Jan
08

Singer Grimes posts nude Instagram photo of her looking pregnant and comments about being 'knocked up,' leading to speculation that she and Elon Musk are having a child

Grimes may have announced she's pregnant in an Instagram post. The singer posted a nude photo on Wednesday afternoon that appeared to show her pregnant with a fetus Photoshopped on her stomach. The post didn't include a caption, but in a comment on the post, Grimes appeared to imply that she is, in fact, pregnant.The meaning behind the photo is unclear, however: Grimes is known for trolling, and she has new music coming out in February. The photo could simply be promotional. However, people are already speculating that Grimes is pregnant with on-again, off-again boyfriend Elon Musk's baby.Representatives for Grimes and Musk weren't immediately available to comment. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Grimes may have just announced that she's pregnant.

The singer and producer, who is dating Tesla CEO Elon Musk, posted an unusual (and not safe for work) Instagram post on Wednesday afternoon that showed her naked with a fetus Photoshopped on her stomach. The post didn't include a caption, but in a comment on the post, Grimes appeared to imply that she is, in fact, pregnant. 

The original post stayed up for a few hours before it was apparently taken down, likely because it violated Instagram's standards on female nudity. Grimes reposted a censored version of the photo Wednesday evening. 

The meaning behind the photo is unclear. Grimes is known for trolling on social media, and given that the singer is planning to release a new album, "Miss Anthropocene," in February, this could be a reference to the new music or an album cover.

Grimes/Instagram

The couple have been dating on and off since 2018, when they made their relationship public by walking the red carpet at the annual Met Gala. Musk has five sons from a previous marriage. 

Representatives for Grimes and Musk did not immediately respond to requests for comment. 

Moments after the photo was posted, social media was ablaze with people speculating whether the pregnancy is real and whether Grimes and Musk are having a baby together:

—Alex Tumay (@alextumay) January 8, 2020
—beating a dead horsegirl (@w000rm) January 8, 2020
—esme (@killbiill) January 8, 2020
—??????? (@DracarysWonder) January 8, 2020
—? (@amakabot) January 8, 2020
—Jessica Rex (@JessicaReXxx) January 8, 2020

 

 

Original author: Avery Hartmans

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Mar
05

Thought Leaders in Cyber Security: Node International CEO Neil Gurnhill (Part 3) - Sramana Mitra

Happy New Year, and welcome back to Trending, the newsletter where we highlight BI Prime's biggest tech stories of the week. I'm Alexei Oreskovic, Business Insider's West Coast bureau chief and global tech editor.

I just returned from the snowy climes of Wyoming, land of jagged peaks, bison chili and phenomenal backcountry skiing. If you want to talk tech, or skiing, hit me up at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

And if this is your first time reading Trending, here's how you can get it in your inbox every week.

This week: Welcome to the '20s

The '20s are already off to a frenetic start, with a former auto CEO fleeing Japan stowed away in a box, a leaked internal Facebook memo about Trump, and, of course, more SoftBank drama. 

As Megan Hernbroth reported this week, Zume, the SoftBank-backed startup developing pizza-making robots and valued at $1 billion, is conducting big layoffs. Big is a relative term. And in this case, it might actually under represent the situation. As Megan reported, Zume had planned to cut up to 400 employees, which would represent an astounding 80% of its staff. On Wednesday Zume convened the troops and announced that the official number of jobs cut would be 360, but apparently noted that it was creating 100 new positions in its packaging unit.

SoftBank Group Chairman Masayoshi Son The Asahi Shimbun via Getty Images

How a company reported to be seeking new funding at a $4 billion valuation just a few weeks ago is now in a position where it must take such extreme measures will no doubt be part of a fascinating history one day. But if you've been following Megan's reporting, it was clear that the signs of trouble at Zume had been mounting. 

Other big SoftBank portfolio companies have also had to make cuts, most notably WeWork and Uber. And media reports this week also flagged difficulties at GetAround, Oyo and Improbable, three other SoftBank bets.

For SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son and his Japanese tech conglomerate, it's a humbling turn of events after a bold effort to conquer Silicon Valley. And with reports that SoftBank has reneged on some startup investments, SoftBank risks losing goodwill in the valley. 

There's a lot at stake for Son and SoftBank in 2020. Will Son double down, as he did with WeWork last year, and try to salvage his empire? Or will he take his cue from Carlos Ghosn and make a hasty getaway from Silicon Valley in the dead of night?

