Dec
20

Facebook says there's an innocent explanation for why it allowed Spotify and Netflix to access your private messages (FB, AMZN, AAPL)

Facebook says that there's an innocent explanation for why it allowed Spotify and Netflix to access users' private messages — a behavior that it acknowledged in the wake of a bombshell New York Times report.

In short, writes Facebook VP of Product Partnerships Ime Archibong in a blog post published on Wednesday evening, the social network needed to give those partners special access in order to enable messaging features.

"We've been accused of disclosing people's private messages to partners without their knowledge. That's not true," Archibong says.

The experimental features, which are no longer available, allowed users of Spotify and Netflix to message their Facebook friends directly from those apps.

Spotify therefore needed permission to "write" private messages so users could share songs via Facebook Messenger; Netflix needed the same access so viewers of the streaming video service could share links to movies with each other. The same general idea goes for integrations with Dropbox and the Royal Bank of Canada app, which feature Facebook messaging features.

"That was the point of this feature — for the messaging partners mentioned above, we worked with them to build messaging integrations into their apps so people could send messages to their Facebook friends," writes Archibong.

Read more: Facebook had a secret data deal with Amazon which flouted its own privacy rules

Importantly, Archibong says, these features did not mean that Facebook was actively supplying outside companies with your private messages; that users always need to grant permission for the companies to use these features; and that all of these social sharing features "were experimental and have now been shut down for nearly three years."

Notably, Archibong's blog post does not mention Amazon, and only contains a passing, irrelevant reference to Apple — two companies that were identified by the New York Times report as also having potentially inappropriate access to Facebook user data.

You can read Archibong's blog post here.

Original author: Matt Weinberger

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Jan
29

Microsoft buys gaming services startup PlayFab to bolster its Azure platform

Waymo

Waymo, the autonomous-driving technology company, could prove to be a huge boon for Alphabet, Jefferies analysts wrote in a research note out Wednesday.Google's parent company, Alphabet, spun off Waymo in 2016. Follow Alphabet's stock price live.

"Can Waymo Drive Alphabet's Stock?" Jefferies equity analysts wondered in a research note to clients Wednesday. 

It certainly could, the analysts concluded in a sweeping report that examined the self-driving company's impact on the Google-parent Alphabet. 

Jefferies upped its long-term value estimate for Waymo to $250 billion (from a previously forecasted range of $75 to $125 billion). That's a notable price tag, compared to Alphabet's current market capitalization of $730 billion.

"Waymo is exploring many different business models, and our new estimate encompasses not only AV technology sale, but also transport services (people, goods/foods, commercial freight), ongoing AV tech support, incar services (advertising/marketing, entertainment, business), and new types of vehicles," the analysts, led by Brent Thill, wrote, referring to the autonomous-vehicle technology.

Accordingly, Jefferies said it would change its methodology in evaluating Waymo to a "revenue per mile monetization model," from an "upfront per vehicle value model." Their forecasts for Waymo's growth take into consideration the many concerns that still surround Waymo and self-driving technology more broadly.

"Questions linger around timeline, as influenced by AV tech progress, regulations, cost, and consumer concerns," Jefferies wrote, citing cities and states taking a cautious approach to allowing autonomous driving.

Still, the California-based company has appeared to progress this year. Waymo was planning to launch its first commercial rides as soon as this month, in Phoenix, Arizona, Bloomberg reported in November, citing a person familiar with the matter. And back in October, Waymo became the first company to receive permission to test unmanned, self-driving cars in California.

Other Wall Street firms have analyzed Waymo's impact on Alphabet. Earlier this year, Morgan Stanley upped its own expectations for Waymo's valuation, taking it to $175 billion from $75 billion.

And while the valuations are eye-popping, analysts note autonomous vehicles still have a long road ahead.

In a report earlier this month, UBS auto analyst Colin Langan wrote that even though Waymo had just launched its commercial autonomous car service outside of Phoenix, Arizona, the MIT professors that the firm met with believe it will be a decade before "scale AV applications in complex urban environments become commonplace."

Alphabet shares have tumbled nearly 18% from the stock's all-time high hit in July.

Now read:

Markets Insider

Original author: Rebecca Ungarino

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Dec
20

Leadership shuffle continues at Thoma Bravo's Apttus as PE firm grapples with human resources crisis

Private Equity firm Thoma Bravo continues to overhaul the management team at Apttus, the scandal-ridden software company it acquired in October after its founding CEO stepped down following an allegation that he sexually assaulted an employee during a company trip to Mexico.

Chief Strategy Officer Jeff Santelices is the latest executive to leave Apttus. Apttus

The most recent departure is Chief Strategy Officer Jeff Santelices, who left his role at the company this week, according to sources familiar with Apttus.

Santelices, who is based in Colorado, joined Apttus in 2015 after a career spent in sales roles at IBM and various tech startups including Webroot and TrackVia.

It is unclear whether Santelices left on his own or was pushed out of Apttus. His departure comes weeks after Raj Verma, chief operating officer at Apttus, changed roles to chief revenue officer.

