The Download: AI’s impact on the economy, and DeepSeek strikes again
Tacking On Additional Fees To Cover Your Costs? Stop And Do These 3 Things Instead.
Sorry, Elon Musk — To Suggest Remote Work Isn’t ‘Morally Right’ is a Flawed Attempt to Push Your In-Person Work Agenda. Here’s Why.
Bird stock dips 11% on news of reverse stock split
Shared micromobility company Bird’s share price fell 10.8%, or about two cents, in after-hours trading after the company said it would issue a reverse stock split. The move is Bird’s attempt to get back into compliance with the New York Stock Exchange after it received a delisting notice for trading too low. The news comes […]
Bird stock dips 11% on news of reverse stock split by Rebecca Bellan originally published on TechCrunch
21 Lessons I Swear By After 21 Years as an Entrepreneur
Kraft Heinz Is Rolling Out a Make-Your-Own-Sauce Machine With Over 200 Possible Flavors
Cruise, Waymo near approval to charge for 24/7 robotaxis in San Francisco
Self-driving vehicle companies Waymo and Cruise are on the cusp of securing final approval to charge fares for fully autonomous robotaxi rides throughout the city of San Francisco at all hours of the day or night. Amid mounting resistance to the presence of AVs in the city, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) published two […]
Cruise, Waymo near approval to charge for 24/7 robotaxis in San Francisco by Rebecca Bellan originally published on TechCrunch
Supreme Court rules in favor of Twitter and Google, avoiding the issue of Section 230 for now
The Supreme Court resolved two adjacent cases aiming to hold social platforms liable for dangerous content on Thursday. The pair of cases, Twitter v. Taamneh and Gonzalez v. Google, both sought to hold tech platforms accountable for hosting content from the Islamic State that promoted the terrorist organization in connection to violent attacks. The Supreme […]
Supreme Court rules in favor of Twitter and Google, avoiding the issue of Section 230 for now by Taylor Hatmaker originally published on TechCrunch
YouTube will no longer be deleting videos from inactive accounts
Google updated its policy on inactive accounts on Tuesday, declaring that any account that has not been active in two years will be deleted. The people of the internet quickly pushed back: what about old YouTube accounts? There’s a trove of internet history lying in dusty corners of YouTube, not to mention the accounts of […]
YouTube will no longer be deleting videos from inactive accounts by Amanda Silberling originally published on TechCrunch