Read Megan's full story here:

SoftBank-backed robotic pizza startup Zume plans to lay off up to 400 employees — 80% of its staff— and won't renew its Seattle lease amid widespread restructuring to stop burning cash

The deal of the decade, or maybe, the century

A new year (and decade) is a natural time for prognostications, from the slightly probable to the wildly fanciful.

As Ashley Stewart reports, Wall Street's equity research departments are already as busy as beavers building hypothetical scenarios in the cloud-computing business. Just as Amazon's AWS cloud business could potentially be spun out from the retail giant, it's not unreasonable to consider Google, or Alphabet, spinning out its cloud computing business. 

Even more interesting though, is the possibility for Google Cloud to go shopping. Among the potential acquisition targets bandied about by analysts are Palo Alto Networks, Workday, and ServiceNow. But as Ashley reports, RBC floats an even more eye-popping deal: Salesforce. 

Robert Galbraith/ Reuters

Such a deal would be valued at $250 billion according to RBC, making it one of the biggest acquisitions ever. And Google would need to lever itself up with debt to make it happen. But, as Business Insider first reported, Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian has set a goal of becoming the No.2 player in the cloud market within five years. And super-sizing with Salesforce would instantly accomplish that. 

Meanwhile, Paayal Zaveri has a nice look at what observers think is in store for Salesforce this year (and getting acquired by Google doesn't seem to be high on the list).

Read the full story here:

Google could acquire Salesforce and spin out its cloud business to catch up to Amazon and Microsoft, analyst predicts

Amazon, a decade of swole

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

You'll also want to check out Eugene Kim's fascinating look at Amazon's past decade as told through a series of charts. 

Just as Jeff Bezos's personal physique has noticeably bulked up to action-hero proportions in recent years, so has Amazon's business gone through an amazing transformation, beefing up existing guns and popping new muscles and veins where none previously existed. 

Consider: In 2010, Amazon's headcount was roughly 34,000 employees. Today, the company employs 750,000 full and part-time workers.

If you're in a business that competes with Amazon (and these days, who isn't), this is a must-read. 

Read the full story here:

25 charts that show Amazon's explosive growth over the past decade

Here are some other tech highlights:

How Apple's push to rule the smartphone industry has made Apple Store employees feel like robots

Tech legend John Chambers explains how his new startup Pensando will face off with Amazon in a 'David versus Goliath' cloud showdown

Challenge to recognise world's first AI inventor heads for High Court battle

Facebook abandoned a red-hot app after promising to keep it relevant, and it shows how far the social network goes to stay dominant

VCs predict that remote work, celebrity startup investors, and an exodus from Silicon Valley are the big tech trends to watch in 2020

And more big stories from across the BI newsroom:

Meet the 36 rising stars of Madison Avenue revolutionizing advertising

Publicis spent $30 million to build Marcel, an AI tool that was supposed to 'break the industry.' Instead, it's been hampered by confusion, ridicule, and delays

Mark Minervini crushed markets with a 33,554% return over 5 years. Here are the select books out of the 4,000 in his library he says most fueled his success.

Thanks for reading, and remember, if you like this newsletter, tell your friends and colleagues they can sign up here to receive it.

— Alexei

Original author: Alexei Oreskovic

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Jul
17

Netflix calls speculation that it's moving into selling advertising 'false' (NFLX)

Boomerangs are a popular way to share content on Instagram, both in stories and in permanent posts. 

A Boomerang is a burst of photos that plays back and forth to create a video that continuously replays on a loop. 

There are two ways to post a Boomerang to Instagram – users can post to Stories or to their Feed directly from the Boomerang app; or they can post to Stories using Instagram's built-in Boomerang function. Instagram does not have a built-in Boomerang function to post on the Feed.

Either way, it's easy to make a Boomerang on an iPhone. Here's how. 

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

iPhone 11 (From $699.99 at Best Buy)

How to make a Boomerang on an iPhone using the Boomerang app

1. Download and open the Boomerang app on your iPhone.

2. Press and hold the center button to record the Boomerang. The video will immediately play back. If you're happy with the quality, select the "Instagram" button at the bottom.

Select "Instagram" to share a Boomerang on Instagram. Stephanie Lin/Business Insider

3. Click whether you'd like to post to Stories or to your Feed.

4. The Instagram app will then open. Post the Boomerang as you would any other post, either to the Feed or Stories. You can add text, locations and tags to the post. 