Although Apttus' senior leadership team has faced withering criticism from insiders who point to the company's toxic and "dishonest" corporate culture, Santelices stood out for being well-liked among employees. Multiple former employees described him as one of the most "ethical" and "well-respected" senior leaders at the company.

Santelices did not respond to multiple requests for comment. Thoma Bravo declined to comment.

Thoma Bravo also brought in several of its own executives in recent weeks, including Chief People Officer Colleen Carr and Chief Legal Officer Omer Rafatullah.

CEO David Murphy joined Apttus in October when the acquisition closed. He took over a role left vacant in July when founding CEO Kirk Krappe left the company.

Neehar Giri and Kent Perkocha, who cofounded Apttus along with Krappe and held c-level positions throughout their time at the company, are both listed just as "co-founders" on the Apttus website.

Human resources crisis continues at Apttus

The leadership shakeup comes as Thoma Bravo grapples with a human resources crisis at Apttus, where allegations ranging from sexual assault to a hostile work environment have cost the company millions of dollars in settlement fees with departing employees.

Apttus faces multiple on-going legal complaints, sources said, related to allegations of inappropriate behavior from leadership at the company.

In November, Murphy asked employees to take an anonymous survey which asked about their past interactions with human resources.

It's unclear whether any of the title or position changes are related to human resources concerns.

Departing CSO had a $4.7 million exit package

Santelices was one of four executives at the company with a parachute package valued over $1 million, according to a company document previously reported by Business Insider.

The exit packages caused a stir at the company after a equity holders — which included most current and former employees — were asked to vote to approve of the packages ahead of Apttus's sale to Thoma Bravo.

A large portion of the payments are contingent on shareholder approval. It is unclear whether shareholders approved of the payments.

The document outlines payments that "have, will, or may be paid," the total of which may ultimately prove to be overstated, according to the documents. The parachute provisions include an array of potential payments, including potential severance packages and unvested equity awards.

Business Insider reported last month that employees were particularly concerned with the $26.5 million parachute for Verma, whose behavior, sources said, is the subject of several ongoing legal complaints.

Santelices' exit package was valued at $4.7 million total. Chief Marketing Officer Ben Allen has a $1.3 million package, and Chief Information Officer Praniti Lakhwara has a $1.7 million package. Both Allen and Lakhwara remain at the company.

Got a tip about Apttus? Email the author at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or direct message on Twitter @beckpeterson. Secure messaging available upon request. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Becky Peterson

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Dec
19

Square Roots is bringing more transparency to its produce

If you’re concerned about what you eat, there’s a good chance you’ve looked at the food in the supermarket, or in your fridge, and wondered where it actually comes from. Now urban farming incubator Square Roots is introducing a new way for you to check full history of the produce that you’re about to purchase.

To do so, you just scan the QR code or type in the lot number that the company says will be included in the packaging of all its produce moving forward. Either way, you’ll be taken to to what Square Roots calls a Transparency Timeline. You can actually try this out on the QR codes included in the announcement — the timelines show where and when the produce was planted, grown and harvested, and when it was delivered to the store.

To do this, Square Roots says it’s taking advantage of its indoor growing system, which involves refurbished, climate-controlled shipping containers, as well as “software that enables us to monitor and control every aspect of the process” — that’s supposed to help the farmers who are being trained at Square Roots, but apparently it gives the company data that it can package for consumers too.

In the announcement, Kimbal Musk (who founded Square Roots with Tobias Peggs) laid out the reasoning behind the Transparency Timeline:

Consumers across the world are demanding greater transparency into where and how their food is grown — and with good reason. As mentioned above, this past Thanksgiving, another ecoli outbreak resulted in the recall of all romaine lettuce grown in the US. This was the third such outbreak in the last two years. It put millions of consumers at major risk of foodborne illnesses. The situation was compounded by opaque supply chains in the Industrial Food System, making it ridiculously difficult to accurately trace the source of guilty pathogens. To their credit, the big lettuce producers did eventually react, and agreed to start labeling their products with a mark of the state in which their products are grown. But that’s not enough. Consumers demand — and deserve — to know more.

Musk acknowledged that some companies are trying to use blockchain technology to introduce more transparency to the food supply chain, but he suggested that the results have been “underwhelming,” and that the solution is more straightforward: “What people want to know, simply, is where and how was my food grown and who grew it? With that information, they can make their own informed choices about whether to trust the food and whether to buy it.”

Square Roots produce is only sold in select New York City locations, so the rest of you probably won’t get a chance to try this out in your own supermarket anytime soon. But it sounds like Musk has expansion plans, and he said, “As we scale, we will keep building local farms in the same neighborhood as the consumers — so we can always own the supply chain end to end.”

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Jan
29

SaaS Companies: You Have an Unprecedented Opportunity - Sramana Mitra

Elon Musk revealed what's next for The Boring Company in a series of tweets on Wednesday, a day after he demonstrated how the underground tunnels the startup is developing would operate in Los Angeles.

"Next step for @BoringCompany Loop is demonstrating high throughput at high speed. Target is 4000 vehicles/hour at 155mph (250km/h)," he said.

Musk said the company will offer vehicles in a range of sizes for passengers in its proposed underground tunnel system.

