.insider-raw-embed + p { display: none; }
// Marketing for Small Business
const seriesTitle = "Marketing for Small Business";
// Presented by
const text = "Presented by";
// 63692b9300d7c60018787048
const sponsorLogoID = "63692b9300d7c60018787048";
// Mailchimp logo transparent background
const altText = "Mailchimp logo transparent background";
// https://www.businessinsider.com/category/marketing-for-small-business
const hubOrCatURL = "https://www.businessinsider.com/categor
The days of wading through pages of comments on a Reddit post to find exactly what you’re looking for are no more. The internet forum has added a new feature to posts.
Getty; Phil Rosen/Insider
Happy Friday eve, team. Phil Rosen here. Did you catch yesterday's Fed minutes release?
It looks like central bank officials unanimously agreed that the last rate hike of 25 basis points was the appropriate size, and that slowing down the pace would "better allow them to assess the economy's progress."
But several participants would have also backed a half-point hike, the minutes showed.
That tells us we should be taking the Fed at its word: The inflation battle isn't over.

Meme stocks, “stonks,” “hold the line,” were among the words and phrases popularized by the WallStreetBets community. But a new lawsuit challenges the very idea of ownership over that community, or more specifically, who should be able to monetize the very name of the famed subreddit.
Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Twitter’s ad revenue may have gone up in smoke recently, but the company isn’t letting that get it down. Instead, it’s taking the high road and adjusting for headwinds.

Users on Reddit are speaking out after the Replika AI companion reportedly stopped responding to their sexual advances.
NurPhoto/Getty Images
NurPhoto/Getty Images