TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
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The TechCrunch Top 3 More layoffs: Dropbox CEO Drew Houston broke the news today that the company will be laying off 500 employees, or 16% of its staff. Ingrid reports Houston said the cuts are due to slowing growth and âthe era of AI.â Get the popcorn ready: Warner Bros. is partnering with Viacom18 to bring âSuccessionâ and other HBO content to India. Manish has more. Legacy learns to embrace AI: Jagmeet takes a deep dive into how legacy financial software giant Intuit decided to put out the welcome mat for artificial intelligence instead of closing the door and turning the deadbolt. |
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Startups and VC Posh is an event management and ticketing platform for all users to host events large or small, regardless of whether youâre an event organizer, promoter, or just want to charge your friends a cover for drinking all the expensive alcohol at your birthday party. Lauren reports that Posh announced its public launch today after being in beta since October 2020. Alongside the launch, the company also announced its $5 million seed round. The concept of SaaS as a business model changed the game in tech by moving users away from buying software outright and toward paying for service availability based on time-based subscriptions, typically with per-month or annual pricing, Ingrid reports. Today, a startup out of London called M3ter that is building tools to take the next step in that evolution â more granular usage-based pricing â is announcing funding on the back of strong demand. The company has raised $14 million. More? Okay, fine, hereâs another handful for you: Not having steak is a mis-steak: Christine writes how Chunk Foods is close to opening a factory to produce “millions” of plant-based steaks. Thatâs code for “help me out over here”: Kyle reports that Replit, the web-based IDE developing a GitHub Copilot competitor, raised $100 million. Swimming upstream: Sturgeon Capital launches $35 million fund aimed at emerging startups in Central Asia, Mike reports. Batten the hatches: Bastion is an all-in-one cybersecurity solution for small businesses, Romain writes. On yer bike: Rebecca reports how Grubhub and Joco team up to give NYC delivery workers access to e-bikes. |
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Big Tech Inc. Letâs talk about Meta today, shall we? Yesterday, the company reported that its earnings beat revenue expectations, as covered by Amanda. But thatâs not all: Our colleagues grabbed on to a few tidbits, including that the company said 10% of its global ad revenue was at risk from European Union data flows order. Natasha L has more on that. Also, time spent on Instagram grew 24%, thanks to TikTok-style AI Reel recommendations, reports Darrell. Meanwhile, Meta also had a win in court, with an appeal court ruling in the tech giantâs favor regarding an antitrust case brought by state attorneys general. Sarah writes that âthe States alleged Meta had illegally maintained monopoly power in the social networking market through its acquisitions of photo-sharing app Instagram in 2012 and WhatsApp in 2014, and that it gained further power through data policies that harmed app developers.â Now hereâs five more for you: Ruffled feathers: NBCUniversal let go of its CEO and then reported higher Peacock losses. Lauren has more. More to Lyftâs layoffs: Last week, Kirsten reported that ride-hailing giant Lyft was going to lay off employees as part of a restructuring move. Today, she writes that those layoffs will affect 26% of its workforce. A conscious coupling: Morgan reports that senators from both sides of the aisle came together to introduce a bill today that would ban social media algorithms for minors. Truth time: Elon Musk may testify about his Autopilot statements, reports Rebecca. Get out the flashlight: Zack and Carly write about a ransomware attack that is leaving CommScope employees in the dark. |
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