TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
|
Welcome to TechCrunch AM! Will TikTok get banned? Will it be spared? The controversy is now swirling towards the upper chamber of the U.S. Congress. If you arenât that interested in regulatory fights, donât worry, because this morning, you can read about a 2-year-old cybersecurity startupâs huge exit, new import rules in India that could shake up its EV market, and Appleâs latest buy: A small startup with a focus on, you guessed it, AI. â Alex |
|
|
|
TechCrunch Top 3 Whatâs next for TikTok: In the wake of the House of Representativesâ passage of a bill that would force a divestment of TikTok from parent company Bytedance or ban it in the United States, the proposed law is heading to the Senate. But the bill, Taylor Hatmaker reports, is not guaranteed to be passed. In fact, itâs âfar from apparent that the upper chamber of Congress shares the Houseâs appetite for laser-targeting a single tech company with tailored legislation.â Apple buys DarwinAI: The Canadian startup uses AI to watch components during manufacturing to help improve efficiency, and has raised $15 million during its time as a private company. With capital from BDC Capital, Obvious Ventures and others, the company also has methods for making AI models smaller and quicker, which could be useful for Appleâs AI plans for its myriad portable devices. PornHub bows out of Texas: Age verification laws for adult content are gaining steam in the United States, leading to a legal scrap between PornHub and certain states. In the wake of a legal setback in Texas, PornHub and its sister sites have decided to vacate the state. Google Trends data indicates that searches for VPNs in Texas have spiked. |
| Image Credits: TechCrunch |
|
|
Morning must-reads India changes import rules in boon to EV makers: Electric car companies that invest a minimum of $500 million in India, and âestablish local manufacturing for EVs with at least 25% of components sourced domesticallyâ will be allowed to import 8,000 cars at a reduced tax rate of 15%. Currently, imported cars can carry a 70% to 100% tax rate in India. Given how much of Teslaâs manufacturing is based in China, the EV-maker may now have an easier road to selling in India. How blockchain is tacking content authenticity: It seems weâre back in the crypto bull-cycle, so itâs worth paying attention to what companies are doing with blockchain tech. In a recent interview, TechCrunchâs Jacquelyn Melinek spoke to Fox Corpâs CTO Melody Hildebrandt about the push to verify content authenticity on blockchains. Given the AI-media kerfuffle playing out right now, Foxâs collaborative project with Polygon has a pretty huge market to tackle. Paytm lands payments lifeline, but issues remain: Paytm has secured access to Indiaâs UPI payment infra just days before its banking unit is set to shutter in the wake of a scrap with the countryâs banking regulator. The new setup is not as winsome for Paytm as its previous bank, but will allow it to compete with PhonePe and Google Pay in the country. TFW your AI is not AI: A new commercial from clothing brand Under Armour ran head-first into controversy after it was dubbed the âworldâs first AI-powered sports commercialâ by its creator. It turns out that the company used a bunch of human-created material in its creation. AI is cool, but saying things are AI when they are not is not. Zscaler buys Avalor: Cybersecurity giant Zscaler is buying Avalor just 26 months after the startup was founded. With the deal reportedly worth $310 million, itâs a material exit for the startup market. Zscaler is one of the fastest-growing software companies in the market today, and is worth just under $30 billion. Avalor âacts as a source of truth for cybersecurity assets, controls, identities, vulnerabilities, bugs and other data points, allowing security teams to aggregate, normalize, de-duplicate and track risk data from discovery to remediation,â Kyle Wiggers writes. |
| Image Credits: Kriangkrai Thitimakorn / Getty Images |
|
|
|
Before you go Mercedes Benz starts testing out humanoid robots: TechCrunchâs Brian Heater writes that âpilot season has officially begun for the world of humanoid robotics.â Amazon is testing Agilityâs Digit robots in some of its fulfillment centers, and more recently, Mercedes Benz has been working with Texas-based Apptronik, which builds a âgeneral-purpose humanoid robot.â Humans are expensive and robots donât need snacks or smoke breaks, so expect to see more of this. |
| Image Credits: Apptronik |
|
|
|
Newest Jobs from Crunchboard | Senior Policy Analyst / Senior Economist at Center for AI Policy (Washington D.C., DC, USA) Unified Technology Solutions Supervisor at Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission (Middletown, PA, United States) Principal Software Engineer/Developer at Health Research, Inc. (Menands, NY, USA) Systems Administrator II at City of Newport (Newport, Oregon, USA) Product Manager at imgix (San Francisco, CA, USA) See more jobs on CrunchBoard Post your tech jobs and reach millions of TechCrunch readers for only $349 per month. |
|
|
|
|
|