Mar
31

'Dumbo' wins the weekend box office, but performs worse than expected

Disney's "Dumbo" is having a bumpy takeoff.

It's uncommon for a Disney IP to not hit its industry box office projections or surpass it, but that's what's happened to the latest live-action remake of the Disney classic animated movie.

Tim Burton's look at lovable Jumbo Jr. (budgeted at $170 million, not counting marketing) took in an estimated $45 million over the weekend, that's below the $50 million most of the industry predicted it to make this weekend.

Playing on over 4,200 screens, Disney gave the movie the ability to be another one of its many hits, despite having a feeling audiences weren't going to run to see a movie about an elephant with big floppy ears who is split up from his mother. When reviews for "Dumbo" officially went online, Disney released its "Avenge the Fallen" character posters for its upcoming "Avengers: Endgame" Marvel movie, which went viral and numbed some of the negative "Dumbo" reviews (the movie is only sporting a 50% rating on Rotten Tomatoes).

Read more: Jai Courtney says he will be back playing Captain Boomerang in the James Gunn "Suicide Squad" movie

The "Dumbo" opening is a far cry from Burton's last live-action remake for Disney. 2010's "Alice in Wonderland" had a $116 million opening, strengthened by the 3D craze of the time. The movie went on to earn $1 billion. The opening for "Dumbo" didn't do as strongly as Disney live-action movies like 2014's "Maleficent" ($69.4 million) and 2015's "Cinderella" ($67.8 million), but did better than the studios' previous live-action remake, "Christopher Robin" ($24.6 million).

Coming in second place for the weekend was Universal's "Us," bringing in $33.6 million. The Jordan Peele movie has earned over $100 million domestically (it was made for $20 million). Peele is now the first African-American writer-director with multiple movies to gross $100 million (the other being "Get Out").

Neon's ambitious release of Harmony Korine movie "The Beach Bum" didn't turn out so well. The movie played on over 1,000 screens but only brought in $1.8 million. That's the lowest wide-release opening ever for a Matthew McConaughey movie (performing worse than the $4.4 million opening for his movie "Serenity" earlier this year).

Original author: Jason Guerrasio

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Jun
05

Best of Bootstrapping: Bootstrapping by Piggybacking from Romania - Sramana Mitra

Jeff Bezos' security chief Gavin de Becker said in a column published Saturday that the Saudi government had access to the Amazon chief's phone and gained private information from it.

De Becker wrote in The Daily Beast that he could confirm the connection after an extensive investigation into the publication, which was sparked by reports targeting Bezos in tabloids owned by American Media Inc.

"Our investigators and several experts concluded with high confidence that the Saudis had access to Bezos' phone, and gained private information," de Becker wrote. "As of today, it is unclear to what degree, if any, AMI was aware of the details."

In February, Bezos alleged in a widely-read Medium post that the National Enquirer tried to blackmail him by threatening to publish intimate text messages and photos. He also revealed that he had launched an investigation after a January exposé on his relationship with Sanchez to find out how the paper obtained the private information in the piece.

Read more: These are the main players in the explosive saga of Jeff Bezos' love life and his war with the National Enquirer

Bezos drew a connection in the letter between the kingdom of Saudi Arabia and American Media Inc., specifically accusing owner David Pecker of trying to blackmail him unless he publicly declared that the tabloid's reporting on him had no political motivation.

Days after Bezos' post, AMI attorney Elkhan Ambramowitz doubled down on the paper's commitment to their explanation that Sanchez's brother had been the only source, flatly denying any connection to the Trump administration and the media company's ties to Saudi Arabia.

De Becker points to an appearance by Abramowitz on ABC as perhaps the most concerted effort to throw blame on Sanchez's brother for the revealing materials in the January story, when he insisted that the source was "not Saudi Arabia" but a "person that was known to both Bezos and Ms. Sanchez."

This statement was marred by reports from the Wall Street Journal and Page Six that said the Enquirer came to Sanchez after it knew about the relationship, de Becker said, which suggests there were other sources.

Numerous outlets suggested that Saudi Arabia's alleged role in AMI's pursuit of Bezos was motivated by Bezos' ownership of the Washington Post, which created diplomatic issues for the country through its dogged reporting on the killing of its columnist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey, last October.

Bezos acknowledged in his February post that his ownership of the Post was a "complexifier," and De Becker wrote in the Beast that the Saudi government had been threatening Bezos since October.

The kingdom reportedly denies any connection, as well as any responsibility for Khashoggi's death.

De Becker also points to owner Pecker as a central figure in the paper's Saudi connections, ushering in glowing coverage for Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman, including an advanced copy of a magazine that the prince and his aides had a chance to edit.

De Becker's investigation reportedly relied on interviews with "current and former AMI executives and sources," "top Middle East experts in the intelligence community," "leading cybersecurity experts who have tracked Saudi spyware," "discussions with current and former advisers to President Trump," "Saudi whistleblowers," and "people who personally know the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman."

De Becker also wrote that he has turned over his investigation's findings to US federal officials and will be releasing no further details.

Original author: Ellen Cranley

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Jun
06

In a massive executive reshuffle, Google's core business just found its new MVP. But it also comes as search and ads face a building antitrust storm (GOOG, GOOGL)

Morgan Stanley is trying to tamper investor excitement for General Motor's Cruise robo-taxi unit.

In a note to clients this week, the Wall Street bank told clients that the self-driving department may not ever turn revenue if it can't remove backup safety drivers from the cars.

"While we think GM Cruise has important technological value, we urge investors to lower expectations on revenue generation and profitability of the unit," analyst Adam Jonas told clients in a research note.

"Taking nothing away from GM cruise, it is our understanding that the technology required to remove human drivers at an acceptable level of consumer safety is likely many years away," he continued. "And the legal and regulatory construct to support, even proven technology, may present even greater hurdles largely outside of GM Cruise's control."

Jonas is far from the first to downplay the hype around self-driving cars.

Take Google's Waymo, for instance, which is running the only consumer-facing, revenue-driving self-driving fleet. Even Waymo still has backup drivers in cars, making the service a de-facto Uber ride, for all practical purposes.

GM's hope is that Cruise can soon operate without a driver — and eventually in a car that doesn't even have a steering whee l. Federal regulators have opened up that possibility to the public in a 60-day comment period on GM's 15-month old proposal.

High-profile incidents, like the killing of a pedestrian in Arizona by an Uber self-driving car in 2018, have added to some skepticism of the technology. Still, given the massive number of road deaths each year in the US, advocates point to more safety with robots at the wheel than humans.

"We are constructive on the development of autonomous cars, but see room for the market to elongate the adoption curve scenarios," Jonas said. "Given the technological challenge as well as the legal and regulatory framework."

