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Haidt warns tech companies face ‘karma’ over harm to children

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Haidt warns tech companies face ‘karma’ over harm to children

Jonathan Haidt, a social psychologist and author of “The Anxious Generation,” says mounting concerns over social media’s impact on children have hit a “turning point.”

Speaking Thursday on FOX Business’ “The Big Money Show,” Haidt pointed to a closely watched social media trial, citing internal Meta communications in which employees described Instagram as “a drug” and acknowledged they were “basically pushers.”

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“What we learned is that the companies really behaved abominably,” Haidt said. “Congress created the problem, and now I’m thrilled to see tweets and statements from senators and congressmen [from] both parties saying, ‘We’ve got to do something about this.’”

JURY FINDS META, GOOGLE LIABLE IN LANDMARK SOCIAL MEDIA ADDICTION TRIAL, AWARDS MORE THAN $6M IN DAMAGES

Psychologist Jonathan Haidt

Jonathan Haidt at Project Healthy Minds’ World Mental Health Day Festival held at Spring Studios on Oct. 10, 2025 in New York, New York. (Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Haidt said the recent jury verdict could mark the beginning of a much larger wave of litigation.

“We believe that there are literally millions of victims,” Haidt said. “… Hundreds of kids are dead.”

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With “millions of potential plaintiffs,” he warned, the financial consequences for tech companies could be enormous.

“I think we’re looking at a giant case of karma coming for these companies,” Haidt said. “They were able to exploit kids for decades and now their deeds are catching up with them.”

He argued the crisis was shaped in part by decades-old policy decisions.

META ORDERED TO PAY $375M AFTER JURY FINDS PLATFORM ENABLED CHILD PREDATORS IN LANDMARK NEW MEXICO CASE

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Social media apps are seen in this photo illustration. ( Matt Cardy / Contributor / Getty Images)

Haidt pointed to laws like Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which shields platforms from liability, and federal rules that allow companies to collect data from users who simply claim to be over 13.

However, public awareness is shifting — driven in part by recent jury verdicts and policy changes abroad, according to Haidt.

“We are at a turning point,” he said. “There is now a global understanding that this stuff is just wildly inappropriate for children.”

On Wednesday, a Los Angeles jury found Meta and Google liable in a case accusing the companies of designing addictive products for young users, awarding the plaintiff $6 million in damages.

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Google and Meta both told FOX Business they plan to appeal the verdict.

SOCIAL MEDIA TRIAL VERDICT: WHAT HAPPENS NOW, HOW MUCH WILL TECH GIANTS REALLY PAY?

The family of victims raise photographs outside Social Media Trial

Family members of victims outside Los Angeles Superior Court after a jury verdict Wednesday, March 25, 2026, in Los Angeles. (Kayla Bartkowski / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images / Getty Images)

In a separate case, a New Mexico jury on Tuesday ordered Meta to pay $375 million after finding the company misled users about platform safety and allegedly enabled child sexual exploitation.

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Meanwhile, Australia implemented a landmark law in December banning users under 16 from holding social media accounts — one of the strictest online safety measures globally.

“We parents can’t deal with this on our own,” Haidt said. “We’re all having the same fight with our kids.”

Fox News Digital’s Jasmine Baehr, Louis Casiano and Ashley Carnahan contributed to this report.

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BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warns AI could worsen wealth inequality

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BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warns AI could worsen wealth inequality

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warned in his annual chairman’s letter that wealth inequality could worsen if more people don’t participate in financial markets to reap the benefits of investing.

Fink said that the vast majority of wealth has flowed to people who own assets, as opposed to those who earned most of their income from working, and warned that artificial intelligence (AI) could exacerbate that trend.

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“Since 1989, a dollar in the U.S. stock market has grown more than 15 times the value of a dollar tied to median wages. Now AI threatens to repeat that pattern at an even larger scale – concentrating wealth among the companies and investors positioned to capture it,” Fink wrote.

He said that at the corporate level, the companies that have the “data, infrastructure, and capital to deploy AI at scale are positioned to benefit disproportionately.”