How to make a Boomerang on iPhone using Instagram 

1. Open Instagram on your iPhone. 

2. Click on your profile picture to begin adding to stories. 

3. Select "Boomerang" at the bottom of the screen. 

Slide to "Boomerang" to start shooting one on Instagram. Stephanie Lin/Business Insider

4. Press on the center button to record your Boomerang, and then post as you would any other Instagram story.

 

Original author: Kelly Laffey

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May
28

Wonderschool’s Chris Bennett and investor Marlon Nichols will break down the path to seed-stage funding

Amazon-owned Ring has fired four employees over the past year for abusing access to customers data, the company told lawmakers in a letter Monday, which was posted online by NBC reporter Cyrus Farivar.

Ring, which makes home security cameras, said it received four complaints regarding instances where employees accessed information that "exceeded what was necessary for their job functions." In each instance, Ring said it carried out investigations and, upon discovering that employees had violated company policies, terminated them.

The company's security and privacy practices have come under fire in recent months following a wave of cyberattacks and reports of lax internal policies around employees' access to customer data.

Following those reports, a group of Senators sent a letter to Amazon and Ring in November asking the companies to clarify their security and privacy practices. The companies responded in a letter sent Monday where they also disclosed data access abuse instances and subsequent terminations.

Original author: Tyler Sonnemaker

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Jan
08

How to connect to a Wi-Fi network on your Android phone or tablet, and disconnect when you're done

You can connect to Wi-Fi on an Android device through the "Connections" (or "Network & Internet") menu, which is in your Settings app.If you're trying to connect to a Wi-Fi network that's locked, you'll need to have its password. Some networks may also require you to log in via your internet browser. Once your Android phone or tablet has been connected to a Wi-Fi network, it'll automatically reconnect to that network whenever it's in range.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

If you have a cap on how much mobile data you can use, you should know how to connect your Android phone to a Wi-Fi network. Using Wi-Fi won't cost you anything, won't count towards your data cap, and will often give you faster internet speeds. 

Connecting your Android phone or tablet to Wi-Fi is a quick and easy process. And once your Android knows a network, it will store that network's password and automatically reconnect whenever you're in range.

Here's how to connect.

Check out the products mentioned in this article:

Samsung Galaxy S10 (From $899.99 at Best Buy)

How to connect to Wi-Fi on an Android device

1. Open your Android's Settings app by swiping up from the bottom of the screen and selecting it.

On most Android devices, you can find the Settings app by swiping up from the bottom of the screen. Steven John/Business Insider

2. Tap the word "Connections."

On some Android devices, this tab may be labeled "Network & Internet." Steven John/Business Insider

3. In the new menu, tap "Wi-Fi" and then look under the "Available Networks" heading.

4. Select the Wi-Fi network that you want by tapping it. If it's locked, enter its password, and then tap "Connect."

Wi-Fi networks that are password protected will display a lock icon. Steven John/Business Insider

If you're trying to connect to the Wi-Fi at certain public locations — this includes sports arenas, airports, libraries, and more — you may need to also agree to the network's terms and conditions. You can usually do this by opening your internet browser and trying to load a new page, where you'll be automatically redirected to the Wi-Fi network's login page.

To disconnect from a Wi-Fi network, tap the name of the network you're currently connected to from the screen depicted above and tap "Forget."

Original author: Steven John

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Jan
08

Grubhub said to explore sale in boon to Uber, DoorDash and others

Shares of Chicago-based food delivery service Grubhub are sharply higher in regular trading today after The Wall Street Journal reported that the company has hired external advisers to explore its “strategic” options, inclusive of a possible sale.

Investors, heartened by the news, bid its equity up 17% as of the time of writing, valuing the firm at around $57 per share, or $5.2 billion.

The news comes during a difficult time for the company. Grubhub’s value fell sharply last October after it reported its third-quarter earnings. At the time, the company cited new and rising competition as growth-related difficulties, as well as noting that, in its view, “the supply innovations in online takeout have been played out and annual growth is slowing and returning to a more normal longer-term state.” It expected “low double digit” growth in the future.

Investors dumped its shares after reading the growth warnings, sending Grubhub equity from the high $50s per share to the mid-$30s. Since then, the company’s share price has recovered; with today’s news, Grubhub is effectively back to where it was before the Earnings Report from Hell.

So what?

All this may sound a bit boring, frankly, to regular TechCrunch readers. What do Grubhub’s troubles have to do with startups, private capital and high-growth companies? A lot, as it turns out.

Grubhub competes with a number of startup darlings, including Postmates (trapped in Schrodinger’s Exit at the moment), DoorDash (aggressively valued, under fire for payment practices and theoretically considering a direct listing despite unprofitability) and Uber Eats (a deeply unprofitable portion of Uber’s larger Red Ink empire).