Original author: Graham Rapier

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Mar
31

The top 7 shows on Netflix and other streaming services this week

Average demand expressions: 25,549,346

Description: "DOOM PATROL reimagines one of DC's most beloved groups of Super Heroes: Robotman aka Cliff Steele (BRENDAN FRASER), Negative Man aka Larry Trainor (MATT BOMER), Elasti-Woman aka Rita Farr (APRIL BOWLBY) and Crazy Jane (DIANE GUERRERO), led by modern-day mad scientist Niles Caulder aka The Chief (TIMOTHY DALTON). Each member of the Doom Patrol suffered a horrible accident that gave them superhuman abilities, but also left them scarred and disfigured. Traumatized and downtrodden, the team found their purpose through The Chief, coming together to investigate the weirdest phenomena in existence. Following the mysterious disappearance of The Chief these reluctant heroes will find themselves in a place they never expected to be, called to action by none other than Cyborg (JOIVAN WADE), who comes to them with a mission hard to refuse. Part support group, part Super Hero team, the Doom Patrol is a band of superpowered freaks who fight for a world that wants nothing to do with them."

Rotten Tomatoes critic score (Season 1): 94%

What critics said: "This adaptation from executive producers Geoff Johns and Greg Berlanti is just as wonderful and weird as the comic." — Mark A. Perigard, Boston Herald

Season 2 premiered on DC Universe February 15.

Original author: Travis Clark

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Mar
31

The world's 'doomsday seed vault' is built to store every crop on the planet, but the icy area that protects it is at risk

The 2,100-person town of Longyearbyen endures four months of perpetual darkness in the winter, followed by four months of sunlight in the summer. The area boasts more polar bears than people and a bustling adventure-tourism economy. It's also home to the most important agricultural safeguard in the world.

Buried inside a mountain in Norway's Svalbard archipelago, the Global Seed Vault — often referred to as the doomsday seed vault — stores back-up seeds for every one of humanity's food crops. The vault's location and design protect its contents from the effects of sunlight, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, warfare, and political strife.

The idea is that in the event of a global disaster, people from anywhere in the world should be able to withdraw seeds for crops that they'd need to re-grow.

But Longyearbyen is no longer as invulnerable as scientists initially thought when it opened in 2008. A new report from the Norwegian Centre for Climate Services warns that increasing Arctic temperatures are putting the seed vault and the surrounding area at risk.

An 'insurance policy for the world's food supply'

Currently, the Global Seed Vault holds more than 983,500 seed samples — seeds from almost every country in the world — according to the Crop Trust, which oversees the vault in partnership with the Norwegian government. The group calls the vault the "ultimate insurance policy for the world's food supply."

The seeds are sealed in three-ply foil packages that are stored in boxes shelved inside the vault. Scientists can only access the vault via a 400-foot-long tunnel. To deposit seeds, they must pass through five doors with coded locks.

The only way into the vault is a 400-foot-long tunnel. AP Photo/John McConnico

The air in the Global Seed Vault is kept at a constant temperature just below 0 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 18 degrees Celsius). The vault was designed so that even if its power goes out, the seed contents would to stay frozen for 200 years. That's because the space is set more than 300 feet deep into the side of a mountain and buried in permafrost — a layer of soil that remains frozen all year long.

Read More: Staggering photos show what life is like in the world's northernmost town, where it's dark 4 months of the year and you're likely to run into a polar bear

But that built-in refrigeration mechanism is showing signs of fallibility.

The doomsday seed vault's natural refrigeration may melt away

In 2017, record temperatures and heavy rainfall caused melt-water to breach the vault's tunnel. Fortunately, the water didn't reach the seeds.

"A lot of water went into the start of the tunnel and then it froze to ice, so it was like a glacier when you went in," vault owner Hege Njaa Aschim told the Guardian at the time. "The question is whether this is just happening now, or will it escalate?"

Since then, Arctic temperatures have continued to go up due to climate change, and that's causing the permafrost to thaw. A new report from the Norwegian Centre for Climate Service warns that the future of the Global Seed Vault is even more up in the air than it was in 2017.

Longyearbyen endures four months of perpetual darkness during the winter.Mari Tefre/Svalbard Globale frøhvelv/Flickr

The report's authors project that surrounding air temperatures will increase by 18 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100 if greenhouse-gas emissions continue to increase at current rates. They also warn that instances of heavy rainfall in the Svalbard area will get more frequent, with 45% to 65% more annual precipitation than we see today. More water, of course, means more melting, floods, and avalanches.

What's more, the scientists reported that Svalbard has the warmest permafrost this far north in the Arctic. If emissions continue, permafrost near the surface (anything less than 32 feet deep or so) in western Svalbard is projected to thaw and perhaps completely disappear by the next century.

Even if emissions are reduced according to the Paris climate agreement goals, the Arctic permafrost is still expected to shrink by 45%, according to a report from the United Nations. That could create a feedback loop that would release trapped carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to additional warming.

As Aschim recently told CNN, "we can't trust the permafrost anymore."

Coastal ice melts in the city of Longyearbyen, in Norway's Svalbard Islands, on February 27, 2008. John McConnico/AP

Inger Hanssen-Bauer, the editor of the new report, told CNN that the climate in Longyearbyen is probably warming faster than in any other town on Earth. The town's annual average temperature about 120 years ago was 18 degrees Fahrenheit. Since then, the average has gone up by almost 7 degrees Fahrenheit — nearly triple the worldwide average increase of about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit (1 degree Celsius).

In anticipation of these challenges, the seed vault is getting expensive upgrades. The vault originally cost about $9 million to build, but subsequent upgrades will likely add up to more than 1.5 times that much — upwards of $12 million.

These upgrades include the construction of a new concrete access tunnel, as well as a service building to house emergency power and refrigeration units.

"It is a great and important task to safeguard all the genetic material that is crucial to global food security," Norway's Minister of Agriculture and Food Jon Georg Dale said last year.

However, Norwegian government officials haven't yet given a timeline for the completion of the new projects.

Original author: Aylin Woodward

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Jun
06

This floating tiny home can be 3D printed in only 48 hours, and is designed to last 100 years — see inside

Way back in 1998, developer Epic Games took the technology behind its hit PC first-person shooter "Unreal" and released it as the first version of the Unreal Engine.

Nowadays, Epic Games is best known as the proprietor of the smash-hit "Fortnite," the most popular game in the world, with some 250 million players. Less visibly, the Unreal Engine has grown over the years to become the foundation for blockbuster games including "Kingdom Hearts 3," the forthcoming "Mortal Kombat 11," and, naturally, "Fortnite" itself. Epic says that 7.5 million developers are using Unreal Engine today.

Now, Epic Games is putting the pieces in place to bring these two worlds closer together, CEO Tim Sweeney told Business Insider in a conversation at the Game Developers Conference earlier in March. Ultimately, he says, this plan stands to take "Fortnite" beyond its roots, and make it a true online world.

"We see that as 'Fortnite' evolves, it's evolving beyond being a game," said Sweeney. He says "there'll be more and more interesting things happening in that world" that will allow it to "evolve in ways that previous games haven't."

