Monthly Archives: September 2023

Meredith Whittaker reaffirms that Signal would leave UK if forced by privacy bill | TechCrunch

Onstage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2023, Meredith Whittaker, the president of the Signal Foundation, which maintains the nonprofit Signal messaging app, reaffirmed that Signal would leave the U.K. if the country’s recently passed Online Safety Bill forced Signal to build “backdoors” into its end-to-end encryption.

“We would leave the U.K. or any jurisdiction if it came down to the choice between backdooring our encryption and betraying the people who count on us for privacy, or leaving,” Whittaker said. “And that’s never not true.”

The Online Safety Bill, which was passed into law in September, includes a clause — clause 122 — that, depending on how it’s interpreted, could allow the U.K.’s communications regulator, Ofcom, to break the encryption of apps and services under the guise of making sure illegal material such as child sexual exploitation and abuse content is removed.

Read More

The copyright issues around generative AI aren’t going away anytime soon | TechCrunch

Generative AI has brought a host of copyright issues to the fore. Just this week, authors including George R.R. Martin, led by the Authors Guild, filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that the startup’s viral AI-powered chatbot, ChatGPT, was trained on their work without their knowledge or consent.

And it’s not just OpenAI that’s having to contend with this. Onstage at Disrupt 2023, Anastasis Germanidis, one of the co-founders of Runway, a company developing generative AI tools for video, said that his company is “still exploring” the right approach to training AI models on artists’ and creators’ works.

“We’re working closely with artists to figure out what the best approaches are to address this,” Germanidis said. “We’re exploring various data partnerships to be able to further grow … and build the next generation of models.”

Read More

How to Think Like an Investor When Preparing Your Pitch Deck | Entrepreneur

Key Takeaways:

  • It’s getting tougher to win global investment, and your pitch deck can turn it around.
  • Understanding the investor’s perspective is key to crafting a successful pitch deck, as the future of global fundraising is likely to be even more interconnected and competitive.

Startups are no longer confined to their local markets for fundraising. In the last decade, global venture capital (VC) investment in the startup ecosystem surged from $347 billion in 2010 across 31,623 deals to $671 billion in 2021 across 38,644 deals.

Startups are looking for more than just cold monetary transactions to fuel their growth and global exposure.

Today, successful startup fundraising boils down to one single most important thing: the pitch deck. It’s still the golden ticket for startups to secure both local and global VC funding. However, there are strategic differences between these two.

Read More

The Importance of Connecting Your Company to Your Product and Users | Entrepreneur

Key Takeaways

  • How to connect your company to its product and users
  • The importance of understanding the competition
  • The importance of fully understanding the user and becoming your own customer

When you first launch a startup, you, along with your small initial team, are able to build something incredible from the ground up — and that’s because everyone is intimately connected to the company vision. As your company grows to 100 employees, 500 employees, and beyond, maintaining that connectivity gets a little harder. But I believe that when all employees are aligned with the company vision and culture, and they truly understand the value of the product they’re building, that’s when you get an amazing impact.

This is how it’s done:

Read More

Timothée Chalamet, Kylie Jenner, and the internet’s fixation on PR relationships | Mashable

There’s a natural cycle to the launch of a new celebrity couple. It starts with a simple tabloid rumor. Then come observations on the pairing from a personal confidant, spread publication-wide, or maybe there’s a jump to casual paparazzi pictures of the two together. The final push in the celebrity couple birth is the two attending a public event — a red carpet premiere or maybe … a sporting event. It’s a tried and true formula that lets the world know this celebrity couple is here and ready for their close-up.

Those deemed unfit matches by fans will receive resistance at every step, most often with fans crying out, “PR relationship!” and enlisting their “expertise” to craft arguments as to why a budding relationship is staged.

Read More

Disney is expanding its investment into theme parks and cruises | CNN Business

Disney is greatly expanding its investment into theme parks and cruises, the company said Tuesday.

Over the next 10 years, it will pour $60 billion into its Disney Parks, Experiences and Products segment, according to an SEC filing which coincided with its investor summit taking place this week. That’s about twice what it spent in the most recent 10-year period.

The investment comes at a time the company is facing revenue challenges in its streaming services, movie and television assets — almost everywhere but its international theme parks.

Read More

Cancer screening may not extend lives, new study suggests. But experts say it’s flawed. | Live Science

Cancer screening involves searching for signs of the dangerous disease before symptoms develop. The goal is to catch cancer as early as possible, making it easier to treat and thus saving lives.

A new study recently seemed to cast doubt on whether screening for cancer actually saves lives, but scientists told Live Science we shouldn’t jump to conclusions.

In the new research, published Aug. 28 in the journal JAMA Internal Medicine, scientists reviewed 18 randomized clinical trials (RCTs) involving 2.1 million people, which investigated six tests for four types of cancer: breast, lung, prostate and colorectal, also called colon cancer. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) supports screening for all of these cancers except prostate cancer, in line with recommendations from an independent panel of experts called the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF).

Read More

Managing Stress As a Business Owner | Business News Daily

  • Stress can have negative effects emotionally, mentally and physically, and failure to manage it as a business owner can even have detrimental consequences to your company.
  • You can manage stress by maintaining a stable work-life balance and implementing best business practices.
  • With stress management tools in place, your business will benefit from fewer sick days, higher productivity and lower turnover.
  • This article is for small business owners looking to better manage the stress of entrepreneurship.

Read More

If you live in New York, your next package might be delivered via Ferr | Fast Company

To shrink the emissions from delivering packages and groceries in New York City for customers like Amazon Fresh, a company called DutchX uses around 250 electric bikes. But it still uses trucks to get cargo into the city. Now it’s testing an alternative: ferries traveling on the Hudson River.

In a new pilot launching this month, the company will start using a ferry to bring shipments from a New Jersey warehouse across the river to Midtown Manhattan. Boxes will be packed inside mini shipping containers designed to fit behind four-wheeled electric bikes or “eQuads,” made by a company called Fernhay; they look like tiny delivery trucks, but fit inside bike lanes. On the other side of the river, DutchX’s bike couriers will pick up the containers and then make doorstop deliveries.

Read More

An e-bike executive calls for the industry to get regulation | Fast Company

The global e-bike market is expected to double between 2021-2027 to over $53 billion, a promising benefit to modern cities, personal health, and America’s broader sustainability efforts.

But in tandem with this rapid growth, there’s a slew of safety concerns bubbling to the surface that must be addressed before e-biking as we know it comes to a screeching halt. And no, I’m not just talking about passing helmet laws.

Without clear and consistent regulation, battery fires, youth injuries, and traffic accidents have been among the worst safety incidents. Unfortunately, this hasn’t deterred the handful of fly-by-night companies that continue to cut corners, deceive consumers, and openly market their products to young children, oftentimes under the age of 12. As an executive in this industry, I’m alarmed. As a parent, I’m furious.

Read More