So what happens to Grubhub could impact two unicorns looking to go public, and another post-IPO unicorn looking to shore up its income statement. As CNBC noted following the Grubhub report, “Uber shares also spiked on the news, as investors bet consolidation in the crowded food-delivery industry would help the company.”

Consolidation could assist remaining players squeeze out more margin from their market. More margin means smaller losses. And as smaller losses are hot now in the IPO world, the move could help some yet-private companies get public.

After years of beating each other up, one key player in the on-demand food delivery space is willing to sell, or join up with someone else. That’s big news, given the sheer scale of the venture bet on companies that compete with Grubhub.

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Jan
08

Building the Helium Mesh Network in the Mid-Atlantic

As you might have seen in an earlier post, Foundry Group is helping to bring the Helium Network to Boulder. Another Helium fan – James Fayal – reached out to me about his effort to do the same in his hometown of Baltimore, as well as DC and Philly.

I’m hopeful that some of the readers of this blog live in Baltimore, DC, or Philadelphia and are interested in participating in the Helium rollout. If you fit this description, fill out the Mid-Atlantic Application.

James wrote me a little more about his background and motivation for doing this, which follows.

While I’m a consumer product founder by trade, I’ve been involved in various crypto projects since 2013. I’m excited about Helium because it is one of the first projects with significant real-world use-cases and the community has grown exponentially since they started selling hotspots earlier this year. 

In short, Helium is building a ‘mesh’ network for LongFi data transmission, which can be used by IoT devices to transmit and receive data over long distances. You can see more about the technology here. 

We’re looking to work with 15 – 25 locations in or around the cities of Baltimore, DC, and Philadelphia to host hotspots. We’ll be covering the cost of the unit and work with you to optimize the hotspot’s reach in the area. In return, we’ll be providing hosts with a % of the network’s tokens ‘mined’ by the hotspots.  

If we’re successful, we could be one of the first regions of the United States with comprehensive coverage on the network!

To apply to be a host, fill out the Mid-Atlantic Application. Supply is limited and the Helium company is close to stocking out of their current batch of hotspots, but James will do his best to work with as many hosts in the area as possible. 

And, if you are curious about the Boulder rollout, I’ve got 47 unallocated Helium hotspots in my office that are going to be provisioned in the next week. We will then start deploying them around town in the second half of January. While we have more than 47 people interested, if you have an interest and haven’t signed up on the Boulder Helium Hotspot Application, go for it so we know about anyone who wants to participate.

Original author: Brad Feld

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Jan
08

Virtual Incision Corporation raises $20 million for its abdominal surgery robot

Over the past several years, surgical has become one of the hottest — and best funded — categories in robotics. That’s thanks, in no small part, to the massive success of companies like Intuitive. Virtual Incision Corporation has also had a pretty solid fundraising streak since its 2006 founding.

Today the Lincoln, Neb. startup announced its latest funding round. The $20 million Series B+ brings its total funding up to $51 million. This time out, things were led by Bluestem Capital, with participation from PrairieGold Venture Partners and Genesis Innovation Group.

VIC’s primary product is the MIRA (“miniaturized in vivo robotic assistant”), a two-pound robot designed for minimally invasive abdominal surgery. Among is biggest value propositions is the relative portability of the product, versus many existing surgery robots, which are downright massive.

“We designed the MIRA Surgical Robotic Platform with the fundamental understanding that minimally invasive procedures offer tremendous benefits to patients,” president and CEO John Murphy said in a release. “We believe our portable and affordable abdominal robot has the potential to bring these benefits to many more patients. The planned IDE clinical study of MIRA is the critical next step for the company.”

The round will to helping prep the product for an Investigational Device Exemption (IDE) with the FDA. VIC will also use it to help get the device ready for commercialization.

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Mar
05

Will ‘New Retail’ help D2C brands succeed offline?

The Daily Crunch is TechCrunch’s roundup of our biggest and most important stories. If you’d like to get this delivered to your inbox every day at around 9am Pacific, you can subscribe here.

1. ClassPass, finally a unicorn, raises $285 million in new funding

ClassPass launched in 2013 to give people an easier way to work out. The company partners with boutique fitness studios, letting users search through that inventory and book a class all from their smartphone.

Since launch, ClassPass has implemented several different business models, trying to find the right unit economics. More recently, the company has introduced variable pricing — instead of users paying a monthly fee for three, five or 10 classes per month, they could use their virtual ClassPass currency to sign up for classes and pay based on the demand around those classes.

2. Sonos sues Google over alleged patent infringement on smart speaker tech

The lawsuit specifically calls out Google for five alleged patent violations, including technologies that allow their speakers to wirelessly communicate and synchronize with each other. Sonos also claims that Amazon is infringing on its IP, but that the company can only afford to take on one tech titan.

