News

The video of a cheating couple caught on a kiss cam at a Coldplay concert was created by a Belmar woman who had no idea she ...
How did the Kristin Cabot scandal at the Coldplay concert impact workplace ethics discussions? Imagine attending a concert, ...
Experts point to growing instances of social media users rushing to publicly identify, or dox, the people captured on camera — much like how quickly the internet committed to finding those involved in ...
HR professionals may know all too well that workplace romances are a common occurrence. In a 2022 survey by HR consulting ...
Until last week, most of us had never heard of the data company Astronomer or its then CEO, Andy Byron. That was before he ...
The former Astronomer CEO just learned a tough lesson about social media and life. Like a lot of Gen Zers, I knew this ...
The glee that followed the kiss-cam kerfuffle is less about who Byron and Cabot are, but about what they represent. Maybe ...
The laughter directed at the couple caught canoodling, sans spouses, at a Coldplay concert isn't self-righteous as much as it ...
The backlash is not about sensationalism; it reflects growing public demands for ethical behavior from corporate leaders.
The Coldplay ‘kiss cam’ moment featuring former Astronomer CEO Andy Byron and the company’s ex-HR chief Kristin Cabot has ignited a cultural debate.
In the era of lightning-fast social sharing and when cameras are practically inescapable, does being in public hold any expectation of privacy?