maintaining AI risk oversight.
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Governments worldwide increasingly rely on contingent claims such as deposit insurance, too-big-to-fail guarantees, credit support for firms and households, and disaster insurance to accomplish policy goals. What are the micro- and macro-economic consequences of [...]
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The COVID-19 induced ‘Great Lockdown’ has cast doubt on the efficacy of bank buffers in supporting the real economy in times of crisis. Despite accommodative regulatory and supervisory action, banks remain hesitant to [...]
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Three steps to finding use cases for large language models: Break down workflows into tasks, consider all costs associated with automation, and launch pilots.
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Today the MIT CFP announced the winners of its first crowd-sourced contest, “What is a Systemically Important Financial Institution?” A collaboration between the MIT Center for Finance and Policy and the Harvard Crowd Innovation Laboratory, the contest was launched to generate new proposals to speci...