3. App Store customer spending hit record $1.42B from Christmas Eve through New Year’s Eve

Apple this morning released a year-end retrospective of its Services business, which includes the App Store, Apple Music, iCloud and, new in 2019, Apple Arcade, Apple TV+, Apple News+ and Apple Card. To date, App Store developers have earned more than $155 billion, Apple says — and a quarter of those earnings came in the last year alone.

4. Here’s everything Google announced at CES 2020

Just about everything Google is showing off at CES 2020 is focused around the company’s voice-powered AI helper, Google Assistant, with new features like webpage reading, scheduled actions, sticky notes and speed dial.

5. What to expect in digital media in 2020

As we start 2020, the media and entertainment sectors are in flux. New technologies are enabling new types of content, streaming platforms in multiple content categories are spending billions in their fight for market share and the interplay between social platforms and media is a central topic of global political debate. (Extra Crunch membership required.)

6. Getaround is latest SoftBank portfolio company to announce layoffs

The Information, which first reported the news, pegs the layoffs at 150 employees, amounting to around a quarter of the company. In the report, CEO Sam Zaid seemed to lay at least some of the blame for the layoffs on the effects of SoftBank’s recent struggles.

7. Ben Horowitz will explain how to create and sustain culture at TC Early Stage SF

In addition to authoring multiple books with practical advice for entrepreneurs, Horowitz sits on the boards of 14 portfolio companies, including Okta, Lyft, Foursquare, Genius, Medium and Databricks. So there should be plenty to learn from him at TC Early Stage come April 28 in San Francisco.

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Jan
08

Thought Leaders in Online Education: Greg Smith, CEO of Thinkific (Part 2) - Sramana Mitra

Sramana Mitra: What trends are you seeing on your platform? What are the top topics that people are teaching and what are the top topics that people are learning? Greg Smith: This is a question I get...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  13 Hits
Jan
08

AI Unicorn ByteDance Faces Rough Overseas - Sramana Mitra

Best known for its video sharing app TikTok and news aggregating site Toutiao, ByteDance is the most valuable AI unicorn. Last year, it raised a whopping $1.3 billion at a valuation of $75 billion....

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Original author: Sramana_Mitra

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Jan
08

AvePoint lands $200M investment to expand market for Microsoft cloud governance tools

While Microsoft cloud services such as SharePoint, Microsoft Teams and Office 365 are used widely by large organizations, the products don’t come standard with an enterprise-grade control layer. That’s where AvePoint, a Microsoft independent software vendor (ISV), comes in. Today, the company announced a $200 million Series C investment.

The round was led by TPG Sixth Street Partners, with additional participation from prior investor Goldman Sachs and other unnamed investors. The round brings the total raised to $294 million, according to the company.

The company says that the equity investment has a couple of purposes. First of all it wants to provide some liquidity for long-time investors. Secondly, it wants capital for company expansion.

Specifically, it provides a set of governance and migration services for Microsoft SharePoint, Teams, Office 365 and other Microsoft SaaS products. The company has been around for 18 years, but transitioned about five years ago to protecting online services, chief marketing officer Dux Raymond Sy explained. Prior to that it concentrated on on-prem services like SharePoint backup.

Today, AvePoint takes care of a few key management tasks. First of all, it provides a policy layer on top of Office 365, Microsoft Teams and SharePoint to give companies the ability to enforce usage rules across these products. For instance, it could define the types of files an employee can share in Teams.

In addition, the company provides backup for the three services and others like Microsoft Dynamics to aid in disaster recovery, and finally it has migration tools to move data from a related cloud service to a Microsoft cloud service.

For example, AvePoint could help move documents from Google Drive to Office 365 or Slack data to Microsoft Teams.

Sy says the company has been growing rapidly, with four consecutive quarters of record growth, which he said works out to about 40% year over year growth. AvePoint currently has 1,250 employees serving 16,000 customers. Overall, it is helping to protect 7 million Microsoft cloud service users around the world, but it has a long-term, rather ambitious goal of adding more than 40,000 new customers.

It hopes to expand its market further by adding new services to sell to existing customers, while expanding aggressively into the SMB market. It also wants to enhance relationships with channel partners to sell AvePoint on its behalf. It already has a number of channel partners, including Ingram Micro, Synnex and TechData.

The new investment should help the company invest in the engineering, sales, customer service and partner relations that this level of expansion will no doubt require.