"A variety of vehicles, like normal roads, from a small car to a densely seated bus. Must be seated & belted for high speed safety," he said.

Read more: A rail-guided Tesla and flamethrowers: Inside Elon Musk's exclusive Boring Company tunnel launch party

Musk then said the company's vehicles could carry over 100,000 people per hour through one of its tunnels if the vehicles resembled "densely seated" buses, but he said the company would instead focus on providing a range of vehicle options for customers.

"If all vehicles were densely seated buses, throughput in excess of 100,000 people per hour per lane is possible, but better to offer a range of vehicles & let people decide what makes them happy," he said.

The Boring Company, which was founded to dig tunnels for the proposed Loop and Hyperloop transit systems, unveiled its first test tunnel in Hawthorne, California, on Tuesday. The company has so far won a bid to build a tunnel for the Loop transit system in Chicago and has proposed building tunnels in Los Angeles, New York, Baltimore, and Washington, DC. (Musk has suggested the company could also build a tunnel in San Francisco.)

The Boring Company has received approval to dig a 10.3-mile tunnel beneath Baltimore and begin preliminary work in Washington, DC.

Hyperloop, first proposed by Musk in a 2013 white paper, would carry passengers in pods at speeds of over 600 mph. Loop resembles the Hyperloop but would be used for shorter distances that require slower speeds. Musk has said Loop pods would hold 16 people and travel at 150 mph. He has also said a Loop system could be accessed by dozens of small stations that would transport passengers underground and take up as much space as a parking spot.

Original author: Mark Matousek

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Dec
19

New York's new $4 billion bridge is reportedly plagued by dozens of failing bolts and a simmering cover-up scandal

A small team of engineers worked under the cover of darkness to replace failing bolts on one of New York's newest bridges, NBC4NY reported Wednesday.

Sixty bolts out of more than a million total are known to have failed on the newly opened Mario Cuomo Bridge, located on the Hudson River about 25 miles north of New York City.

An NBC4NY investigation revealed that more failed bolts may have been secretly repaired.

According to a safety inspector turned whistleblower, a handful of workers were covertly replacing broken bolts under the cover of darkness before safety inspections could take place, NBC4NY reported.

The New York attorney general's office has been investigating the faulty bolts. The construction company that built the bridge says it's cooperating and that its work is completely safe. One engineering expert told NBC there's likely no chance of collapse — just inflated maintenance costs throughout the bridge's lifespan.

AP In a statement to the New York Times, Tappan Zee Constructors said: "all bolt testing performed by multiple parties indicates there is not an issue with the bolts."

"TZC has not been provided with, nor is it aware of, any information that is contrary to these bolt testing results," it continued. "TZC has demonstrated a constant willingness to address any additional issues and will continue to do so."

The issue could end up being similar to one which plagued the Bay Bridge across the San Francisco Bay, costing an additional $4.3 million to replace faulty anchors. The builder, in that case, avoided any legal punishment for the problems.

The Mario Cuomo Bridge, which replaced the 50-year-old Tappan Zee Bridge, has been mired in controversy ever since the idea was conceived. Critics were quick to attack Governor Andrew Cuomo for re-naming the new crossing after his father and former governor. Others said the opening of the $3.98 billion bridge was intentionally sped up to happen before the primary race in which Cuomo defeated challenger Cynthia Nixon.

Read more:Virgin Hyperloop One's new CEO has run subway systems and bike-sharing companies around the world — now he's focused on making Elon Musk's dream a reality.

In 2016, a crane collapsed while contracting the new spans, injuring three motorists and adding headaches to

"Ninety-percent of the time these things are tracked down and found not to be the big problem someone thought in the beginning," the MIT engineer told NBC4NY. "Ten percent of the time it might end up being a big problem and then it really gets into who is the one who didn't pay attention to what was going on."

A thruway spokesperson told the New York Times that "the bridge is completely safe for the traveling public."

Original author: Graham Rapier

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Dec
19

Pinterest is talking to bankers and has hired a key exec as it readies itself for a 2019 IPO

Pinterest is gearing up for an initial public offering as early as April 2019 and is in the process of talking to bankers as it seeks to choose its underwriters, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The company could be valued at more than $12 billion, sources told the Journal. That's also the level at which Pinterest most recently raised funding.

The report comes on the heels of Pinterest tapping former Google and Alibaba exec Jane Penner to be its head of investor relations, as Business Insider first reported last week.

Read More: Pinterest has nabbed Google and Alibaba's former head of investor relations — the biggest sign yet that it's gearing up for a 2019 IPO

Pinterest has also contacted a number of banks for a credit line that could come in at around $500 million, according to the Journal.

Companies typically reach out to banks for lending in the run-up to an IPO to incentivize them to land a role on the offering. They also hire investor-relations executives a few months before going public.

Pinterest is poised to double its revenue this year to nearly $1 billion, according to a CNBC report from this summer, and has a valuation of $13 billion to $15 billion. In September, it announced it had 250 million monthly users, up from 200 million a year before.

2019 is expected to be a banner year for initial public offerings, with a roster of hopefuls including Uber, Lyft, Slack, and Airbnb.