BLACKROCK CEO SAYS TRUMP ACCOUNTS COULD BE A ‘VERY SIGNIFICANT STEP’ FOR YOUNG AMERICANS

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink. (Victor J. Blue/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

“That is not unusual, and none of this is inherently problematic. Market leadership has always shifted with technological change,” Fink said. “The broader question is who participates in the gains. When market capitalization rises but ownership remains narrow, prosperity can feel increasingly distant to those on the outside.”

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He noted that it’s unclear how the deployment of AI will impact the labor force, particularly for entry-level white-collar workers.

BLACKROCK: AS AMERICANS STRUGGLE TO SAVE FOR RETIREMENT, 71% BACK THIS TRUMP PROPOSAL

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BLK BLACKROCK INC. 968.14 -13.21 -1.35%

Fink added that, historically, automation has boosted productivity and, over time, broadened the range of work available even as certain roles were displaced – though he cautioned that “new roles take time to emerge, and workers don’t always move seamlessly from old ones to new ones.”

“One thing is clear: AI will create significant economic value. Ensuring that participation in that growth expands alongside it is both the challenge and the opportunity,” he wrote.

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Fink went on to discuss ways to broaden participation in financial markets to expand access to the market to a larger segment of Americans.

BLACKROCK’S LARRY FINK SAYS US STILL TOP DESTINATION FOR GLOBAL INVESTORS TO PARK MONEY

BlackRock office sign

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said expanding market participation is key to addressing inequality. (Angus Mordant/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

He said that the newly created Trump Accounts could be a “very significant step” in encouraging young people to put their money in the market.

Trump Accounts are savings accounts given to newborns and seeded with money from the government and philanthropic benefactors as well as parental contributions that are invested in a broad index of U.S. stocks. They may also be created for people under the age of 18, and are held in custody by a parent or guardian until the child turns 18.

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Fink said market-based approaches like that could also be used for programs like Social Security to stabilize the safety net program, which is approaching insolvency in under a decade.

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Judge rejects Pentagon’s attempt to ‘cripple’ Anthropic

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Judge rejects Pentagon's attempt to 'cripple' Anthropic

“If this were merely a contracting impasse, DoW would presumably have just stopped using Claude,” Judge Lin wrote, referencing the Department of War, a secondary name for the Department of Defense. “The challenged actions, however, far exceed the scope of what could reasonably address such a national security interest.”

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RM Williams aims for more international growth

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RM Williams aims for more international growth

Andrew and Nicola Forrest’s bootmaker RM Williams has signalled its desire to grow into western Europe and Japan after opening a flagship store in London to support its UK expansion.

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US Stock Market: An 800-year-old math principle to spot bottom of S&P 500’s rout

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US Stock Market: An 800-year-old math principle to spot bottom of S&P 500's rout
The S&P 500 Index has clocked four consecutive weeks of declines and it’s on track for the worst month in a year.

To get a sense of where the pain may end, many equity traders look to a type of technical analysis credited with identifying the bottoms of big market declines, including two major routs since 2020. The bad news for bulls: It signals a long way down before the index finds major support.

It’s known as the 50% Fibonacci retracement level, a tool that chart watchers use to find potential entry points based on an 800-year-old mathematical principle. In this case, it represents a decline that would erase half of the S&P 500’s gains from last April’s low to its most recent record in January. It sits at 5,980 – or some 9% below Wednesday’s close.

“When you get a clear change in trend, there’s just certain levels that investors look at to kind of come back in, especially shorter-term traders,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. “And that 50% retracement is one that people follow very closely.”

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Technical analysis is just one tool to gauge stock-market trends and potential inflection points, and it’s far from a magic crystal ball. The S&P 500 briefly fell below 6,500 last week and it’s trading below its 200-day moving average, a trend line many hoped would act as support to halt the decline. Its failure to do so has pushed technical analysts to search for other potential levels where the bottom may be.