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May
08

Amazon reveals it was a target of 'extensive' fraud affecting seller accounts (AMZN)

Sramana Mitra: When you start modeling some of your customer scenarios, what kind of metrics are you discovering? Sanjoe Tom Jose: A key metric that we built around is time-to-hire. Time is critical....

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  11 Hits
Jan
07

Thought Leaders in Online Education: Greg Smith, CEO of Thinkific (Part 1) - Sramana Mitra

Online education is a booming field that is seeing entrepreneurship both on the platform and technology tool side as well as on the educator side. This interview covers both. Sramana Mitra: Let’s...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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  50 Hits
Mar
05

475th Roundtable For Entrepreneurs Starting NOW: Live Tweeting By @1Mby1M - Sramana Mitra

According to an Allied Market Research report, the global enterprise AI market is estimated to grow at 35% CAGR to $53.06 billion by 2026 from $4.68 billion in 2018. Redwood City-based C3.ai is a...

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Original author: MitraSramana

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  48 Hits
May
09

Nest's product boss says it's time to rethink what it means to 'own' a tech product: 'We're not going to allow the owner dictate how our products work' (GOOG, GOOGL)

Sramana Mitra: Let’s double-click down on a number of things. Where in the workflow are you really adding value with artificial intelligence? You may have read my interview with Ashu Garg from...

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Original author: Sramana Mitra

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Jan
07

Union Square Ventures leads legal tech startup Juro’s $5M Series A

Juro, a UK startup that’s using machine learning tech and user-centric design to do for contracts what Typeform does for online forms, has caught the eye of Union Square Ventures. The New York-based fund leads a $5 million Series A investment that’s being announced this morning.

Also participating in the Series A are existing investors Point Nine Capital, Taavet Hinrikus (co-founder of TransferWise) and Paul Forster (co-founder of Indeed). The round takes Juro’s total raised to-date to $8M, including a $2M seed which we covered back in 2018.

London is turning into a bit of a hub for legal tech, per Juro CEO and co-founder Richard Mabey — who cites “strong legal services industry” and “strong engineering talent” as explainers for that.

It was also, he reckons, “a bit of a draw” for Union Square Ventures — making what Juro couches as a “rare” US-to-Europe investment in legal tech in the city via the startup.

“Having brand name customers in the US certainly helped. But ultimately, they look for product-led companies with strong cross-functional teams wherever they find them,” he adds.

Juro’s business is focused on taking the tedium out of negotiating and drawing up contracts by making contract-building more interactive and trackable. It also handles e-signing, and follows on with contract management services, using machine learning tech to power features such as automatic contract tagging and for flagging up unusual language.

All of that sums to being a “contract collaboration platform”, as Juro’s marketing puts it. Think of it like Google Docs but with baked in legal smarts. There’s also support for visual garnish like animated GIFs to spice up offer letters and engage new hires.

“We have a data model underlying our editor that transforms every contract into actionable data,” says Mabey. “Juro contracts look like contracts, smell like contracts but ultimately they are written in code. And that code structures the data within them. This makes a contract manager’s life 10x easier than using an unstructured format like Word/pdf.”

“Still our main competitor is MS Word,” he adds. “Our challenge is to bring lawyers (and other users of contracts) out of Word, which is a significant task. Fortunately, Word was never designed for legal workflows, so we can add lots of value through our custom-built editor.”

Part of Juro’s Series A funds will be put towards beefing up its machine learning/data science capabilities, per Mabey — who says the overall plan at this point is to “double down on product”, including by tripling the size of the product team.

“That means hiring more designers, data scientists and engineers — building our engineering team in the Baltics,” he tells us. “There’s so much more we are excited to do, especially on the ML/data side and the funding unlocks our ability to do this. We will also be building our commercial team (marketing, sales, cs) in London to serve the EU market and expand further into the US, where we already have some customers on the ground.”

The 2016-founded startup still isn’t breaking out customer numbers but says it’s processed more than 50,000 contracts for its clients so far, noting too that those contracts have been agreed in 50+ countries. (“Everywhere from Estonia to Japan to Kazakhstan,” as Mabey puts it.)

In terms of who Juro users are, it’s still mostly “mid-market tech companies” — with Mabey citing the likes of marketplaces (Deliveroo), SaaS (Envoy) and fintechs (Luno), saying it’s especially companies processing “high volumes of contracts”.

Another vertical it’s recently expanded into is media, he notes.

“E-signature giants have grown massively in the last few years, and some are gradually encroaching into the contract lifecycle — but again, they deal with files (pdfs mostly) rather than dynamic, browser-based documentation,” he argues, adding: “In terms of new legal tech entrants — I’m excited by Kira Systems especially, who are working on unpicking pdf contracts post-signature.”