Original author: Tanya Dua

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Mar
27

Bird lays off about 30% of workforce amid COVID-19 pandemic

It was several years ago, at a tech conference in Laguna Beach, Calif., that the venture capitalist Bill Gurley issued one of what would become repeated warnings that startups were staying private too long. Comparing companies that refuse to go public to undergrads whose college careers extend several years past the point that they should, Gurley suggested they should be embarrassed, not proud, for keeping their shares in private hands. “Until you get liquid, you really haven’t accomplished anything,” Gurley said.

Whether Gurley was referring to Uber at the time, only he knows. Though his firm, Benchmark, eventually forced out Travis Kalanick, the co-founder and longtime CEO of Uber, the tipping point was seemingly not Kalanick’s determination to keep Uber privately held as long as possible, but rather an investigation into sexual harassment investigations and the employee misconduct that was discovered in the process.

Either way, it’s looking increasingly like Gurley had a point. As you may have noticed if you care anything about the public markets, they took a nosedive today. In fact, they fell to a new low for the year this afternoon, a reaction in part to the Federal Reserve’s decision earlier today to raise its benchmark overnight lending rate for the fourth time in 2018.

The Fed also signaled minimal rate hikes for next year — forecasting two rate hikes instead of three — but investors were apparently hoping for even better news.

It’s hard to blame them for seeking out more of a silver lining, given everything else that’s going on. Tech stocks are getting battered, with the FANG companies (Facebook, Apple, Netflix and Google) down meaningfully from their share prices of six months ago. (Amazon has held up the best.)

The economy of China — the U.S.’s third largest export partner and its largest import partner — is slowing sharply, which is expected to have an impact on the U.S. and world economies. Add trade tensions into the mix, a sprinkling of uncertainty about regulations, a splash of a possible government shutdown and the growing prospect that Donald Trump will be impeached, and you start to appreciate why the market is finally going off the rails.

Despite so much uncertainty, Uber, Lyft, Slack and now Pinterest, among many others, are racing to become publicly traded at long last. According to Dealogic data quoted in today’s WSJ, 38 unicorn companies went public this year, and more are expected to test the market in 2019.

Their venture backers will tell you it’s because the markets recognize a strong growth company when they see it, and that each is finally positioned well to tell their story, aided by some dazzling metrics. Yet it seems just as likely that they see the window, which flew open this year, starting to swing back in the other direction. And if this month is any indicator, it could be hard to pry it open again, at least in the first quarter or two.

“The market is basically closed between now, and the start of a new year is always slow because companies don’t start roadshows [until the markets re-open],” says Kathleen Smith, a principal of Renaissance Capital and the manager of its IPO exchange-traded fund. Pre-IPO companies like Uber are also waiting on their audits to close before they put any numbers in a public document, she notes. But it could be far from smooth sailing after that, suggests Smith. “In normal times, late January and February and March become very active, but we aren’t in a typical market. I can predict from other times that we’ve seen a bear market like this that it will have an impact on IPO activity.”

It’s all part of a vicious cycle, Smith suggests. As public market shareholders begin to feel less affluent and more risk averse, they start redeeming their public market shares. That leaves fund managers who might otherwise gamble on new issuers with less capital to invest, and less flexibility. “Investors are just not going to want to take on any risk positions when market has [taken a turn for the worse],” says Smith.

Put another way, if the markets are as crummy early next year as looks to be the case, it’s too bad, too sad for unicorn companies. “They made the choice to stay private and get capital,” says Smith. “I’ve stated many times that they should be getting while the getting is good. The pain can happen if money dries up, and it will dry up when the public market dries up.” 

That doesn’t mean tech’s favorite unicorn companies are doomed, of course, especially those that can show strong fundamentals. For her part, Smith notes that what often happens in a downturn is that offerings get heavily discounted. “Valuations will be chopped if the companies want investors to participate. They’ll have to be sure to make money.”

Even if they don’t get the rich prices that ambitious bankers might pitch them (or that their VCs assigned them before that), they can always grow into the valuations their investors want to see. One need look no further than Facebook to remember why a bumpy offering doesn’t mean all that much longer term.

“Just because a stock crashes below its IPO price isn’t a sign of a bubble,” says Pivotal Research analyst Brian Wieser. “You also have to keep in mind the dynamic of companies going public,” he says. “You expect IPOs to be overvalued. Investors in these companies are necessarily selling to the greatest fool.”

Still, there may be fewer fools willing to buy what they are selling than there might have been this year or last, and if those numbers really change, today’s unicorns will look like tomorrow’s donkeys.

They’re certainly going to face more scrutiny than they might have had they moved sooner.

“Maybe we’ll roar into 2019 and all will be well,” says Lise Buyer, the founder of Class V Group, an advisory firm for IPOs. “But to the extent that investors will be more selective, they’ll look at path to profitability, and they’ll look at the valuations these companies took when they were private.” Then they’ll do their own math, suggests Buyer.

If the market is truly shifting, public market shareholders “won’t care what valuations companies achieved when they were private,” says Buyer. “They’ll only be willing to pay what they are willing to pay.”