Read more:The CEO behind 'Fortnite' says the entire video game industry is missing the 'inevitable' trend as the barriers between consoles and smartphones get obliterated

The big idea, says Sweeney, is that Epic views "Fortnite" as sort of the ultimate expression of what the Unreal Engine is capable of — its graphics and cross-platform support, sure, but also its ability to support large-scale online events like the massively popular Marshmello concert, which attracted 10 million players.

10 million gamers tuned in for a virtual Marshmello concert in "Fortnite." "Fortnite"/Epic Games

On the other side of the coin, Sweeney says that "Fortnite's" Creative mode— where players work together to build, rather than battle — has attracted 100 million players since it launched in December. Sweeney says that he sees this Creative mode as an extension of the Unreal Engine; a version that's "super easy to use" for all players.

The ultimate goal, says Sweeney, is to establish a "continuum" between "Fortnite" and the Unreal Engine, to ease the transition from playing "Fortnite," to building in "Fortnite," to developing advanced content with the Unreal Engine.

"We're a digital ecosystem company. 'Fortnite' is the 250 million user version of the tool, which is a game and also a creative platform for 100 million people for building content. Which is an impressive number and bigger than any game engine by far," Sweeney said. "And then 7.5 million people have been in Unreal Engine 4, the super-high-end content creation tool."

Creative mode lets "Fortnite" players team up to build, not battle. Epic Games

The ultimate goal, says Sweeney, is to build "something like the Metaverse" — the idea for a "collective virtual shared space," as Wikipedia puts it, popularized in science fiction novels like Neal Stephenson's "Snow Crash" and Ernest Cline's "Ready Player One." Indeed, "Fortnite" has been likened to a social network unto itself, as a place for kids especially to hang out online.

Read more:The CEO behind 'Fortnite' used to be one of Microsoft's fiercest critics. Now, he explains why he thinks it's a 'new company' under CEO Satya Nadella.

"It can't be just a game and it can't be just an engine, it's gotta be something that's he runs the full gamut," Sweeney said. "Nothing like this exists right now, but we're seeing it emerge this year. It's exciting."

It should be noted that Epic isn't the only one trying to build the Metaverse: Roblox, the massively popular online gaming platform, has a similar line of thinking around combining gameplay with creative tools to make something bigger. Facebook's Oculus VR unit, too, has ambitions around building social, virtual worlds.

Sweeney says that Epic has a responsibility to "maintain a great experience" and "set the tone" for players as it gradually broadens its scope, but that the committed "Fortnite" player base forms a strong foundation from which to build.

"'Fortnite' has, I think, the most positive gamer community that's ever emerged from a game at this scale," said Sweeney. "I think it's partly because of the great community, and partly because of the tone set by the game. Half the time when you're eliminated, you're laughing, because the situation that happened is hilarious."

Original author: Matt Weinberger

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Jun
06

Startups Weekly: The George Floyd protests come home to the tech industry

China is the world's largest electric vehicle market. In 2018, it was responsible for 56% of global electric vehicle sales with 1.2 million units sold.

In an effort to capture a greater percentage of that market, Tesla is building a factory in Shanghai, the first that will be wholly-owned by a foreign car company. For now, Tesla is shipping vehicles to Chinese customers from the United States.

Read more: The CEO of China's largest electric-car company compares Tesla to high fashion — and says his company is the 'girl next door'

Tesla's primary domestic competition in China's luxury electric-vehicle market is Nio, which released its first vehicle, the ES8 SUV, in 2018. The ES8 has a 220-mile range, up to seven seats, and a starting price of around $67,000.

Though it was first released in 2015, Tesla's Model X SUV is the company's closest competitor to the ES8.

Here's how the two vehicles compare.

Original author: Mark Matousek

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Mar
31

This CEO explains how the hottest trend in software development helped his startup take off and raise $50 million in new funding

It's taken a while, but Sauce Labs may finally be right where it wants to be.

The San Francisco startup offers a cloud-based service that allows developers to automatically test their web and mobile applications for bugs. It specializes in offering programmers the chance to test their applications on multiple simulated devices or browsers at once, allowing them to markedly speed up the process of development.

The company, which has about 300 employees and development teams in Berlin and Warsaw, announced last that it's secured $50 million in new, late-stage venture funding from Riverwood Capital. The new company's new funds came with a valuation north of $380 million, or more than double what it was in 2016 when Sauce Labs last raised capital.

The company launched 10 years ago, but it didn't really take off until an industry-wide shift in app development took root, said Charles Ramsey, Sauce Labs's CEO. But now that it has, business is booming, he said.

"The market is changing rapidly, to our advantage," he said.

Sauce Labs is benefitting from an Agile approach

In recent years, a growing number of companies have embraced so-called Agile software development. In Agile, big software projects are divided up into discrete chunks. Small teams typically work on those different pieces of the projects in parallel and by iterating on them repeatedly. The process usually allows organizations to develop software faster than with older methods, in which development is generally done sequentially and only after each step is completed, and allows them to more rapidly fix problems and introduce new features.

One of the things that can delay Agile development, though, is testing each new feature in and iteration of an app, Ramsey said. In the past, testing was a largely manual process, requiring actual human beings — whether volunteers or paid employees — to try out apps and features, he said. That can be a slow, potentially expensive or logistically challenging, and often incomplete; it's often hard to test all of an app's features in a set amount of time.

Read this:$25 billion Atlassian is releasing a new tool to help developers release code faster as it takes on GitHub

That's where Sauce Labs' service comes in. By offering automated testing and allowing organizations to tap into multiple simulators simultaneously, its service can quicken the process and allow it to be more comprehensive.

"Testing is a constraint to really great Agile development," Ramsey said, "and so we're getting a lot of attention."

It has more offerings in the works

Sauce Labs' service, which it offers as a subscription, allows organizations to test their apps to make sure they work across different operating systems, browsers, and devices. In addition to its simulators and emulators, it also offers a service that allows organizations near the end of the development process to try out their apps on actual devices via manual testing.

And the company, whose offerings have already become popular in the financial services, health care, and media industries, is planning to offer an even more comprehensive service, Ramsey said. It's developing a feature that would allow programmers to test out small snippets of code. The feature reflects how the development environment continues to evolve as more organizations are embracing Agile, he said. Those organizations are wanting to test their code more often and earlier in the development process, he said.

Sauce Labs plans to continue to add on to its offerings, including through an acquisition that Ramsey said is imminent but declined to discuss. It should have the opportunity to do so, thanks to this newest round of funding.

"We want people to be able to test at every step of the development process with the appropriate tool," Ramsey said.

Got a tip about a startup or other tech company? Contact this reporter via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., message him on Twitter @troywolv, or send him a secure message through Signal at 415.515.5594. You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

Original author: Troy Wolverton

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Mar
31

Your AirPods are probably disgusting — here's how to clean them (AAPL)

You probably wouldn't wear the same outfit day after day without tossing it in the laundry, just like you wouldn't eat off of the same fork without washing it. But most people probably can't say the same for their earbuds.