“It’s easy to see from a technical perspective that the worst isn’t over yet,” said Doug Peta, US investment strategist at BCA Research. “Until the Strait of Hormuz is open and crude oil, LNG, refined products and derivatives are moving through it at a normalised rate, there’s likely to be upward pressure on inflation and downward pressure on global growth.”
Should the S&P 500 extend losses this week, it would likely move toward 6,200, Maley said in a recent note to clients. The next potential support after that would come in at 5,980, which marks not only the 50% Fibonacci retracement but also the gauge’s mid-June low. The Fibonacci sequence, which was named after Italian mathematician Leonardo Pisano, known as Fibonacci, came in handy during the market turmoil trigged by President Donald Trump’s so-called Liberation Day tariff announcements last year. The S&P 500 found support at 4,982.77, a level that corresponded with the midpoint of a rally spanning three years from 2022.

Similarly, the 2022 bear market found its trough near the 50% retracement of the rally between March 2020 and early January 2022.

To Jonathan Krinsky, chief market technician at BTIG LLC, signs of stock-market weakness were present well before the conflict in the Middle East erupted. Issues with software and private credit had already taken their toll. In terms of how effective the 50% retracement level is when calling a bottom, Krinsky explains that it’s just “one piece of the puzzle.” Maley agrees, noting that there needs to be other influences on the market in order for it to be effective.

A resolution to the war in Iran and an end to the ensuing spike in energy prices would be one obvious catalyst to help the market rebound. Stocks rallied on Wednesday as traders weighed the viability of US-Iran ceasefire talks, with the S&P 500 closing up 0.5%. Still, uncertainty about the longer-term trajectory of US stocks remains.

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“The war and what’s happening in it is a specific issue,” said Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners. “What is the Fed going to do about interest rates given all the extremely changeable views people have on markets? And then there’s the price of oil, which fluctuates wildly. Pick your topic and you can own it.”

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Los Angeles County orders economic study on Paramount, Warner Bros. merger

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Los Angeles County orders economic study on Paramount, Warner Bros. merger

Los Angeles County voted in favor of an analysis into the proposed merger between Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery and its impact on the entertainment industry.

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors approved the motion Tuesday to have the Department of Economic Opportunity (DEO) conduct a “comprehensive economic impact analysis” on the direct and indirect impact the merger could have on employment in the county.

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Entertainment is more than what we watch on a screen—it’s part of who we are as Angelenos and a cornerstone of our economy. Thousands of families rely on this industry for their livelihoods, and we must protect their jobs and our signature industry,” Supervisor Lindsey P. Horvath said in a statement.

PARAMOUNT LAUNCHES HOSTILE TAKEOVER BID OF WARNER BROS DISCOVERY, SAYS OFFER IS ‘SUPERIOR’ TO NETFLIX DEAL

hollywood sign in california

The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors released a motion to analyze a potential merger on Tuesday. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

She continued, “As the proposed merger moves forward, we need a clear understanding of its impacts on jobs, competition, and the future of storytelling. Today, we took action to support workers, strengthen our local economy, and keep Los Angeles at the center of the global entertainment industry.”

According to Horvath, who proposed the motion, the DEO will “develop workforce strategies, including job training and placement programs, to support and retain entertainment industry workers” and report back to the Los Angeles board in 60 days with a final report due in 120 days.

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Los Angeles County Counsel will then submit a final report to the Department of Justice regarding potential antitrust issues.

CBS NEWS UNION MEMBERS HOLD 24-HOUR WALKOUT OVER FAILED CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS WITH MANAGEMENT

Paramount Warner Bros.

Paramount successfully launched a bid against Netflix to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery in February. (AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images)

Actress Jane Fonda, who heads the Committee for the First Amendment, supported the motion for “fighting” for the entertainment industry.

“Los Angeles runs on the creativity and hard work of the people behind our entertainment industry. As this acquisition moves forward, we need to make sure workers and storytellers aren’t left behind. I’m grateful to Supervisor Lindsey Horvath for fighting for our industry and for the people who power it every day,” Fonda said.

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Fox News Digital reached out to Paramount for a comment.

WHY NETFLIX’S CEO DROPPED HIS BID TO BUY WARNER BROS DISCOVERY AND TRUMP ‘DIDN’T CARE’

New Paramount CEO David Ellison

Critics have expressed concerns regarding Paramount CEO David Ellison potentially taking over Warner Bros. Discovery. (Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for CinemaCon)

Paramount won the ongoing bidding war to purchase Warner Bros. Discovery in February, though the merger has not yet been finalized.

