Martin Shkreli, former CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, smiles during questioning last year on Capitol Hill.
Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Twitter suspended Martin Shkreli's account on Sunday following harassment of a freelance journalist.
The pharmaceutical executive began trolling Lauren Duca after she wrote an opinion piece for Teen Vogue in December under the headline Donald Trump is Gaslighting America. Shkreli, a Trump supporter, soon began peppering Duca with messages of faux attraction, including an invitation to be his date at Trump's inauguration, which Duca tweeted last week.
Martin Shkreli, former CEO of Turing Pharmaceuticals, smiles during questioning last year on Capitol Hill.
Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images
Twitter suspended Martin Shkreli's account on Sunday following harassment of a freelance journalist.
The pharmaceutical executive began trolling Lauren Duca after she wrote an opinion piece for Teen Vogue in December under the headline Donald Trump is Gaslighting America. Shkreli, a Trump supporter, soon began peppering Duca with messages of faux attraction, including an invitation to be his date at Trump's inauguration, which Duca tweeted last week.
Here are the most important parts of Nissan's CES 2017 keynote
After seemingly stalling out in the public eye for a while, Google's self-driving car plans appear to be accelerating.
Strongly.
John Krafcik, CEO of the company's newly created Waymo division, has just shown off the company's autonomous Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid minivan at the Detroit Auto Show. In fact, whether Google's autonomous efforts really ever paused in the first place remains an open question, because from the looks of the progress that Krafcik has outlined, things may have remained "all systems go" all along.