When Business Insider swabbed 22 pairs of earbuds last year to see what types of germs might be residing on them, Columbia's microbiology lab found that two samples had grown yeast and one sample had grown a type of bacteria associated with dirt. While that test did not include Apple's AirPods, it's still in your best interest to keep yours clean.

See below for tips and tricks on how to clean your AirPods. Be careful to avoid getting liquid in any of the AirPods' openings, especially the charging ports, since they're not water resistant.

Original author: Lisa Eadicicco

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Mar
31

Here's what you need to know about Jumia, the Alibaba of Africa that's getting ready to IPO on the New York Stock Exchange (JMIA)

One of the first unicorns out of Africa is about to go public.

Jumia Technologies' public debut is expected any day now. On Thursday, Nigerian-founded company set a price range of $13 to $16 per American depository share, according to its updated offering paperwork. At the mid-point of its price range, the company, which plans to have its shares trade under the ticker symbol "JMIA," would raise $195.8 million in its IPO at a $1.1 billion valuation.

It expects to raise another $56 million in a private sale of stock to Mastercard Europe at the same time as its public offering. Morgan Stanley is leading the IPO, working with Citigroup; Germany's Berenberg Capital Markets; RBC Capital Markets; Raymond James; Stifel, Nicolaus; and William Blair.

Jumia was born in Nigeria, but is based in Germany

Jumia was founded in 2012 in Lagos, Nigeria. It eventually grew into the conglomerate known as the Africa Internet Group, run by cofounders and co-CEOs Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara.

On January 31, 2019, AIG officially renamed itself Jumia Technologies after its popular Nigerian e-commerce website, one of a handful of different companies it previously operated under the AIG umbrella. The company has sold off some of those subsidiaries to other owners, including online real estate website Jumia House.

Despite its African founding and focus, Jumia's global business is incorporated and has its headquarters in Berlin.

The startup's biggest and earliest backers include Africa-based Mobile Telephone Networks, which owns 29.7% of Jumia; Germany's Rocket Internet, which owns 20.6%; and the cellular company Millicon, which owns 9.6%, according to the documents Jumia has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Among its other investors is Goldman Sachs.

Jumia offers e-commerce, logistics, and payments

Like Amazon in the US and Alibaba in China, Jumia has established itself in Africa as the go-to marketplace for a wide variety of goods and services. On its sites, customers can purchase clothing and electronics, order food for delivery, and even book hotel rooms.

But Jumia offers more than just consumer shopping sites. It also helps sellers ship their goods to customers via its logistics service and offers them a payment service.

The company has 41 million active customers, and 81,000 active retailer partners who sell through its sites.

Jumia brought in $149.6 million in revenue last year, which was up 39% from 2017, according to its filings. But like Lyft and many other technology companies going public lately, Jumia is still operating in the red. It lost $195 million in 2018, compared to about $189 million the year before.

Read this:READY FOR LYFT-OFF: Lyft to IPO on Friday at whopping $21 billion valuation

The company claims to be the "only" successful e-commerce business working across Africa. But it believes it has more room to grow as internet penetration increases across Africa and as online shopping grows in popularity.

"As Africa becomes more affluent and 'connected,' we believe that African consumers will increasingly become aware of online shopping," the company said in its latest SEC filing. "Moreover, organized retail is underdeveloped across most of the continent, making the distribution of goods less efficient than in other regions in the world. "

Jumia's marketplace is available in 14 African countries, which represent 72% of the continent's overall gross domestic product, according to the filing. Residents of those countries accounted for 74% of the €1.4 trillion in consumer spending across Africa, Jumia said in the filing.

"Though still nascent, we believe that e-commerce in Africa is well positioned to grow," the company said.

Original author: Becky Peterson

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Jun
09

Sign up for tomorrow’s Pitchers & Pitches session

It all started when 32-year old Hiroki Takeuchi, then a freshman at Oxford University, got dragged along to an event in his first week of university.

A student in the year above corralled Takeuchi, who had just started studying Mathematics, into attending a gathering of the Oxford Entrepreneurs in 2004.

"There wasn't really like a tech scene in the UK," Takeuchi told Business Insider. His awareness of tech startups was basically nil, but his experience at the Oxford Entrepreneurs event sparked an interest in starting a company.

"It was through that society that I kind of got quite involved, learnt all about startups in general, but also in particular tech startups," he told Business Insider.

Takeuchi's journey towards becoming a founder took off when in the summer following his first year, he managed to swing an internship with a programme which had little to no profile in the UK — Y Combinator.

Y Combinator to GoCardless

Two of Takeuchi's friends, brothers Harjeet (Harj) and Kulveer Taggar, went out to Silicon Valley in 2007 to join Y Combinator, a startup incubator famous for producing prodigies such as Airbnb, Dropbox, and Twitch.

Read more: Sam Altman, one of the world's most influential tech investors, has stepped down as president of Y Combinator

Harj and Kulveer were setting up a company called Boso, a student marketplace. "It was like eBay for students," Takeuchi said, and luckily he talked his friends into letting him come along for the ride as an intern.

While in the Valley, Harj and Kulveer ended up clubbing together with Patrick and John Collinson — who would go on to found payment company Stripe — on a new company called Auctomatic, a super-niche inventory management system for eBay power sellers (people who sell high volumes of items on eBay).

Takeuchi interned for a summer, doing odd jobs and learning about how tech startups work. "I was just doing loads of random stuff," he said, adding that all of them were learning on the fly. "They were building this product that none of them had ever used before, none of them were eBay power sellers."

He recalled that, at one point, the group bought a bunch of lasers from China to sell on eBay to gauge how their product was working. After that summer of odd jobs and lasers, he knew what he wanted to do.

"I got the startup bug," he says.

Chance encounters with the GoCardless founders

After graduating from Oxford, Takeuchi didn't feel he was quite ready to found his own company — so he took a placement at consultancy firm McKinsey. He picked the placement specifically because after two years, McKinsey would shove him out the nest.

In his first week at McKinsey he met his future cofounder: Matt Robinson. "We immediately hit it off, " he remembers. "Through the whole of that [time] we would think about various ideas and brainstorm things on whiteboards and all that sort of stuff — ultimately none of it came to anything."

When the time came to leave McKinsey the pair knew they wanted to work together, but they ended up roping in another cofounder — Tom Blomfield, the CEO of unicorn fintech Monzo.

Read more: Meet the 35 most exciting young entrepreneurs, engineers, and advisors in UK fintech

Blomfield had been in the year above Takeuchi at Oxford. Blomfield was a cofounder of Boso with Harj and Kulveer Taggar, but had been on a year abroad in Paris so his and Takeuchi's paths came close but never crossed.

By strange coincidence, however, Blomfield was just due to start at McKinsey as Takeuchi and Robinson were getting kicked out and setting up shop. Lucky for them, Blomfield was moving between consultancy jobs and so had a few months of gardening leave.

