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4 votes
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Beat Saber developer Beat Games has been acquired by Facebook
15 votes -
Oil is the new data
5 votes -
Uber has been refused a licence to operate in London, UK
17 votes -
Pre-Thanksgiving Merger Monday sees over $60 billion in announced deals
7 votes -
Finland's flag-carrier airline, Finnair, said it has been forced to cancel almost 300 flights amid a nationwide solidarity strike for postal workers
8 votes -
WeWork lays off 2400 employees, about 20% of its workforce
8 votes -
Ethos Capital has acquired the Public Interest Registry, manager of the .org top-level domain
30 votes -
SoftBank-controlled Yahoo Japan agrees to merge with Line Corp., creating a combined company worth about $30 billion
7 votes -
Hewlett-Packard board unanimously rejects $33 billion takeover offer from Xerox
11 votes -
Iceland's biggest fisheries company Samherji stands accused of bribing Namibian politicians
4 votes -
1Password has raised $200 million from Accel
16 votes -
SoftBank poured $100 billion into start-ups that use armies of contractors, upending the lives of drivers, hotel operators and real estate agents around the world
8 votes -
Society, not just Goldman Sachs, has an anti-women bias
Today in twitter drama, people are up in arms about the Apple Card offering a tech entrepreneur's wife significantly less credit than her husband. Recently, other tech entrepreneurs like the Woz...
Today in twitter drama, people are up in arms about the Apple Card offering a tech entrepreneur's wife significantly less credit than her husband. Recently, other tech entrepreneurs like the Woz have noticed similar limit discrepancies. However, I think this is all missing the forest for the trees. It is likely that GS is in fact offering less credit to women. However, in both cases, higher credit was offered to male tech entrepreneurs (while their spouses got much less credit). And, given that Only 1/5th of VC money goes to startups with even a single women on the founding board, I don't think it's super far fetched that the statistics will show women, on average, are given notably less credit than men, especially when those men are tech entrepreneurs.
Ultimately, I have no idea why twitter is so surprised by this. People seem to think this is a unique case of bank discrimination, yet it's really just a reflection of a society which pays women less than men, and values their work as less than men. And I worry we might "fix" the algorithm, but never correct the larger societal issues surrounding this problem.
Sidenote: Currently, most cards circumvent this issue by linking spouses accounts, so they are one and the same. The Apple card, for privacy(?) reasons, does not allow this.
6 votes -
Subscription affliction - Everything is $10/month
11 votes -
DEV (dev.to) raises an $11.5 million Series A
6 votes -
Far from the spotlight, a Boeing partner feels the heat
5 votes -
Airbnb to verify all listings, CEO Brian Chesky says
7 votes -
Abbey Games (developer of Reus, Renowned Explorers, and Godhood) will end all employees' contracts at the end of the year
7 votes -
Airbnb pledges to improve platform safety, including verifying 100% of hosts and listings by the end of next year
8 votes -
It's time to break up Disney: Part one
15 votes -
'They're madly checking their payrolls': The ugly truth of Australia's underpayment epidemic
8 votes -
After days of resignations, the last of the Deadspin staff has quit
18 votes -
Blizzard confirms departure of veteran developers amid cancelled projects
27 votes -
The first transatlantic telegraph cable was a bold, beautiful failure
6 votes -
Deadspin revolt escalates, with mass resignations by staff
10 votes -
Dropshipping journalism - Newsweek has become a financially-troubled, traffic-chasing outlet without a clear purpose
9 votes -
Nokia's collapse turned a sleepy town in Finland into an internet wonderland
5 votes -
More than 100 tons of manure from 370 horses at the Helsinki International Horse Show was used to create 150 megawatt hours of energy
4 votes -
H&M is the latest fashion brand to test out the concept of clothing rental
5 votes -
The cybersecurity firm Tiversa dominated an emerging online market—before it was accused of fraud, extortion, and manipulating the federal government
6 votes -
Sony will shut down its PlayStation Vue streaming service on January 30, 2020
5 votes -
Google owner Alphabet has made an offer to acquire wearable device maker Fitbit
9 votes -
When Amazon Web Services, Azure, or GCP becomes the competition
7 votes -
Pando sold to BuySellAds - Sarah Lacy reflects on 8 years building the company, and 20 years in tech journalism in Silicon Valley
6 votes -
Riding the unicorn—Peloton accidentally built a fitness cult. A business is a little more complicated.
8 votes -
Why Costco is cheaper than Amazon
5 votes -
Ubisoft delays Watch Dogs Legion, Gods & Monsters, Rainbow Six Quarantine and dramatically drops financial targets
8 votes -
The 737 built Southwest, and the 737 Max could be its undoing
4 votes -
SoftBank to take control of WeWork at a pre-funding valuation of $7.5B - $8B, according to sources
11 votes -
Kik Messenger acquired by MediaLab, announces plan to introduce ads
8 votes -
Introducing the Gulfstream G700
9 votes -
The not-com bubble is popping—The unicorn massacre unfolding today is exactly the opposite of what happened in 2000
22 votes -
The merger between T-Mobile and Sprint could be good for US businesses, despite opposition from state attorneys general and consumer advocacy groups
5 votes -
How Airbnb is silently changing Himalayan villages
5 votes -
No one expected The Athletic could get people to pay for sports news. Now it has 600,000 subscribers.
8 votes -
More bad news for Norwegian Air as the airline loses Norway's biggest single customer contract to domestic rivals SAS
4 votes -
Domino's Pizza will pull out of three Nordic countries and Switzerland after sustaining significant losses
10 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission formally approves T-Mobile/Sprint merger
6 votes -
In 2019, multiple open source companies have changed course and their licenses to try to protect their businesses—is it the right move?
10 votes