As part of the Series A, Union Square Ventures parter, John Buttrick, is joining Juro’s board.

Commenting in a supporting statement, Buttrick said: “We look for founders with products equipped to change an industry. While contract management might not be new, Juro’s transformative vision for it certainly is. There’s no greater proof of the product’s ease of use than the fact that we negotiated and closed the funding round in it. We’re delighted to support Juro’s team in making their vision a reality.”

Juro’s contract management platform — dashboard view

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Mar
05

Kinnos, which makes colorized disinfectant to ensure surfaces are covered, just landed $6 million in funding

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

Good morning! This is the tech news you need to know this Tuesday.

Facebook has banned deepfake videos and manipulated content from its site. The company said it was taking a multi-pronged approach to address the issue, including investigating deceptive behaviors in AI-generated content and partnering with academia, government, and industry to better identify manipulated content.YouTube has overhauled its rules for children's content, and it could have a major impact on both creators and the company's business.  The policy upheaval carries legal risks for YouTube content creators, who are now responsible for choosing whether their content is made for children.Sony has unveiled an electric car at CES. According to the BBC, the vehicle, called "Vision S," was shown during a surprise announcement at the show.Impossible Foods has unveiled a new plant-based pork substitute at CES, BBC News reports. The firm is also offering a ground pork alternative, with its range of pork products designed to comply with kosher and halal rules.Golden Globes host Ricky Gervais roasted Apple for its 'Chinese sweatshops' in front of hordes of celebrities as Tim Cook watched from the audience. Gervais described the Apple TV Plus drama "The Morning Show" as "made by a company that runs sweatshops in China."Sacha Baron Cohen satirically described Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg as a 'naive, misguided child who spreads Nazi propaganda'. Baron Cohen made the satirical reference to Zuckerberg and the film 'Jojo Rabbit' during Sunday night's Golden Globes.Instagram's US user growth dropped to single digits for the first time and it looks like it will keep falling. EMarketer estimated that Instagram is still growing in the US, but the pace of that growth slowed to 6.7% in 2019, down from growth of 10.1% in 2018.Two couples whose Ring cameras were hacked have filed a lawsuit seeking class action status against the Amazon company. The two couples have accused Ring of being negligent by not doing enough to secure their home cameras against cyberattacks.Samsung created an invisible keyboard that uses AI to track your finger movements. SelfieType will use a front-facing camera to track your fingers and turn any empty surface into a virtual keyboard.The last known Nintendo PlayStation is going up for auction. The owner of this incredibly rare piece of video game history said he's already turned down an offer of $1.2 million.

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Original author: Charlie Wood

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Apr
08

A celebrity jeweler who made a $37,000 ring for Elon Musk said the Tesla CEO canceled their meeting after the jeweler posted on Instagram about being locked in his Model X (TSLA)

Facebook said in an announcement on Monday that deepfake videos and manipulated media will be banned from the social media site.The company said in a statement that it was taking a multi-pronged approach to address the issue, including investigating deceptive behaviors in AI-generated content and partnering with academia, government, and industry to better identify manipulated content.Videos that are flagged will be subject to review by third party fact-checkers to determine if the content is false.In September, Facebook CTO Mike Schroepfer said the company was making its own deepfake content in order to better detect manipulated content for removal, Business Insider's Alexei Oreskovic reported.Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook said in an announcement Monday that deepfake videos and manipulated media will be banned from the social media site.

The company said in a statement that it was taking a multi-pronged approach to address the issue, including investigating deceptive behaviors in AI-generated content and partnering with academia, government, and industry to better identify manipulated content.

"Manipulations can be made through simple technology like Photoshop or through sophisticated tools that use artificial intelligence or 'deep learning' techniques to create videos that distort reality – usually called 'deepfakes,'" the company said in a statement. "While these videos are still rare on the internet, they present a significant challenge for our industry and society as their use increases."

The company defined the type of "deepfake" content that will be removed from the site as the following:

It has been edited or synthesized – beyond adjustments for clarity or quality – in ways that aren't apparent to an average person and would likely mislead someone into thinking that a subject of the video said words that they did not actually say.It is the product of artificial intelligence or machine learning that merges, replaces or superimposes content onto a video, making it appear to be authentic.

The policy does not affect content that is manipulated for the purpose of comedy or satire, the company said in the statement.

Videos that are flagged will be subject to review by third party fact-checkers to determine if the content is false. At that point, Facebook will "significantly reduce its distribution" to newsfeeds or reject it, if it is attempting to run as an ad.