"If you know Tom, you know it doesn't take long to realise there's no way the guy's going to take three months of gardening leave," Takeuchi says.

Monzo cofounder Tom Blomfield. Noam Galai/Getty Images for TechCrunch

Blomfield never started at McKinsey, and Takeuchi is acutely aware of the interwovenness of GoCardless' origins. "It's all weirdly connected," he laughs.

The trio started work on what was then an idea for a group-payments startup, and Takeuchi's knowledge of Y-Combinator proved a massive advantage for the fledgeling firm. "I remember when Tom and I were first starting out and I said, 'it's a no brainer, we're doing YC,' and they were like 'what's YC,'" he says.

In 2011 GoCardless was born, a startup focussing on building tech to ease recurring payments between businesses. Takeuchi still vividly remembers his first fundraise, which he managed at the age of 24.

"The first fundraise was super hard," he says. How did they pull it off? "A lot of mistakes and persistence," he says, chuckling. Since that first raise, GoCardless has secured $122 million of investment, $75 million of which came in February.

"It always comes down to momentum... especially [in] the last 10 years it's so cheap to go and start something. You can go and spin up servers with AWS at almost zero cost. With the click of a few buttons you can write code and build products that can go and be used by... millions of people from your bedroom," he says.

Both his cofounders have now left, leaving Hiroki at the helm of GoCardless. Matt Robinson departed in 2015 and now heads up home sale startup Nested, while Blomfield left in 2013 and now runs Monzo.

Takeuchi describes the breakup as amciable. "I don't think [Blomfield] wanted to ever be involved in a B2B company. When we started GoCardless, we weren't aware enough of what we were doing to really realise what we're building," he explains.

He also says Blomfield talked to him about Monzo while they were still starting GoCardless. "We were like, retail banking sucks, there must be a better way to do this."

Takeuchi radiates pride that Robinson and Blomfield have branched out an set up their own companies. "That's one of the coolest things about it all," he said.

He speaks highly of Monzo. "In 10, 15, 20 years, what bank is not going to be a technology company? I think there's going to be a fundamental shift, and I think Monzo are doing a great job of leading the way with that."

A catastrophic accident

Since GoCardless was founded in 2011, British fintech has exploded. "I feel like I've been really lucky to be part of that," Takeuchi says. "We ended up raising money mainly from Europen investors, but it was through learnings in America that we were able to go and do that. That, and a lot of rejection."

GoCardless' recent $75 million raise, included backing from GV (previously Google Ventures), Salesforce, and Adam Street Partners.

This was GoCardless' first raise following a life-changing event for Takeuchi. In September 2016, the founder was left paralysed after a cycling accident. He now uses a wheelchair, and was back to work just six months after the accident.

Takeuchi prefers not to dwell on the accident or his recovery during his interview with Business Insider. He told TechCrunch's Steve O'Hear in 2017 that he occasionally has flashbacks to the accident but, for the most part, he doesn't remember it.

At the time, he told O'Hear that he was dialling into board meetings just 24 hours after major surgery. Told by doctors it would take him six-to-12 months to complete a rehab programme, Takeuchi did the job in just seven weeks. He gave a speech at the GoCardless Christmas party in December 2016, just two months after the accident.

Takeuchi was back to work just six months after the accident. GoCardless

Along with its latest fundraise, GoCardless also announced it's been working on a system facilitating international recurring payments. Takeuchi says the company has been working on it for a few years, stitching together all the different financial systems across different countries.

"It's clearly not done, there's hundreds of countries around the world and each one has different systems, but by the middle of this year we'll cover about 70% of the global recurring payment volume," he says.

The shadow of Brexit

While GoCardless has been busy stitching together a global payments system, its been having to allow for major political upheaval which could radically change financial systems in the UK.

Brexit has forced GoCardless' development teams to make technical provisions for all the potential outcomes, and Takeuchi said they've had to make "drastic changes" on the backend.

"It's been frustrating because we've had to divert resources and investments into doing things that I hope will have been a complete waste of time, but we've taken the approach of saying — no matter what happens, even if we crash out at the end of this month, we need to be in a position where we can support our customers without there being any kind of blip in the service," he explains.

"If we crash out then all financial services companies don't know what's going to happen with passporting and financial regulation. We assume we won't be able to passport anymore, [but] who the f--k knows," he says.

"Brexit will end up being a missed opportunity for London and the UK more broadly," Takeuchi adds. "It's not gonna shrink [the London tech scene] because there's just too many companies growing very fast that are not likely to move out of London. What worries me for the London ecosystem is more the next companies — will they start in London or will they go somewhere else?"

He says that he's already starting to see an impact on recruitment for GoCardless, as European hires are becoming more difficult to convince. People are apprehensive about taking up a job in Britain. That's a problem when half of your product developers come from Europe.

"It's potentially a lot harder to scale up big product development teams in London when so much of the talent has historically come from across Europe," he says.

Frustrated though he is by Brexit, Takeuchi doesn't seem daunted. He says engineers have always been tough to hire, "but we're quite good at it." Takeuchi has come a long way since those early days in Oxford.

Original author: Isobel Asher Hamilton

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Mar
30

DC Universe revealed the release date for 'Swamp Thing,' its next original series

DC Universe announced when its next original series will premiere on the streaming platform at Wondercon in California on Friday.

"Swamp Thing" will debut on DC Universe May 31. The series is based on the DC Comics character of the same name created by writer Len Wein and artist Bernie Wrightson.

DC Universe also revealed that the second half of "Yong Justice: Outsiders" will premiere July 2, and "Titans" season 2 and the animated "Harley Quinn" series will debut this fall.

A first-look image from "Star Girl," which premieres in 2020, was also revealed. The image is below:

"Stargirl" debuts on DC Universe in 2020. DC Universe

DC Universe — a streaming platform that includes original TV shows, classic DC Comics movies, and digital comic books — has been off to a hot start with its original shows since it launched in September.

Its first three originals — "Titans," "Young Justice: Outsiders," and "Doom Patrol"— have consistently been among the seven most in-demand streaming shows in the world, according to weekly data provided to Business Insider by Parrot Analytics.

A spokesperson told Business Insider that the biggest upticks in free-trial sign-ups, aside from the initial launch, have corresponded with the premiere of new series.

Original author: Travis Clark

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Mar
30

Marc Benioff and Jeff Lawson have jumped into a fight over a rich San Francisco neighborhood's efforts to block a homeless shelter from being built on a parking lot

An oh-so-San Francisco battle is going on right now that involves the city's massive homeless population, rich property owners, even richer tech executives, crowdsourced funding and an empty parking lot.

With the vocal help of San Francisco native Marc Benioff, the billionaire founder and CEO of Salesforce, San Francisco a few months ago passed a bill to raise taxes on tech companies to help the homeless. Proposition C, which is expected to raise $300 million for homeless programs, passed with overwhelming support.