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Critics of the bid have expressed concerns that the consolidation of two legacy studios under one company could lead to mass layoffs in the entertainment industry. Others have expressed fears over Paramount CEO David Ellison, who has a friendly relationship with President Donald Trump, having control over CNN.

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The spiky cactus fruit giving Indian farmers a cash boost

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The spiky cactus fruit giving Indian farmers a cash boost

Indian farmers are turning to dragon fruit as a profitable alternative to mangoes and coffee.

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Nexgrill recalls 10 million grill brushes over metal bristle hazard

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Nexgrill recalls 10 million grill brushes over metal bristle hazard

More than 10 million grill brushes are being recalled nationwide after reports that metal bristles can break off and end up in food.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced the recall Thursday for several Nexgrill metal wire brushes sold at Home Depot stores and online between 2015 and 2026. 

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“Small metal wire bristles can detach from the brushes and stick to the grill or food, posing an ingestion hazard and risk of serious internal injuries that could require surgery,” the CPSC said. 

HOUSEHOLD CLEANING TOOL RECALLED AFTER DOZENS OF BURN INJURIES REPORTED

grill brush recall

Nexgrill has received at least 68 reports of bristles coming loose.  (Consumer Product Safety Commission)

Nexgrill has received at least 68 reports of bristles coming loose. 

Five people reported swallowing the metal pieces and needed medical treatment to remove them from the throat or digestive tract, according to the CPSC.

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The recall includes multiple models of brushes with black plastic or wood handles measuring about 18 to 21 inches long. 

TOYOTA RECALLS MORE THAN 144,000 LEXUS VEHICLES OVER REARVIEW CAMERA FAILURE RISK

grill brush recall

The recall includes multiple models of brushes with black plastic or wood handles measuring about 18 to 21 inches long.  (Consumer Product Safety Commission)

Model numbers were listed on the packaging, and each product is labeled “Nexgrill.”

The recall covers the following models:

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  • 19-Inch Grill Brush (Model 530-0024), sold 2015–2016
  • Grill Cleaning Brush with Scraper (Model 530-0024G), sold 2022–2026
  • Long Handle Grill Brush (Model 530-0034), sold 2015–2026
  • Grill Brush and Scraper (Model 530-0039), sold 2015–2026
  • Grill Brush with Scrub Pad (Model 530-0041), sold 2015–2026
  • Wood Handle Grill Brush (Model 530-0042), sold 2015–2021

The brushes typically retail for $5 to $15.

GAS RANGES SOLD AT US RETAILERS ARE BEING RECALLED OVER BURN HAZARD RISK

grill brush recall

Consumers are urged to stop using the brushes immediately. (Consumer Product Safety Commission)

Consumers are urged to stop using the brushes immediately. Nexgrill is offering refunds in the form of gift cards.

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The recalled brushes were manufactured in China and imported by Nexgrill Industries, based in California.

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Nexgrill could not be immediately reached by FOX Business for comment.

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'Affordability is the biggest thing' – Conservatives mixed on economy under Trump

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'Affordability is the biggest thing' - Conservatives mixed on economy under Trump

Conservatives gathered at the annual CPAC conference in Texas were mixed when asked about their feelings on the current economy.

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Two humanitarian aid boats en route to Cuba missing, Mexico says

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Two humanitarian aid boats en route to Cuba missing, Mexico says

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Cleaning Edge Invests Millions Into Breakthrough Technology to Revolutionise Cleaning Transparency Nationwide

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Founder Clayburn Figredo

Cleaning Edge Solutions, Australia’s fastest growing commercial cleaning provider, has invested millions of dollars into the development and rollout of its proprietary desktop platform, CESgo, in what industry leaders are describing as a major shift in how businesses manage cleaning, hygiene and operational accountability.

The significant investment signals a new era for commercial cleaning across childcare centres, schools, aged care, hospitals and medical facilities, offices, transport hubs, retail environments, food production and industrial sites, where services are no longer invisible but fully measurable and transparent.