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Dec
19

The first official keyboard and mouse for the Xbox is $250 and only works with 16 games

Gaming hardware and accessory company Razer announced the "Turret" on Wednesday, the first official keyboard and mouse designed specifically for the Xbox One console.

For some who prefer the good old-fashioned keyboard and mouse over console gamepad controllers for playing games, the news may seem like cause for celebration. It means you can finally use your preferred gaming control method on the couch with a powerful console that delivers better performance than an equivalently priced PC.

For others, Microsoft is making a controversial move to allow keyboard and mouse support on its games console.

There's a whole debate over the speed and accuracy advantages of using a keyboard/mouse over a gamepad. Pit a keyboard/mouse gamer against a gamepad gamer in a match, and it's likely the keyboard/mouse gamer will win. Some say that gamers who choose to use keyboards and mice on a console have an unfair advantage on a gaming platform where most players use controllers.

With that said, one of the games that will support Razer's Turret is the massively popular "Fortnite," a third-person-shooter game where players on any platform, including Xbox One, PlayStation 4, mobile, Nintendo Switch, PC, and even Macs, can play together in the same online match. So far, there hasn't been any massive upheavals regarding a PC player's advantage with a keyboard and mouse over another player on console, or even on mobile, where the controls are arguably the most limited or difficult to use.

The Turret sports a $250 price tag, which is wildly expensive when Microsoft's Xbox One controller goes for $50. Even Microsoft's premium Elite Xbox One controller is less expensive at $150.

The Razer Turret is available for pre-order now from the Microsoft Store, and it's estimated to start shipping March 31, 2019.

For now, you can check out the $250 Razer Turret and all it details below:

Original author: Antonio Villas-Boas

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Jun
05

Scooter startup Bird has authorized sale of $200M in shares in latest funding round

In the wake of reports that Google didn't follow normal procedure in the development of a censored search product for China— with execs said to have circumvented standard company procedures and shut out important legal and security staffers from deliberations — the search giant has announced a revamping of its internal review processes.

On Tuesday, Google announced that it has established a formal process to review new AI-based initiatives that involve sensitive policy questions. The review structure was announced as a part of the company's six-month update to its AI Principles that CEO Sundar Pichai released in June.

According to the report, one hundred reviews have been conducted so far, including a review of its facial recognition technologies for developers— which the company decided to sideline.

"In a small number of product use-cases—like a general-purpose facial recognition API — we've decided to hold off on offering functionality before working through important technology and policy questions," Google wrote.

Read more: Google's Dragonfly execs didn't take written notes and isolated internal teams to hide China search plans from other employees

A Google spokesperson confirmed with Business Insider that Project Dragonfly — its censored search engine project for China, which the company has not announced plans to formally release — was not one 100 projects referenced in the report and did not face the scrutiny of the newly announced review process. Google did not immediately respond to Business Insider's questions as to why that was the case.

As first reported by The Intercept on Monday, Google will likely halt the Dragonfly project over privacy concerns around the data sources it was using to build the product.

Google says that its new review process consists of three internal groups: an "innovations team" that oversees daily operations and initial assessments, "a group of senior experts" for technical guidance, and "council of senior executives" to make the most difficult decisions.

Google did not respond to Business Insider's request for names of executives that are apart of the review groups. Other tech giants, including Microsoft, have adopted similar council structures to oversee AI development.

Original author: Nick Bastone

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Feb
05

221st 1Mby1M Entrepreneurship Podcast With Andrew Romans, Rubicon Venture Capital - Sramana Mitra

The Insider Picks team writes about stuff that we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

Amazon

Everything seems to get more chaotic around the holidays — there's a rush at work and your calendar continues to fill up with events and parties to attend. Suddenly, it's the week before Christmas and you realize you forgot to find a gift. The good news is, you're not alone — plenty of us fall victim to last-minute gifting. You can still find thoughtful gifts that they'll appreciate, even just a few days before the holidays — we even have a list if you need some inspiration.

So you don't need to worry about finding the right gift, but you do need to worry about making sure that gift ends up under the tree. Luckily, if you like to shop online, many retailers have "buy by" dates that let you know when you need to purchase a product to guarantee it arrives by December 25.

Amazon is one of the major retailers that's released a detailed holiday delivery calendar.

It outlines what shipping options are available, and until when, to ensure delivery before Christmas. If you have Amazon Prime, you'll have a longer window for delivery. Even if you aren't a Prime member, you can sign up for a 30-day free trial of the service now, so you can take advantage of the holiday shipping options. The following dates only apply to the contiguous US, and of course, it's a good idea to double check the delivery dates in your cart at checkout to be sure you'll get your gifts in time.

Wednesday, December 19: Last day for standard shipping (Free for Prime members on qualifying orders. Learn more). Saturday, December 22: Last day for Prime free two-day shipping (No minimum purchase. Learn more). Sunday, December 23: Last day for Prime free one-day shipping (In select areas, on qualifying orders over $35. Learn more). Monday, December 24: Last day for Prime free same-day delivery (In select areas, on qualifying orders over $35; items ordered before noon will arrive by 9 p.m. Learn more). Also the last day for free two-hour delivery with Prime Now (In select areas. Learn more).

