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The TechCrunch Top 3 - When SPACs attack:Â The United States Department of Justice is investigating Lordstown Motors, the embattled EV company that went public via a SPAC. Detractors of the company have punched holes in the story it told before going public, and the companyâs SPAC deck has proven to be somewhat, well, disconnected from reality. The company needs more money, it turns out, despite having told investors that it would not. Whoops.
- China v. Didi v. American investors:Â Sticking to the theme of companies in trouble, Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is in hot water with its own domestic regulators. The company has been told to halt new user registration, pending a cybersecurity review. Just days after it went public in the United States. Oof.
- IBMâs President steps down:Â Jim Whitehurst, who made his way to IBM via its Red Hat deal, is out. His tenure as president at the firm lasted 14 months. Details were light on his exit, per Ron Miller Yeesh.
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| Image Credits: PlaySimple / MTG |
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Startups/VC Todayâs startup news has a strong non-American bias. Thatâs because nearly everyone in the United States took most of today off, regardless of what their boss thought was going on. The rest of the world was still busy, however: - Licious raises tasty $192M round:Â The Bangalore-based meat and seafood e-commerce player has now raised through a Series F. A few years back we would have joked that the F in Series F stood for âfailed to go public,â but thatâs no longer the case. Why not raise a Series F when money is so cheap? The company is now worth more than $650 million, TechCrunch reports.
- MTG buys PlaySimple for $360M: Why are investors betting so much money on the Indian startup ecosystem? Rising exit values, perhaps. TechCrunch noted that the sale of Indiaâs PlaySimple to Swedish gaming giant was âone of the largest exits in the Indian startup ecosystem.â
- Tiger invests $40M into Nigerian neobank: Itâs a big day for FairMoney, a Nigerian startup that has its genesis in offering consumers credit. Itâs also yet another round for African fintech, a sector that has felt pretty active lately.
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Did you hear about the CEO who made misleading claims about a funding round and got sued by the SEC? How about that pharmaceutical executive whose taunts to a former secretary of state led to a 4.4% decline in the Nasdaq Biotechnology Index? In case it isn’t clear: Startup executives are held to a higher standard when it comes to what they post on social media. “Reputation and goodwill take a long time to build and are difficult to maintain, but it only takes one tweet to destroy it all,” says Lisa W. Liu, a senior partner at The Mitzel Group, a San Francisco-based law practice that serves many startups. To help her clients (and Extra Crunch readers) stay out of trouble, Liu has six basic questions for tech execs with itchy Twitter fingers. And if the answer to any of them is âI donât know,â donât post. (Extra Crunch is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.) Read More |
| Image Credits: NeONBRAND/Unsplash |
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Big Tech Inc. Todayâs Big Tech news is a mixed bag, but a fun one. And each story has a strong California hook. Letâs begin: - GM is investing in a California lithium extraction project:Â Why? Batteries. Gotta have lithium to make batteries. No batteries, no electric cars. In this case the project is actually pretty neat, having a strong hook to Salton Sea Geothermal Field near Los Angeles in the southern part of the state. The geothermal field will provide power and materials. So perhaps electric carsâ pre-driving carbon footprint will be a bit more sustainable in the future.
- Twitter tests more attention-grabbing misinformation labels: Twitter, a California-based company, is making its misinformation labeling a bit more standout. Itâs fun to watch social media companies make warnings sterner at the same time as Google is making advertisements better blend into its organic results.
- Dutch court will hear another Facebook privacy lawsuit: A few Dutch nonprofits are suing Facebook over alleged ârampant collection of internet usersâ data â arguing the company does not have a proper legal basis for the processing,â TechCrunch summarized. This case seems like it could have broad import, depending on how it shakes out. Given, you know, how much data collection goes on literally all the time, literally everywhere, online.
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