Founder Clayburn Figredo
Founder Clayburn Figredo

Founder Clayburn Figredo said the company is redefining what modern cleaning looks like in Australia.

“We are not just cleaning buildings, we are creating operational transparency and real-time visibility,” Figredo said.

“CESgo is the result of a multi-million-dollar investment into technology that gives businesses clarity, control and confidence.”

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Cleaning Edge Solutions is one of Australia’s leading commercial cleaning and facility management providers, specialising in large-scale, high-risk and clinical environments. Founded in 2008 by Managing Director Clayburn Figredo and headquartered in Mulgrave, Victoria, the company has built a national reputation for innovation, strict compliance and advanced infection-control standards.

With ISO certifications across quality, safety, environment and food safety, Cleaning Edge Solutions delivers services to major organisations across health, government, education, transport, retail and aged care sectors. Its operations span commercial and industrial cleaning, facilities maintenance, waste management and property development.

It also owns a number of brands including well-known business, Andy Andersons. For more than 45 years, Andy Andersons has supported Australian organisations with reliable, high-quality cleaning and facility services. A long-standing family business with deep industry roots, Andy Andersons became an entity of the Cleaning Edge Group in 2021, combining decades of legacy experience with the group’s national scale and innovation.

Today, the company draws on more than 100 years of combined expertise to deliver industrial cleaning, commercial cleaning, aged care cleaning and facility maintenance services. Andy Andersons remains committed to safety, integrity and exceptional service.

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Known for its commitment to excellence and social impact, the Cleaning Edge group is dedicated to elevating national cleaning standards and creating safer, healthier environments for all Australians.

A new standard in operational visibility

The desktop-based CESgo platform captures every aspect of cleaning operations in real time, allowing businesses to see exactly what is happening across their sites.

Cleaning Edge staff log in and out digitally, with attendance and hours automatically verified. Every task is outlined through structured workflows and photographic evidence of completed work is uploaded directly into the system.

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Clients can view services undertaken, the timing, the staff involved and the results delivered, removing the uncertainty that has traditionally surrounded outsourced cleaning.

“For decades, cleaning has been a blind spot for many organisations,” Figredo said.

“Now businesses can see the work, the results and the value in real time.”

From invisible service to measurable performance

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The platform transforms cleaning from a reactive, checklist-based activity into a performance-driven function.

Images, reports and digital sign-offs provide a clear record of hygiene outcomes. Site requirements and task schedules are embedded into the system, ensuring consistency across locations and shifts.

“This is accountability elevated,” Figredo said.

“Every hour is captured, every job is documented and every outcome can be verified.”

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The result is stronger oversight, improved service quality and better operational control.

Centralised communication and faster problem resolution

CESgo also functions as a communication hub between businesses, site managers and Cleaning Edge teams.

Clients can log requests, raise concerns and track progress in near real time. Issues are assigned, monitored and resolved within the platform, creating a clear record of action and accountability.

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“Communication is one of the biggest challenges in outsourced services,” Figredo said.

“Our technology creates a single source of truth, ensuring nothing is missed and every request is followed through.”

Reducing risk and supporting governance

With increased scrutiny around hygiene, infection control and workplace standards, organisations are under pressure to demonstrate operational oversight.

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Figredo said traditional paper-based reporting and fragmented communication systems are no longer fit for purpose.

“Boards, executives and regulators want data, not assumptions,” he said.

“CESgo provides a digital audit trail that strengthens governance, supports reporting and reduces risk.”

The platform enables businesses to generate detailed reports quickly, providing evidence of cleaning performance, service delivery and operational compliance.

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A permanent shift in the cleaning industry

Cleaning Edge believes the future of the industry lies in technology-enabled service delivery.

“This is not about mops and buckets,” Figredo said.

“It is about intelligent systems, data and measurable outcomes.”

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By investing heavily in proprietary technology, Cleaning Edge is positioning itself at the forefront of a new era in which cleaning services are defined by transparency, accountability and operational excellence.

“The expectations of businesses have changed permanently,” Figredo said.

“They want visibility and control and they also want proof. CESgo delivers that.”

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