Subscribe to our newsletter. Find all the best offers at our Coupons page. Disclosure: This post is brought to you by the Insider Picks team. We highlight products and services you might find interesting. If you buy them, we get a small share of the revenue from the sale from our commerce partners. We frequently receive products free of charge from manufacturers to test. This does not drive our decision as to whether or not a product is featured or recommended. We operate independently from our advertising sales team. We welcome your feedback. Email us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Remi Rosmarin

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Mar
27

Now might be the perfect time to rethink your fundraising approach

Pinterest may follow Lyft and Uber to the public markets in the first half of 2019, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal.

The visual search engine and shopping tool is expected to tap underwriters in January and complete an initial public offering as soon as April. The company was valued at just over $12 billion with its last private fundraise, a $150 million round in mid-2017, and is on pace to bring in $700 million in revenue this year.

The company, founded in 2008 by Ben Silbermann (pictured), is also in talks to secure a $500 million credit line, per the report, not an uncommon move for a pre-IPO giant like Pinterest.

To date, the company has raised nearly $1.5 billion from key stakeholders such as Bessemer Venture Partners, Andreessen Horowitz, FirstMark Capital, Fidelity and SV Angel.

Pinterest recently reached 250 million monthly active users, up from 200 million in 2017.

This year, it launched several new features to make it easier for passive Pinterest users to actually buy products on the platform, and introduced the “following” tab, where users could view only the content from brands and people they follow. It also added the Pinterest Propel program as part of an effort to create more local content for its users, and implemented full-screen video ads to beef up its advertising options — an area where it competes directly with Facebook and Google.

2019 is poised to be a banner year for venture-backed IPOs. Both Uber and Lyft are in IPO registration, filing privately to go public within hours of each other earlier this month, and Slack, too, has reportedly hired Goldman Sachs to lead its 2019 float.

Pinterest declined to comment.

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Dec
19

Months after lavishing raises and bonuses, FedEx is pushing an employee buyout program

FedEx told investors on Tuesday that it will offer a voluntary buyout program for US employees.

Those who participate will receive four weeks of pay and healthcare coverage for every year of employment for a maximum of two years.

The Memphis, Tenn.-based company will spend $450 million to $575 million on buyouts, depending on how many participate. That will save FedEx $225 million to $275 million in fiscal 2020, it estimates.

It's quite a different tune than what FedEx was whistling just a few months ago.

In April, FedEx bumped compensation by $200 million among its 425,000-plus employees. Two-thirds went to hourly employees and the rest to salaried workers. The delivery company announced those annual raises, which normally take place in October, in January.

FedEx also announced contributions of $1.5 billion to its pension plan and domestic investments of $1.5 billion in January.

The announcement of $3.2 billion of increased spending followed the US tax reform that cut corporate rates.

Read more: USPS is hemorrhaging billions of dollars a year and it might sell the rights to your mailbox to turn a profit

But unexpected economic downturns in Europe and looming troubles in China sank FedEx's profit outlook, even though its domestic business has been flourishing. On Tuesday, FedEx dropped its 2019 earnings guidance to $15.50 to $16.60 per share. Previously, the company forecasted $17.20 to $17.80 a share.

"Global trade has slowed in recent months and leading indicators point to ongoing deceleration in global trade near-term," said Alan Graf, FedEx executive vice president and chief financial officer, on Tuesday.

The buyout program is one of FedEx's planned measures to cost cuts. FedEx will also limit hiring, reduce discretionary spending, and reduce international network capacity.

Are you a FedEx employee with thoughts on the buyout program? Contact the reporter at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Original author: Rachel Premack

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Dec
19

78 thoughtful and cool last-minute gifts you can still get on Amazon — all under $100

The Insider Picks team writes about stuff we think you'll like. Business Insider has affiliate partnerships, so we get a share of the revenue from your purchase.

Anyone who spends time in the kitchen or garden knows how much fresh herbs can upgrade a dish. Click & Grow

We almost always default to Amazon when we need last-minute, well, anything. Because we love procrastinating, we use it most frantically to buy gifts.

Once you're on Amazon, you can breathe a little and remind yourself to calm down — it's virtually impossible not to find a good gift that will arrive in time.

Many of these gifts in our list are available with fast Prime shipping, so don't stress too hard about your last-minute shopping — just remember that the sooner you order, the better your chances of a timely arrival. If you don't already have an Amazon Prime membership, you can sign up for a free 30-day trial to take advantage of free two-day shipping and dozens of other benefits.

Just remember that the sooner you order, the better your chances of a timely arrival. Amazon's detailed holiday delivery calendar notes that the last day for Prime free two-day shipping is Saturday, December 22.

Looking for more last-minute gift ideas? Check out all of Insider Picks' holiday gift guides for 2018 here.

Original author: Brandt Ranj

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Dec
19

Coinbase’s Earn.com becomes a crypto webinar with crypto rewards

Coinbase acquired Earn.com for at least $120 million back in April. And the company now plans to transform Earn.com into Coinbase Earn, a website with educational content to learn more about cryptocurrencies. Users who complete those classes will earn tokens.

