It was a week that Mark Zuckerberg would probably rather forget, and one that may end up being a turning point for Facebook itself. At a U.S. Senate hearing, whistleblower Frances Haugen called out the social media behemoth for allegedly placing profit before child safety, society and democracy. Amid a storm of criticism, Zuckerberg responded with a “not true.” And Cathy O’Neil writes in Bloomberg Opinion that the platform’s harmful algorithms are just too big to fix. Also this week, Facebook services including Instagram and WhatsApp went dark for several hours, making a winner out of Snapchat and helping send Facebook shares down the most since the coronavirus pandemic began.

What you’ll want to read this weekend

U.S. employment data for September was mixed, as weak job creation offset strong wage growth. One item of concern: the reopening of schools failed to boost the number of women in the workforce. The labor market really isn’t making the Federal Reserve’s job any easier, Brian Chappatta writes for Bloomberg Opinion.

Apple wants to control more than your car’s music.The iPhone maker is working on technology that would access functions like the climate-control system, speedometer and seats. But automakers now  have to wait even longer to get their chips delivered—in case you’d forgotten, the average car has 1,400 semiconductors.

Humans are the weakest link in supply chains. MIT’s “beer game” shows the urge to hoard is alive and well among the next crop of wannabe corporate managers. China’s energy crisis is hitting everything from sheep farmers to cardboard box-makers.

Students at MIT Sloan School of Management playing the beer game, a role-playing simulation designed to teach principles of management science.

Courtesy: MIT Sloan School of Management

How does your company stack up on the gender pay gap? Men working in finance in London made 25% more than women last year. Pepsi’s former CEO Indra Nooyi, one of few women of color to ever run a large public U.S. company, said she never asked for a raise and turned one down during the financial crisis.

Demand for travel is declining as the surge of delta cases prompts Americans to stay closer to home. Chinese consumers are also shunning tourism, with trips during the “Golden Week” holiday down by one-third. But if you’re ready to take the plunge, Bloomberg’s travel tracker shows where you can go—and what it might be like when you get there.

Tourists on the streets of Shanghai.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

What you’ll need to know next week

  • U.S. inflation numbers are expected to remain high.
  • JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs kick off Wall Street earnings.
  • The IMF and World Bank hold their annual meetings.
  • FDA is to consider booster doses of Moderna’s Covid vaccine.
  • Star Trek’s William Shatner is boldly going into space.

What you’ll want to read in Businessweek

Twentysomethings Are Joining the SPAC Rush

The trajectory of so-called blank-check companies—vast pools of cash in search of investment opportunities—has morphed from a niche product aimed at financial professionals into a mass-market phenomenon. Almost 600 of these special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, are trading in New York, and high-profile financiers have jumped in. Now the kids are joining the party. More than a dozen people age 30 and younger have been named as executives or board members at blank-check companies that have filed listing plans since June.

Illustration: Sam Island for Bloomberg Businessweek

Illustration: Sam Island for Bloomberg Businessweek

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