And now the city has plans to spend some of that money by building a 200-bed shelter on an empty parking lot owned by the city on the Embarcadero, known as Seawall Lot 330. But residents from some nearby neighborhoods of Rincon Hill and South Beach are fervently protesting those plans. In hearings and town halls some of the residents say they support help for the homeless, just not near where they live, making them known as the NIMBYs, not-in-my-backyard-ers.

In typical San Francisco fashion, they turned to crowdfunding to help them, a GoFundMe campaign called Safe Embarcadero for All. Its goal is to raise $100,o00 or more to pay for legal bills to fight the shelter. By Friday afternoon, nine days after the campaign began, they raised over $70,000 from 175 people, and that sum was growing hourly.

So on Friday, another San Francisco resident, William Fitzgerald, fired up a competing GoFundMe called Safer Embarcadero for All. It's raising money for the one of the city's largest homelessness organizations, the Coalition on Homelessness, which is involved in the plans to build and run the shelter.

Read more: Here's who's getting rich from Lyft's enormous IPO

Twilio CEO Jeff Lawson Twilio But its underlying purpose is really to oppose the NIMBYs. "For those who don't have the backstory: we're fighting an effort by residents of one of the richest neighborhoods in San Francisco to block a homeless shelter on a parking lot," Fitzgerald explained in the campaign.

He's also asking donors to show up at those town halls and support the idea of the shelter.

It didn't take long for "Safer" to come to the attention of Benioff, who donated $10,000 to the campaign.

He was joined by Jeff Lawson, founder and CEO of Twilio, another tech CEO known for taking public stances on social issues. Lawson was also an outspoken advocate of Prop C and he also donated $10,000 to "Safer."

Each one of them tweeted about their support of the GoFundMe to their combined one-million-plus followers and urged them to do the same.

And just like that, in one day, the "Safer" campaign started trending, collecting about $75,000 (and still climbing rapidly) compared to Safe's over $70,000 (and still climbing).

As Lawson wrote in his tweet, "This isn't about the money, it's about the soul of our city, fighting for our most vulnerable citizens, and supporting our leaders like [San Francisco Mayor Breed] @LondonBreed."

Original author: Julie Bort

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Jun
01

JBS meatpacker ransomware attack likely by Russian criminals, U.S. says

Old Facebook posts by Mark Zuckerberg have disappeared — obscuring details about core moments in Facebook's history.

On multiple occassions, years-old public posts made by the 34-year-old billionaire chief executive that were previously public and reported on by news outlets at the time have since vanished, Business Insider has found. That includes all of the posts he made during 2007 and 2008.

Reached for comment, a Facebook spokesperson said the posts were "mistakenly deleted" due to "technical errors."

"A few years ago some of Mark's posts were mistakenly deleted due to technical errors. The work required to restore them would have been extensive and not guaranteed to be successful so we didn't do it," the spokesperson said in a statement.

"We agree people should be able to find information about past announcements and major company news, which is why for years we've shared and archived this information publicly — first on our blog and in recent years on our Newsroom."

These disappearances, along with other changes Facebook has made to how it saves its archive of announcements and blog posts, make it much harder to parse the social network's historical record. This makes it far more difficult to hold the company, and Zuckerberg himself, accountable to past statements — particularly during a period of intense scrutiny of the company in the wake of a string of scandals.

The very nature of the issue means it is extremely challenging to make a full accounting of what exactly what has gone missing over the years. The spokesperson said they didn't know how many posts in total were deleted.

The curious case of Mark Zuckerberg's vanishing Facebook posts

In April 2012, Facebook acquired Instagram — a now-pivotal moment in the growth of the Menlo Park, California technology giant. Multiple news reports from the time quoted from a public post that Zuckerberg made on his timeline about the acquisition — but that post now inaccessible.

The links to that post from old news articles no longer work, and it's nowhere to be seen on his profile.

It was an important document in the history of Facebook, particularly given Zuckerberg promised that "we're committed to building and growing Instagram independently" — a commitment he has since walked back. Facebook is now integrating the photo-sharing app into itself ever-more closely, and tensions around this contributed to the departure of Instagram's two cofounders in September 2018.

READ MORE:Facebook exec Andrew Bosworth broke the social network's rule on using your real name for 8 years

The most drastic deletions involved entire years. Throughout both 2006 and 2009, Zuckerberg was regularly active on the social network — but there are no posts visible of any kind for the two full years in between. The spokesperson confirmed that all the posts during 2007 and 2008 were deleted.

This is the error message you see when you click on a link to one of Mark Zuckerberg's vanished Facebook posts. Facebook

Another, specific example from later on: Facebook's beloved head chef Josef Desimone died in a motorcycle crash in July 2013. TechCrunch reported at the time that Zuckerberg shared the news in a post on Facebook. However, that post is now inaccessible as well.

Facebook would go on to throw a party in Desimone's memory at its headquarters the following month. Hundreds of people were invited, and booze flowed freely — and it subsequently descended into chaos. As Business Insider previously reported, multiple fights broke out among attendees, which security staff believed were gang-related.

Numerous other posts by Zuckerberg from these time periods remain publicly available.

Facebook has also made it harder to navigate its archives of old announcements

Lastly, there have been issues accessing Facebook's archive of older blog posts.

In years past, Facebook had a dedicated blog that announcements would often be posted to and which was navigable by month; an archived example of a post is available here, via the Internet Archive. But at some point — it's not clear when, exactly — Facebook launched its new "Newsroom," a repository for its key announcements, and broke the public links to old blog posts.

Now, when you click on a link to a blog post included in an old news story, it redirects you to the Newsroom. The Newsroom doesn't have copies of many of these old blog posts, meaning there's no easy way to access them.

They do still exist in one form — as a "note" saved to Facebook's public "Facebook" page on the social network. But until today there was no centralized archive through which to browse them, like what was available for the Facebook blog, or like what exists today for Newsroom posts.

Instead, to read a specific one, you had to either know about it already and search for keywords on Google, or scroll back through the Facebook page's thousands of posts over the years.

After Business Insider reached out for comment, Facebook added a "notes" tab to the Facebook page to access them. However, as of press time, no notes are showing up in it.

READ MORE: Facebook secretly explored building bird-size drones to ferry data to people with bad internet connections

Take, for example, the 2006 launch of the News Feed, which is now an advertising juggernaut that now makes billions of dollars for the company. Zuckerberg tried to quash early user backlash against the News Feed with a blog post called "Calm down. Breathe. We hear you," but a link to it in a TechCrunch news report from the time now just redirects to the Newsroom homepage.

There's no copy of the blog post in the Newsroom, and it's currently only available as a note from Facebook. Here's how it looked prior to the closure of the blog, according to the Internet Archive.

The net effect of this change to the archives was to drastically obfuscate Facebook's historical record — making it far harder to find past statements and announcements from the company about itself.

Mark Zuckerberg's content has gone AWOL before

This isn't the first time Zuckerberg-related material has disappeared without warning from Facebook.

