Snap loses another CFO, Fiserv announces a $22 billion merger and Roku stirs controversy by allowing Infowars onto its platform. Here's your Daily Crunch for January 16, 2019. 1. Snap CFO Tim Stone is resigning This marks Snap's second CFO departure in the last 12 months. In a memo to employees, CEO Evan Spiegel said Stone's departure is not related to any disagreements pertaining to company finances. "Tim has made a big impact in his short time on our team and we are very grateful for all of his hard work," Spiegel said. 2. Fiserv is buying First Data in a $22B fintech megadeal It's technically a merger, but Fiserv will be getting the upper hand in the deal: its CEO, Jeffery Yabuki, will become CEO of the combined entity, while First Data's CEO, Frank Bisignano, will become president and COO. 3. Roku now deleting Infowars from its platform after customer outcry Roku's initial decision to support the Infowars channel seemed especially egregious because the conspiracy theory-spreading media company had been purged from multiple social media and app platforms — including Apple, Facebook, Spotify, YouTube, Twitter, Periscope, Stitcher, Pinterest, LinkedIn and YouPorn — for violating their content policies or terms of service. 4. DuckDuckGo debuts map search results using Apple Maps The privacy-focused search engine that promises to never track its users is now using data provided by Apple Maps to power its map-based search results. This will make DuckDuckGo one of the biggest users of Apple's mapping data, six months after Apple said it would open up Apple Maps to the web. 5. China accounted for nearly half of app downloads in 2018, 40 percent of consumer spend Global app downloads topped 194 billion in 2018, up 35 percent from 2016, according to App Annie's annual "State of Mobile 2019" report. And consumer spending across app stores was up 75 percent, reaching $101 billion. 6. Infor lands $1.5 billion investment ahead of possible IPO Infor may be the largest company you never heard of, with more than 17,000 employees and 9,500 customers in 100-plus countries worldwide. All of those customers generated $3 billion in revenue in 2018. 7. Another huge database exposed millions of call logs and SMS text messages Back in November, another telecoms company, Voxox, exposed a database containing millions of text messages — including password resets and two-factor codes. This time around, it's a different company: Voipo, a Lake Forest, Calif. communications provider. |
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