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		Tech company CEO resigns after controversy over video captured at 
		Coldplay concert
		[July 21, 2025] 
		By ALEX VEIGA 
		The IT company CEO captured in a widely circulated video showing him 
		embracing an employee at a Coldplay concert has resigned.
 Andy Byron resigned from his job as CEO of Cincinnati-based Astronomer 
		Inc., according to a statement posted on LinkedIn by the company 
		Saturday.
 
 “Astronomer is committed to the values and culture that have guided us 
		since our founding. Our leaders are expected to set the standard in both 
		conduct and accountability, and recently, that standard was not met,” 
		the company said in its post on LinkedIn.
 
 The move comes a day after the company said that Byron had been placed 
		on leave and the board of directors had launched a formal investigation 
		into the jumbotron incident, which went viral. A company spokesman later 
		confirmed in a statement to AP that it was Byron and Astronomer chief 
		people officer Kristin Cabot in the video.
 
 The short video clip shows Byron and Cabot as captured on the jumbotron 
		at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, during a Coldplay 
		concert on Wednesday.
 
		
		 
		Lead singer Chris Martin asked the cameras to scan the crowd for his 
		“Jumbotron Song,” when he sings a few lines about the people the camera 
		lands on.
 “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy,” he joked.
 
 Internet sleuths identified the man as the chief executive officer of a 
		U.S.-based company and the woman as its chief people officer.
 
 Pete DeJoy, Astronomer’s cofounder and chief product officer, has been 
		tapped as interim CEO while the company conducts a search for Byron’s 
		successor.
 
 Most concert venues warn attendees that they can be filmed
 
 It’s easy to miss, but most concert venues have signs informing the 
		audience that they could be filmed during the event. Look for them on 
		the walls when you arrive and around the bar areas or toilets. It’s 
		common practice especially when bands like to use performances for music 
		videos or concert films.
 
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			 The venue in this case, Gillette 
			Stadium in Foxborough, also has a privacy policy online which 
			states: “When you visit our location or attend or participate in an 
			event at our location, we may capture your image, voice and/or 
			likeness, including through the use of CCTV cameras and/or when we 
			film or photograph you in a public location.” Once captured, a moment can be shared widely
 “They probably would have got away with it if they hadn’t reacted,” 
			said Alison Taylor, a clinical associate professor at New York 
			University’s Stern School of Business. And by the time the alleged 
			identities emerged on social media, it hit a classic nerve around 
			“leaders acting like the rules don’t apply to them,” she added.
 
 Still, Taylor and others stress how quickly such a video can lead to 
			an internet search to find the people involved — and note that it’s 
			important to remember that such “doxing” isn’t just reserved for 
			famous people. Beyond someone simply spotting a familiar face and 
			spreading the word, technological advances, such as the rising 
			adoption of artificial intelligence, have made it easier and faster 
			overall to find just about anyone in a viral video today.
 
 “It’s a little bit unsettling how easily we can be identified with 
			biometrics, how our faces are online, how social media can track us 
			— and how the internet has gone from being a place of interaction, 
			to a gigantic surveillance system,” said Mary Angela Bock, an 
			associate professor in the University of Texas at Austin’s School of 
			Journalism and Media. “When you think about it, we are being 
			surveilled by our social media. They’re tracking us in exchange for 
			entertaining us.”
 _____
 
 AP Business Writer Wyatte Grantham-Philips contributed to this 
			report from New York.
 
			
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