In April 2018, TechCrunch reported that messages sent by the CEO were being deleted from other people's inboxes without their knowledge or consent — a feature that wasn't available to ordinary Facebook users at the time.

And back in November 2016, public posts from Zuckerberg about the media and Facebook's role in the 2016 US election also disappeared, The Verge reported at the time.

At the time, a spokesperson told the Verge that their removal was an accident and subsequently restored them.

Do you work at Facebook? Got a tip? Contact this reporter via Signal at +1 (650) 636-6268 using a non-work phone, email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., Telegram or WeChat at robaeprice, or Twitter DM at @robaeprice. (PR pitches by email only please.) You can also contact Business Insider securely via SecureDrop.

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Original author: Rob Price

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Jun
09

How to get a free week of Disney Plus, Disney's ad-free streaming service

India fired a missile into space on Wednesday, struck one of its own satellites, and destroyed the spacecraft.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is running for reelection, hailed the successful test as "an unprecedented achievement" that makes India "a space power" and the fourth nation ever to develop the capability.

But these anti-satellite missile tests leave behind large debris fields in space that can threaten other satellites.

India's Defence Research and Development Organization downplayed that risk, telling Reuters that the debris field "will vanish in no time" and "should be dying down within 45 days." But Lt. Gen. David Thompson, vice commander of the USAF Space Command, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that "they are tracking about 270 different objects in the debris field," according to Spaceflight Now.

"Likely, that number is going to grow as the debris field spreads out and we collect more sensor information," he said.

A software engineering company called Analytical Graphics Inc. (AGI) has now created its own simulation of the debris created by the anti-satellite test. The company — which "visualizes objects in space and time with unprecedented accuracy," according to its website— posted the video (embedded below) to YouTube on Thursday.

The simulation uses what the company calls "standard breakup models" to approximately illustrate the clouds of debris particles that resulted from the test.

"We modeled 6,500 fragments, basically those that were larger than half a centimeter," Tom Johnson, the vice president of engineering for Analytical Graphics Inc., said.

The remnants of 'Mission Shakti'

Modi announced the test, called "Mission Shakti," during a live broadcast on Wednesday morning. The test destroyed a satellite called Microsat-R that weighed around 1,600 pounds.

"Until now, only US, Russia, and China could claim the title. India is the fourth country to achieve this feat," he said during the broadcast.

Any collision in space creates a cloud of debris, and incredible energies are involved in anti-satellite events. A head-on collision can contain the energy of a car hitting another car at more than 22,000 mph — more than a dozen times as fast as a bullet shot from a gun.

This can hurl countless fast-moving pieces into space; traveling at such velocities, even a stray paint chip can disable a satellite.

Read more: The US government logged 308,984 potential space-junk collisions in 2017 — and the problem could get much worse

Fortunately, Microsat-R was destroyed at a relatively low altitude of about 175 miles. The closer a spacecraft is to Earth when it's destroyed, the quicker its debris will fall back and burn up.

The satellite was lower than the International Space Station's orbit of 250 miles, as well as that of a weather satellite that China destroyed in 2007. (Debris from the Chinese test still orbits the planet today.) This test was about 40 miles higher, however, than the altitude at which the US destroyed one of its satellites in 2008.

Right now, radar and other systems can track debris about the size of a golf ball or larger. Much smaller objects are difficult to track, yet still pose a threat to spacecraft.

The US Strategic Command's Joint Force Space Component Command is "actively tracking and monitoring the situation," a spokesperson told Business Insider on Wednesday.

What the debris simulation of the 'Mission Shakti' test shows

Part of the animation, which we learned about from Michael Sheetz of CNBC, is shown above. It shows the anti-satellite missile's "kill vehicle" — what is essentially a giant bullet slug — and its path in red. Microsat-R and its orbit are shown in green.

"The Microsat-R satellite was launched on January 24, 2019, with a mass of 740 kilograms [1,630 lbs]. It's a fairly large satellite," Johnson said.

He added that the simulation makes conservative assumptions, such as a downward collision "to minimize the debris fragments." The calculations assume that the collision happened at a height of 175 miles (Microsat-R's last known altitude), and that the missile and satellite collided at a "closing velocity" of about 22,000 mph.

Although the model estimates the number of tiny debris pieces to be over 6,000, Johnson noted that "in reality, we can't track the objects that small, so the number of trackable objects is gonna be significantly less."

A narrator of the video said AGI is waiting for US Strategic Command to release information about the 270 objects being tracked.

"We look forward to the release of that information so that we can update our debris model and the rest of our analysis," the narrator said. "Stay tuned."

For now, based on the simulation, the test appears to have kicked some debris to higher orbits around Earth (as shown below).

Business Insider asked multiple spokespeople from NASA and the Department of Defense if any debris is known to pose a threat to spacecraft, but did not get a response.

"We immediately started providing public notice on our Space Track website and will provide direct notification to spacecraft operators if those satellites are under threat," Lt. Gen. Thompson told the Senate on Wednesday. "I will also say, at this point in time, the International Space Station is not at risk."

You can watch AGI's full animation below.

This story has been updated.

Original author: Dave Mosher

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Mar
29

Here's how much the top Salesforce executives make in salaries, bonuses and stock (CRM)

It's that time of the year when salaries, bonuses and stock awards are being approved for the top executives at Salesforce.

Last Friday, Salesforce's board approved cash bonuses for its top executives, including co-CEOs Marc Benioff and Keith Block. These are based on corporate performance goals and also the performance of these executives in the past year. These executives will be paid their bonuses on April 15.

The Compensation Committee on the Board of Directors also approved their salaries for the next fiscal year, as well as their target bonus. This became effective on Feb. 1.

Salesforce executives will receive a basket of different equity awards. Stock options allow executives to purchase shares at the fair market value on the day they were granted. Performance-based stock units will vest if they are employed through April 15, 2022 at a percentage of the number of shares, based on performance. The others are subject to vest on a four-year schedule.

If you've ever wondered how much people at the top of this $121.9 billion cloud-based software company make, here's what you need to know:

Original author: Rosalie Chan

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Mar
29

Lyft is deeply unprofitable — but that isn't stopping eager Wall Street investors (LYFT)

Lyft lost $911 million last year.

That's more than the company lost in 2017, when it lost $688 million, and more than 2016's loss of $682 million.

It's almost counterintuitive, on the surface at least, that big-name investors would be clamoring at the gate and packing hotel penthouses to get a piece of a company so deeply in the red, but that's exactly what's happening with Lyft's initial public offering.

The stock was priced at $72 Thursday evening and quickly soared to above $87 per share when it began trading Friday morning, translating to a massive market value of roughly $29 billion.

Read more: Lyft's founders are set to make more than $1 billion in the company's IPO

That interest was fueled by bullish targets set by some of Wall Street's first analysts to launch coverage of the stock. Only four analysts have set price targets or valuations for the stock, but none of them are bearish on the company's long-term prospects.

