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13 votes
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Google adds warning for users searching for Fortnite in Play Store, could lose $50 million or more in 2018 from Fortnite bypassing it
18 votes -
Saudi Arabia is looking to invest big in Tesla as the company teases going private
8 votes -
Layoffs at Watson Health reveal IBM’s problem with AI
7 votes -
After reading Bad Blood (the story of Theranos) I feel conflicted.
Tweetstorm related: https://twitter.com/bioxcession/status/1028322450910732289 Upfront: the basic premise of the book is that Theranos was an exploitative, evil company headed by two exploitative,...
Tweetstorm related: https://twitter.com/bioxcession/status/1028322450910732289
Upfront: the basic premise of the book is that Theranos was an exploitative, evil company headed by two exploitative, evil people. It makes an effort to not apologize for Elizabeth, or blame her actions on anyone else. She was sucked into the vortex of literally being a bloodsucker. In fact, the book - at one point - goes so far as to suggest she may be a sociopath.
Now, the book was a good read, and I think the point makes sense - bad company is bad. But it's stirring up a ton of music in my head - especially since it compared Theranos to "vaporware companies" - practices that the Valley has engaged in since forever (promising endlessly and not delivering).
Vaporware: software or hardware that has been advertised but is not yet available to buy, either because it is only a concept or because it is still being written or designed.
Theranos was no different, except it tried selling vaporware in the form of a healthcare device. Insisting that this device worked (it didn't), and insisting that most of their received blood tests were running on it (they weren't).
It's my opinion that Theranos would have been hailed as an enormous success if they had delayed for long enough to make this technology work. I believe that my point is furthered by the fact that Walgreens waited through two years of delays, of and tolerated outright lies. If the tech ever came out, all would have been forgiven.
My argument boils down to this: Elizabeth wasn't a shitty person, she operated correctly in a shitty system.
She took risks, yes - but they were necessary to maintain the illusion that she had a product that amounted to anything. Eventually, she hoped, her team would crack the nut and she'd come out unscathed.
The problem amounts to our system encouraging this type of behavior - she was visited by the vice president, Kissinger, Mattis, had dinners with the Clintons, and was a fellow at Harvard medical school. Nobody thought twice because the tech was so exciting.
Tildes, what can we do to prevent this type of behavior, and am I overlooking something?
11 votes -
US jury rules Monsanto liable in weed killer case - ordered to pay $250,000,000 for causing cancer
12 votes -
Monsanto ordered to pay $289 million in world's first Roundup cancer trial
17 votes -
Tesla CEO Musk accused in lawsuit of defrauding shareholders
17 votes -
Jeffrey Katzenberg raises $1 billion for short-form video venture
4 votes -
Captive audience: How companies make millions charging prisoners to send an email
20 votes -
New York City votes to cap Uber and Lyft vehicles in a crackdown
13 votes -
How musicians make money — or don’t at all — in 2018
7 votes -
Why Tesla stock skyrocketed and got halted - Elon Musk is "considering" taking Tesla private in a $70 billion deal
12 votes -
Flexible working becoming the norm
5 votes -
Force India F1 team exits administration, under consortium of investors led by Lawrence Stroll
5 votes -
Tim Cook’s email to employees about Apple’s $1trillion milestone
13 votes -
Tesla shorts lose more than $1 billion on post-earnings surge
15 votes -
AT&T acquires full ownership of Otter Media (including VRV, Crunchyroll, and Roosterteeth)
12 votes -
MoviePass keeps plan at $10, but limits subscribers to three movies a month
19 votes -
Iran sanctions: Trump warns trading partners
6 votes -
PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi is stepping down after twelve years
5 votes -
Google in potential cloud services talks in China, with Tencent and others
5 votes -
How do you pronounce "NES"? Nintendo throws a wrench in the debate
15 votes -
Foodora announced on Thursday it would stop operating in Australia by the end of August
2 votes -
Hammacher Schlemmer: The world's most peculiar company
6 votes -
Competition regulator to assess Nine's proposed takeover of Fairfax for impact on media diversity
3 votes -
Auditors: 30M taxpayers will owe more due to low withholding
11 votes -
Tesla whistleblower countersues over Elon Musk’s ‘defamatory’ statements
5 votes -
MoviePass is down again
11 votes -
Australian drivers in revolt over 'pay cuts' as Uber faces new competition
5 votes -
Slack is acquiring (and discontinuing) HipChat and Stride from Atlassian
28 votes -
VicForests says experiment 'very likely' to kill threatened glider, continues research
4 votes -
US Congress demands Jeff Bezos explain Amazon’s face recognition software
15 votes -
Catalog of Fania Records, the Motown of latin music, is sold
5 votes -
Game studio with no bosses pays everyone the same
19 votes -
Dying alone in Japan: The industry devoted to what's left behind
6 votes -
There are too many artists, most of them crap
8 votes -
SpaceX’s secret weapon is Gwynne Shotwell
4 votes -
Target’s CBGB tribute draws backlash, followed by an apology
3 votes -
Facebook is the first company to see its market cap drop by over 100 billion USD in one day
16 votes -
Defending land and environmental rights has become an increasingly deadly endeavor
7 votes -
Fairfax Media and Channel Nine to merge
Article from the ABC: Fairfax to lose its name in $4 billion takeover by Nine Dummies' guide from the ABC: Fairfax and Nine are merging. Here's what the deal involves and what it will mean for you...
Article from the ABC: Fairfax to lose its name in $4 billion takeover by Nine
Dummies' guide from the ABC: Fairfax and Nine are merging. Here's what the deal involves and what it will mean for you
Analysis from the ABC: Nine's Fairfax takeover is a last-ditch bid for survival, but it comes at a cost
Article from Fairfax: Nine promises to safeguard Fairfax journalism in $4.2 billion tie-up
4 votes -
Bad romance - To cash in on Kindle Unlimited, a cabal of authors gamed Amazon's algorithm
10 votes -
Facebook's quarterly earnings show user growth hit record lows in Q2
19 votes -
Fool’s gold: What fish oil is doing to our health and the planet
8 votes -
Departing Facebook security officer's memo: "We need to be willing to pick sides"
6 votes -
The last days of Blockbuster Video - The stories of three closing Blockbuster locations in Alaska, some of the last ones in the country
7 votes -
British public bought £14bn of goods made by slaves in 2017, claims report
8 votes -
New Deliveroo contract shifts liability for undelivered food to riders
3 votes -
Deliveroo threatens to terminate workers after losing their contracts
1 vote