Coinbase bought Earn.com partly so that it could appoint Earn.com co-founder and CEO Balaji Srinivasan as Coinbase’s CTO. The previous iteration of Earn.com wasn’t a priority for Coinbase.

Earn.com started as a service where you can contact busy people for a small fee. Busy people would get paid in cryptocurrencies to accept those requests. The platform quickly became a way to massively contact Earn.com’s user base for initial coin offerings and airdrops.

Coinbase Earn is launching today in private beta. But at the time of this article, the new Coinbase Earn service is not live (Update: Coinbase Earn is now live and is a separate website from Earn.com). Some Coinbase users will receive an invitation to the service. The company says that educational content will go beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum. Developing education pages for obscure cryptocurrencies makes sense as Coinbase plans to add dozens of cryptocurrencies over the coming months.

At first, there is just one track. Users can learn more about 0x (ZRX), a protocol that lets you create decentralized exchanges. Cryptocurrency trades can be executed without a centralized exchange thanks to 0x .

0x content includes video lessons and quizzes — and yes, writing this makes me feel like it’s 2005 and webinars are cool again. Even if you’re not invited to Coinbase Earn, you can view the content. But those who are part of Coinbase Earn will receive a small amount of ZRX at the end of the track.

Coinbase had previously launched a learning hub to understand the basics of cryptocurrencies.

Disclosure: I own small amounts of various cryptocurrencies.

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Dec
19

Devcon raises $4.5M to beef up adtech security

Adtech cybersecurity company Devcon announced today that it has raised $4.5 million in seed funding.

Over the past couple of years, ad fraud has become a bigger concern in the industry, but Devcon co-founder and CEO Maggie Louie said most existing solutions focus on things like verifying ad quality and confirming that impressions aren’t coming from bots. Devcon, in contrast, functions more like “a Norton AntiVirus of adtech,” preventing attempts by bad actors who are “using adtech as a catalyst to attack consumers and companies.”

In other words, Louie said Devcon works with ad networks and publishers to “eliminate 99 percent of the nefarious things that are making their way through the system.” It says it can block malicious ads on an individual basis, whether they include pop-ups and redirects or unauthorized tag injectors. Customers can then view the individually blocked ads and see where they came from, and there’s also a dashboard that shows how much money is being lost to fraud.

Louie pointed to the recent DOJ indictment of eight individuals allegedly involved in a digital ad fraud scheme as a sign that the issue is becoming more serious.

“Some of these attacks have some very concerning potential outcomes [for consumers], so being able to stop those before they get out is akin to stopping a water contamination at the source level,” she added.

At the same time, she argued that this is a particularly challenging area for security, because there’s been “a lack of crossover between cybersecurity and ad ops,” leading to a dearth of “security people or cybersecurity people who understand adtech.”

In contrast, the Devcon team combines media veterans like Louie (who was recently vice president of audience at the Athens Banner-Herald and also worked at the Los Angeles Times) with “white hat” hackers like co-founder and CTO Josh Summitt (who was previously on the ethical hacking team at Bank of America). It’s also hired former FBI Cyber Squad Supervisor Michael F. D. Anaya as its head of global cyber investigations and government relations.

In fact, Devcon says it assisted law enforcement in the first-ever conviction for online ad theft and money laundering, which resulted in a four-year prison sentence.

Devcon was founded in Memphis, Tenn., but has since expanded its headquarters to Atlanta, and it was part of this year’s Techstars Barclay accelerator in London. The seed funding was led by Las Olas VC — among other things, Louie said it will allow Devcon to further develop its machine learning technology to automatically identify emerging threats.

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Feb
05

Should Alphabet Split Up Into Four? - Sramana Mitra

PetaGene, the Cambridge, U.K.-based genomics data compression startup, has raised $2.1 million in further funding. Leading the round is U.S. venture firm Romulus Capital, with participation from other unnamed investors Silicon Valley and London. It brings total funding to $3.2 million.

Previous investor Entrepreneur First, the company builder backed by Greylock Partners, also followed on. PetaGene is an alumnus of EF6, although notably its two founders Dan Greenfield and Vaughan Wittorff already knew each other from their time at the Computer Laboratory in Cambridge University. Both hold PhDs from Cambridge University, too.

The new funding will be used by the company to grow its technical team based in Cambridge, its global sales team, and further expand PetaGene’s product offerings. I’m also told the new funding comes off the back of signing a large contract with a major undisclosed pharmaceutical company.

“As whole genome sequencing becomes more and more commonplace, the amount of data it creates places great strain on infrastructure. We help organisations with managing that data,” says PetaGene co-founder Dan Greenfield. “Through our compression technology, we make that data up to ten times smaller and faster to transfer for research and analysis, democratising precision medicine in the process”.

As it stands, the storage and processing of genomics data adds a significant extra cost and acts as a bottleneck for how fast data can be worked with. By some estimates genomics data will reach 40 exabytes per year by 2025 (exabytes, by the way, is a lot of data!). Therefore, better file compression technology has the potential to be a major enabler of innovation and research based on genomics, including developing new personalised medicine and treatments.