"While profitability is key," the Wedbush analyst Dan Ives said, "we expect more driver incentives to be offered by Lyft over the next few years as the company needs to expand its drivers and peak house in the US, especially with Uber aggressively going after this market in major cities."

In other words, investors and analysts are focused on growth above all else.

And there's plenty of room to run. Lyft has pitched investors on its "transportation-as-a-service model" that could eventually upend traditional car ownership as we know it. It's a big ask, but that "golden opportunity," as Ives puts it, could be worth the $1.2 trillion American consumers spend on transportation each year.

And Lyft's executives, for their part, don't seem very worried about the negative cash flow either. When pressed by Bloomberg's Eric Newcomer on Thursday, the company's cofounder Logan Green dodged the profitability question: "We cannot talk about the future," he said, "but what we can tell you is that we have set ourselves up to deliver long-term shareholder value."

To be sure, profits are still on analyst's minds, but a money-making investment can easily be made on a money-losing company. Take Tesla, for instance, which at one point held a book valuation bigger than some of the US's largest automakers despite its negative cash flow.

"Lyft has a more focused geographical footprint and product portfolio than its largest competitor, but appears to be several years away from profitability," Tom White, an analyst at D.A. Davidson, told clients this week in publishing his ignition with a buy rating.

"Near term, Lyft's ability to reduce incentives for drivers and riders (critical tools for creating balance in its ridesharing marketplace) will be a key lever to its near term profitability outlook," he added.

Original author: Graham Rapier

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Mar
29

Sheryl Sandberg says that Facebook might place restrictions on who can stream live video in the wake of the Christchurch attack (FB)

Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg said on Friday the company was looking to place restrictions on who can go live on its platform based on certain criteria in the aftermath of the Christchurch massacre.

The company will monitor who can go "Live" on Facebook depending on factors such as prior community standard violations, Sandberg said in a blog post here.

A lone gunman killed 50 people at two mosques in New Zealand on March 15, while livestreaming the massacre.

Facebook has identified more than 900 different videos showing portions of the 17-minutes of carnage and has used its existing artificial intelligence tools to identify and remove hate groups in Australia and New Zealand, the blog said.

Last week, the social networking giant said it removed 1.5 million videos globally that had footage of the New Zealand mosque attack in the first 24 hours after the attack.

Earlier this week, one of the main groups representing Muslims in France said it was suing Facebook and YouTube, accusing them of inciting violence by allowing the streaming of the video.

Facebook, the world's largest social network with 2.7 billion users, has faced growing discontent over its approach to privacy and user data amid increasing concerns over its advertising practices.

Original author: Reuters

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Mar
29

A 'Call of Duty' player who tricked police in a fatal 'swatting' incident has been sentenced to 20 years in prison

A man convicted of making dozens of false reports to police has been sentenced to more than 20 years in federal prison. The "swatting" case of Los Angeles native Tyler Barriss, 26, garnered national attention after police in Witchita, Kansas shot and killed 28-year-old Andrew Finch outside of his home on December 28, 2017.

On that day, Barriss called Wichita Emergency Services and claimed that Finch had killed his father and was holding his brother and mother hostage. Barriss and Finch did not know each other; Barriss was using a tactic called "swatting" to target a different Kansas native using an old address.

Swatting uses false reports to encourage police to use force against an innocent citizen. In this case, Barriss sent police to the Finch family home to face a threat they believed to be lethal. Later, authorities would determine that the call was made following an argument over a game of "Call of Duty: WWII."

A subsequent investigation showed that Barriss had called in fake bomb threat to the FBI headquarters and Federal Trade Commission as well as schools, malls and emergency workers in more than a dozen states. Barriss pleaded guilty to 51 federal charges in total, based on the false reports and instances where he used people's credit cards without permission.

Barris faced additional state prosecution for his numerous false reports but charges in California and Kansas were dismissed as a part of his plea deal. Barriss will serve the full 20 year sentence and an additional five years of supervised release. The Wichita Eagle reports that he will pay a $5,000 fine to the Kansas Crime Victim's Compensation fund, which will then be given to the Finch family.

Two more "Call of Duty" players are always awaiting trial for their alleged role in the incident. Casey Viner of Ohio and Shane Gaskill of Wichita were reportedly the two "Call of Duty: WWII" players who sparked the incident. The two argued on Twitter, and when Viner threatened Gaskill with physical violence, Gaskill provided Viner with an old address claiming that he would be there waiting to accept Viner's challenge. Viner then forwarded the address to Barriss and encouraged him to make the swatting call.

"I take full responsibility in what happened to him," Barriss said during the sentencing, according to the Wichita Eagle. He added, "If I could take it back I would. ... I'm just so sorry for that."

Original author: Kevin Webb

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Mar
29

Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes is reportedly engaged to a 27-year-old hotel heir. Here's what we know about their relationship.

Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes is engaged, Vanity Fair's Nick Bilton reported.

Her fiancé is William "Billy" Evans, a 27-year-old hotel heir, according to the Daily Mail. Evans has also worked for driverless-car startup Luminar Technologies.

"She wears his M.I.T. signet ring on a necklace and the couple regularly post stories on Instagram professing their love for each other," Bilton wrote in a February Vanity Fair article. "She reliably looks 'chirpy' and 'chipper.'"

Holmes and Evans have reportedly been living in a luxury apartment building in San Francisco while Holmes awaits trial. Holmes, 35, was once a Silicon Valley superstar and the youngest female self-made billionaire after founding the blood-testing startup Theranos. But when the flaws and inaccuracies of the company's technology were revealed, Theranos and Holmes were charged with "massive fraud."

Read more: The rise and fall of Elizabeth Holmes, who started Theranos when she was 19 and became the world's youngest female billionaire before it all came crashing down

Holmes and Evans reportedly share a Siberian husky named Balto, according to Brides magazine.

The pair has not publicly confirmed their relationship, but they were seen partying at Burning Man in 2018, according to the Daily Mail.

Holmes arrives at court in California in January 2019. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

In 2014, Holmes told The New Yorker that she "doesn't date."

But in 2019, it came out that the Theranos founder was previously in a relationship with the former president of Theranos, Sunny Balwani, Business Insider's Lydia Ramsey previously reported. The two kept their relationship a secret at the time, but both later confirmed it in deposition tapes reported by ABC News in January 2019. Holmes said in the tapes that the two were together "for a long period of time" but that they didn't disclose their relationship to investors.

Holmes was previously in a relationship with the former president of Theranos. REUTERS/Mike Blake

Their relationship was of interest to John Carreyrou, an investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal and the author of "Bad Blood."

Read more: The mysterious story of former Theranos president Sunny Balwani, who was in a relationship with Elizabeth Holmes and now faces criminal charges

"It instantly became clear to me that she was lying to her board about this romantic relationship that she was having with the number two of the company, who by the way, was also about 20 years older," Carreyrou previously told Business Insider.

Business Insider reached out to Evans for confirmation but did not immediately hear back.

Original author: Katie Warren

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