TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
|
Today, Twitterâs new login requirement for viewing tweets came in like a lion and apparently went out like a lamb. Yes, itâs July not March, but you canât help but picture Twitter executives quietly crossing that idea off their list and trying to forget it ever happened. Also, if you use TweetDeck, youâll want to take note of this new policy. Meanwhile, French accounting startup Dougs took its first funding after bootstrapping for the past eight years. Find out why it took the VC plunge. Going back to that Twitter item for a moment, while we donât know what is on Elon Muskâs mind until he tweets it, itâs probably no coincidence that the social media giant walked back that login requirement a day after news of Meta’s Threads app came out. Threads is Instagramâs Twitter competitor, dropping tomorrow, and already gives you built-in follow and follower bases from your IG account. And you can read posts without an account. However, there are already rumblings that the Threads app wonât have ActivityPub support at launch and the app is already a bit of a privacy nightmare. So much so that it won’t launch in the EU yet. |
| Image Credits: DigitalVision Vectors / Getty Images |
|
|
More top stories Thatâs going to be an awkward ask: PharmEasy, once valued at $5 billion, is reportedly going after new funding at a 90% valuation cut. I want to scan you all over: Neko Health, a company co-founded by Spotify co-creator Daniel Ek, raised $65 million in its first round of external funding to develop preventative healthcare measures via full-body scans. Hey, you, get into my car: Chinaâs WeRide secured a self-driving vehicle license from the UAE. Turning a corner: Cornerstone VC hires Ella Wales Bonner as first female partner. More transparent: NYCâs anti-bias law for hiring algorithms goes into effect. Letâs get physical: Munich-based EGYM pumps up its smart fitness connected device with $225 million from Jared Kushnerâs Affinity Partners. Back to the drawing board?: U.K. security researchers are the latest to blast the regionâs Online Safety Bill as an encryption risk. The chain is still broken: CADDi grabs $89 million in new funding to scale its B2B supply chain marketplace for manufacturing parts. Up, up and away: Jeff Bezosâ space company Blue Origin wants to take its operations internationally and beyond. Ludicrous speed . . . go!: The White House was sent to the courtroom this week where a judge ruled it couldnât talk to social media companies in certain ways. |
| Image Credits: Nasir Kachroo / NurPhoto |
|
|
| Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch |
|
|
Get your TechCrunch fix IRL. Join us at Disrupt 2023 in San Francisco this September to immerse yourself in all things startup. From headline interviews to intimate roundtables to a jam-packed startup expo floor, thereâs something for everyone at Disrupt. Save up to $600 when you buy your pass now through August 11, and save 15% on top of that with promo code DC. Learn more. Read More |
| |
|
|
|
Newest Jobs from Crunchboard | Information Technology Architect at Valley Water (San Jose, CA, USA) Senior Full Stack Developer (.NET) at AAOS (Rosemont, IL, USA) Epic Application Analyst/Coordinator at Administration South (Toppenish, WA, USA) Senior Angular + Nativescript Software Engineer/Architect at Blackout Lighting Console (New York, NY, USA) Systems Integrator at Air Line Pilots Association (McLean, VA, USA) See more jobs on CrunchBoard Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $200 per month. |
|
|
|
|
|