Key to this, PetaGene says its software enables compression of huge amounts of genomic data without compromising on access and data quality. The company claims its products go beyond regular data reduction techniques.

“We have dedicated extensive R&D to building extremely high performance compressors for genomic data, the result being that we outperform existing state-of-the-art compression, sometimes by a factor of 6x or more,” explains Greenfield.

“At the same time our customers want to be assured that the original file can be exactly recovered. Other compression solutions unfortunately aren’t able to restore the original file, and can even sometimes discard or modify internal content without telling their users. We’ve spent a great deal of effort to make sure we preserve the original file bit-for-bit, even providing commercial guarantees to our customers. I can’t really go into the details of our secret sauce here, but we’re very proud of our industry-leading performance, and we continue to keep improving it”.

Krishna K. Gupta, founder and general partner of Romulus Capital, says he was impressed by the part of the genomics value chain PetaGene is targeting, which led the firm to first invest in 2017. “Since then, their ability to successfully develop their product for the cloud and the strong interest from potential customers have only served to reinforce our view,” he says.

Meanwhile, PetaGene’s target customers span pharmaceutical companies, academic research institutions, clinical labs in hospitals, and genomic sequencing companies.

“Our clients pay for our software according to the savings they make,” adds the PetaGene co-founder. “The greater the reduction in size of their data files, the more revenue we receive, and the more they are saving in storage and data transfer costs. We don’t charge our clients for accessing or decompressing the compressed data”.

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May
25

Emotion-detection software startup Affectiva acquired for $73.5M

Candid, a teeth aligner startup that aims to make straight teeth more accessible and more affordable than Invisalign, is evolving its direct-to-consumer business. In addition to its at-home impression process, Candid recently started enabling people to come into a physical office to get their teeth scans completed.

Today, Candid is opening physical storefronts in San Francisco, Austin, Columbus, Ohio and Santa Monica, Calif. This is in addition to the two locations in New York City, one in Boston and one in West Hollywood, Calif. By the end of next year, Candid aims to have 75 locations across the U.S.

Candid, which 3D prints its FDA-approved aligners, is designed for people who need mild to moderate orthodontic work. It costs $1,900 upfront or $88 per month over two years, while braces can cost up to $7,000 and Invisalign can cost up to $8,000.

In Candid’s physical locations, customers can get their teeth scanned and order aligners within 30 minutes. The studios are operated by Candid’s orthodontists and dental assistants.

This is on the heels of Candid’s $15 million Series A round led by Greycroft last November. SmileDirectClub, a major competitor of Candid, raised $380 million in October at a $3.2 billion valuation.

But Candid doesn’t seem too fazed, having seen 15x growth year over year and expecting to potentially raise more funding in Q1 of next year, CEO Nick Greenfield told TechCrunch.

“The advantage is, if you don’t have access or live two hours away from the city, the impression kit is a viable and effective way,” Greenfield said. “But if you live in a city with a Candid studio, we recommend you come in for a scan.”

This is similar to Uniform Teeth’s strategy. Uniform Teeth, which raised $4 million earlier this year, is a clear teeth aligner startup that competes with the likes of Invisalign and Smile Direct Club. The startup takes a One Medical-like approach in that it provides real, licensed orthodontists to see you and treat your bite.

It’s worth noting that the in-person approach aligns more with the values of the American Association of Orthodontists, which has taken issue with the likes of SmileDirectClub and other teeth-straightening services that don’t require in-person visits with a licensed orthodontist.

As Candid grows and opens more physical locations, it wouldn’t be surprising if the company starts to try to funnel more people through the door than through the virtual shopping cart.

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Dec
19

Thought Leaders in Artificial Intelligence: Michel Morvan, Co-Founder of Cosmo Tech (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Michel Morvan: In general, the human brain is able to do two unique things. The first one is recognition. If I see you in a crowd, I will recognize you. It’s a black box because I’m not able to...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Dec
19

Dataiku raises $101 million for its collaborative data science platform

Dataiku wants to turn buzzwords into an actual service. The company has been focused on data tools for many years, before everybody started talking about big data, data science and machine learning.

And the company just raised $101 million in a round led by Iconiq Capital, with Alven Capital, Battery Ventures, Dawn Capital and FirstMark Capital also participating.

If you’re generating a lot of data, Dataiku helps you find a meaning behind data sets. First, you import your data by connecting Dataiku to your storage system. The platform supports dozens of database formats and sources — Hadoop, NoSQL, images, you name it.

You can then use Dataiku to visualize your data, clean your data set, run some algorithms on your data in order to build a machine learning model, deploy it and more. Dataiku has a visual coding tool, or you can use your own code.

But Dataiku isn’t just a tool for data scientists. Even if you’re a business analyst, you can visualize and extract data from Dataiku directly. And because of its software-as-a-service approach, your entire team of data scientists and data analysts can collaborate on Dataiku.

Clients use it to track churn, detect fraud, forecast demand, optimize lifetime values and more. Customers include General Electric, Sephora, Unilever, KUKA, FOX and BNP Paribas.

With today’s funding round, the company plans to double its staff. The company currently works with 200 people in New York, Paris and London. It plans to open offices in Singapore and Sydney, as well.

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