A new Stanford-led study has found that when many employers rely on a single artificial-intelligence vendor to screen job applicants, the same candidates can be rejected at company after company — not because each employer reached an independent decision, but because one shared algorithm reached the decision for all of them. The research, titled “Algorithmic...
Author: Dominick Bianco, Editor-in-Chief
Dominick M. Bianco
Editor-in-Chief, Nexfinity News
Dominick M. Bianco is the Editor-in-Chief of Nexfinity News, where he leads editorial coverage across global finance, capital markets, emerging technologies, macroeconomic policy, and investigative reporting.
His reporting focuses on institutional trends, artificial intelligence, digital assets, ESG investing, blockchain technology, and cross-border capital flows.
Bianco emphasizes data-backed analysis, regulatory context, market transparency, and forward-looking economic implications.
He oversees editorial standards, newsroom strategy, fact-checking practices, and content integrity to ensure coverage aligns with high-trust publishing benchmarks and professional journalism standards.
Bianco is a member of the National Writers Union and the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). He is also a former U.S. Marine Corps veteran.
Areas of Expertise
- Global Financial Markets
- Artificial Intelligence in Finance
- Digital Assets & Blockchain
- Carbon Credits & ESG Investing
- Macroeconomic Policy
- Investigative Financial Journalism
https://www.linkedin.com/in/dominick-m-bianco/
Latest Posts
Hiding in Plain Sight: How the Agri Stats Settlement Exposed Price Coordination Operating Under the Cover of Inflation
When grocery prices surged across the United States during 2021 and 2022, most consumers blamed inflation. Rising fuel costs, supply-chain disruptions, labor shortages, and broader economic pressures appeared to offer a straightforward explanation for higher food bills. A newly settled antitrust case involving Agri Stats, Inc., however, has renewed a more complex debate among economists...
MBA Hiring Cools for a Third Straight Year as Employers Turn More Selective
Introduction Hiring of newly minted Master of Business Administration graduates has softened for a third consecutive year, with placement rates at several of the most selective U.S. programs falling to their lowest levels in more than a decade. The shift has reopened a long-running debate over the value of the degree at a time when...
Mamdani’s Housing Plan Revives NYC Third Party Transfer Program Amid Legal Scrutiny
New Housing Proposal Would Bring Back Controversial Property Transfer Tool New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s newly announced housing strategy is reigniting debate over one of the city’s most controversial affordable housing enforcement tools. Unveiled on May 26, the administration’s “Block by Block” housing initiative includes a program known as “Fix the City,” an enforcement...
How Free Apps Like Life360 and GasBuddy May Increase Your Auto Insurance Premiums
Many consumers assume that free apps earn revenue through advertising. However, some popular mobile applications generate additional income by collecting and sharing user data—including information about driving habits. Privacy advocates, regulators, and consumer protection groups have increasingly raised concerns about how driving behavior data gathered through smartphone apps can ultimately influence auto insurance underwriting decisions....
Automakers Are Becoming Data Companies: How GM, Ford, Tesla and Stellantis Plan to Generate Billions From Driver Data
The global automotive industry is quietly undergoing one of the largest business model transformations in its history. For more than a century, automakers generated revenue primarily through vehicle sales and financing. Today, companies including General Motors, Ford, Stellantis and Tesla are pursuing a different objective: turning every connected vehicle into a recurring revenue platform. According...
How to Opt Out of Driver Data Tracking in 2026: The Complete Privacy Guide
Your car may already be sharing your driving behavior, location history and insurance-risk profile with third parties — often without explicit consent. Across the United States, automakers, data brokers, insurers and private surveillance networks now participate in a rapidly expanding driver-data economy that most consumers barely understand. While a handful of privacy tools now exist,...
How a License Plate Becomes a Person: Inside the Correlation Pipeline That Connects Cameras, DMVs and Insurers
Introduction A license plate is, by itself, an anonymous string of seven or eight characters. The privacy implications of the surveillance economy documented in Parts 1 and 2 of this series depend entirely on the ability of commercial actors to convert that string into a named individual — with an address, a phone number, a...
Beyond the DMV: The Private Camera Networks Tracking American Drivers Without Buying a Single Record
Introduction State motor vehicle agencies collected at least $282 million selling driver data to private companies in fiscal year 2024, as Part 1 of this series reported. That figure, however, represents only the regulated portion of the U.S. license plate data economy. A parallel and substantially larger ecosystem of private surveillance networks, smart-billboard analytics platforms...
New Jersey’s $2 Billion Legacy Landfill Crisis Raises New Concerns Over Cancer Risks and Environmental Oversight
The former Aeromarine landfill in Keyport, New Jersey, is drawing renewed attention as environmental advocates and residents question whether decades of inadequate oversight contributed to ongoing public health concerns. The site has become part of a broader statewide conversation about New Jersey’s aging landfill infrastructure, unfunded remediation obligations, and the long-term environmental risks tied to...