Moreover, people who attempt to share the content before it is completely removed from the site will be issued a warning to alert them that the content is false.

The company added that it established a partnership with Reuters to "help newsrooms worldwide to identify deepfakes and manipulated media through a free online training course."

"News organizations increasingly rely on third parties for large volumes of images and video, and identifying manipulated visuals is a significant challenge," the statement read. "This program aims to support newsrooms trying to do this work."

In September, Facebook CTO Mike Schroepfer said the company was making its own deepfake content in order to better detect manipulated content for removal, Business Insider's Alexei Oreskovic reported.

"The goal of the challenge is to produce technology that everyone can use to better detect when AI has been used to alter a video in order to mislead the viewer," Schroepfer wrote in a September blog post.

Last year, the company faced significant backlash from members of Congress, including Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, for its policy on fact-checking political ads.

Facebook said in most instances it will not fact-check political ads in an attempt to protect free speech. The controversial policy went under fire after President Donald Trump ran political ads with false claims about former Vice President Joe Biden.

"Posts and ads from politicians are generally not subjected to fact-checking," according to Facebook's policy. "In evaluating when this applies we ask our fact-checking partners to look at politicians at every level."

Original author: Lauren Frias

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Jan
07

California has sued tech billionaire Vinod Khosla over beach access, reviving a decade-long legal battle

The state of California filed a lawsuit against billionaire tech investor Vinod Khosla on Monday, alleging that he restricted access to a beach in San Mateo county.The Sun Microsystems co-founder bought properties bordering San Mateo's Martins Beach for roughly $32 million back in 2008, and closed off public access to it in 2010.  The lawsuit, filed on behalf of the California Coastal Commission and the State Lands Commission, revives the decade-long bitter legal battle over access to that beach. Their argument revolves on whether Martins Beach has historically been a public beach. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The state of California just revived a decade-long bitter legal battle with billionaire tech investor Vinod Khosla, over  restricting access to a strip of a San Mateo beach bordering his property. 

California's Attorney General filed a lawsuit on behalf of the California Coastal Commission and the State Lands Commission on Monday, alleging that Khosla had prevented the public from accessing Martins Beach, a San Mateo spot popular with locals for surfing and fishing. California's Constitution guarantees public access to all coastal beaches below the mean high tide line.

The lawsuit, filed in California state court in San Mateo county, is the latest in a series of exhaustive legal fights that have spanned more than a decade, after Khosla began to block people from accessing the beach back in 2010. 

The US Supreme Court's refusal in 2018 to hear Khosla's appeal on a lawsuit filed by the Surfrider Foundation appeared to have put an end to the matter. A San Francisco appeals court had ruled earlier that Khosla needed state permission to gate off access to the beach. 

But the two state agencies that are pushing California's lawsuit say that Khosla has not complied with the ruling, alleging that the gate "has not been consistently open" and that the venture capitalist has yet to file a permit requesting permission. 

A statement delivered by Khosla's lawyer to Business Insider pointed back to a newer ruling on a different lawsuit regarding Martins Beach in November 2019. The San Mateo appeals court ruled that the beach had not been historically public, as previous owners had charged a fee to go there. 

"In the Surfrider case, it was undisputed that the property is private.  The case did not in any way address the issue of whether the public has a right to free use and access of the property,"  Dori Yob Kilmer, a lawyer for Khosla, said in a statement that pushed back against the San Francisco appeals court's ruling. 

Khosla, the famously outspoken cofounder of Sun Microsystems, told the New York Times in 2018 that he regretted buying the property but would continue fighting for his privacy based on "principle," safeguarding property rights. His lawyer doubled down on that sentiment on Monday, writing to Business Insider that the state of California's actions were "commonplace in communist systems," but had never been tolerated in a country where "the U.S. Constitution precludes the government from simply taking private property and giving it to the public."

According to Khosla's lawyer, the beach was privately owned by the Deeney family for roughly one century and the family "chose to use it as a revenue-generating beach-access business." 

But the state of California appears to be gearing to fight the designation of Martins Beach as private. 

The lawsuit seeks to make Khosla remove all gates and signage purporting to limit access to the beach, and to prohibit him from building any structures that would impede access to the beach.

"The state's lawsuit filed this week asks the court to consider unexamined evidence and confirm that the public has the right to continue using Martins Beach. The Coastal Commission has spent several years conducting surveys of beach goers and collecting evidence of continuous public use from more than 225 respondents, including written accounts, photographs, personal journal entries and news articles, reflecting public use as early as back to the 1800s," a press release reiterating the beach's popularity with the public said. 

Original author: Bani Sapra

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