Don't miss these Underscoreâs Lily Lyman presenting at TechCrunch Early Stage 2024: The well-known venture capitalist will talk about how founders should foster investor relationships. As with all talks at Early Stage, attendees can ask questions directly, so bring your notebook! TikTok says it boosted creator payouts by 250% in the past 6 months: Back in 2023, TikTok shook up how it paid creators, bolstering payouts for longer-form videos. Now the short-form video service says the amount paid to creators has risen by 250% in the last six months. Thatâs good, but TikTok remains embroiled in suits over music rights, so the datapoint is only one of many that we should consider when we tot up its bill of health. Waymo brings driverless rides to Austin; Providence in tears: Self-driving company Waymoâs cars in Austin are going safety-operator free, meaning that they are one step closer to opening to the public. This is a good step. Self-driving is taking longer to become a reality than many expected, but progress is being ground up by some players. Now all we need is a more aggressive roll-out schedule in a new market: one with small, twisty streets, terrible drivers, and snow. Say, Providence, Rhode Island? Amazonâs Rufus chatbot is fine: Earlier this year, Amazon unveiled Rufus, an AI chatbot that lives inside the Amazon Shopping app. We got access, tested it, and found it to be fine. Our testing included a battery of standard shopping searches, and then some wilder and hairier questions. I wonder how many users are really turning to Rufus today, and if itâs more a neat toy or a tool that is having a real impact on how Amazon customers use its e-commerce service? Apple loosens its new EU rules for app makers: To comply with the EUâs Digital Markets Act, Apple said it would allow developers to opt out of its payment tech, but it intended to charge them a modestly reduced fee if they do so. Complaints followed that move, predictably. Now, Apple is making some small changes to its plans, including no longer requiring a letter of credit, for example. But the core fee structure that incensed many developers? So far, no change there. (Elsewhere, Apple has dropped a new API for its fintech services.) Speaking of the EU app marketplace: Spotify has an update coming for its iOS app that includes pricing and feature information about the audio companyâs different plans in the EU, and includes a link for users to buy subscription plans from Spotifyâs website. The DMAâs impact, therefore, is about to show up in the market. On the record with Advocateâs Emilie Poteat: The Found crew recently sat down with New Yorkâbased Advocate, digging into why founder Emilie Poteat started the company and how AI fits into its efforts. Itâs a great chat, so hit play and enjoy! A massive run of startup news: Fintech upstart Harness Wealth raised a $17 million Series A to better help startup workers and founders handle their finances, and also to expand into tax planning. BRKZ has shot out of stealth with $8 million for its B2B marketplace for construction materials. Fluent raised $7.5 million to bring new AI technologies to business data, taking on the large BI market. After Agility Robotics stole the show at ProMat with its bipedal robot, TechCrunch spoke with its CEO about automation, Amazon, and delivery. The conversation about the state of robotics is illuminating, especially in the wake of Figureâs massive $675 million round last week. In closing, a few final Big Tech updates: Microsoft is ending support for Android Apps in Windows 11 (I always meant to try this out, but never did, which is perhaps part of the problem), and Roku is blocking users until they agree to its new terms and conditions. |