Saturday, September 30, 2023

Former crypto hedge fund manager sentenced to prison after not complying with court orders

TechCrunch Newsletter
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By Christine Hall

Friday, September 29, 2023

In today's top story, Three Arrows Capital's Su Zhu was arrested in Singapore while attempting to leave the country. The co-founder of the now-defunct crypto hedge fund was sentenced to four months in prison. Zhu is not the only one investigators want to arrest.

Meanwhile, Apple has been busy revamping and updating much of its operating system lately, and now it’s iCloud.com's turn. See what's new in features for Drive, Mail and Notes.

And Discord resolved a widespread outage caused by "unusual traffic spikes." Wonder what you all were doing . . . 

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Image Credits: Getty Images

More top reads

A chip off the old butcher's block: Meal kits were where it was at for a lot of people who didn't want to stress about what to make for dinner. Now one of the biggest ones in the sector was just sold. So what happened to Blue Apron? (TC+)

More people or more impressions?: X, formerly Twitter, has paid almost $20 million to creators, according to its CEO. We break down what that could mean. Meanwhile, Twitter's former head of trust and safety says X is headed for a "rule of law" clash with the European Union. Read on.

Discounted: It's rumored that WestBridge Capital is in the advanced stages of inking a deal to buy a stake in India's Meesho. Get the scoop.

Google Pixel Event: Next week, Google unveils its new Pixel products. See what's on tap.

Pitch Deck Teardown: I point, you point, let's all point at point.me's $10 million Series A deck and learn what Haje liked and didn't like. (TC+)

No fakers here: BeReal pushes back at a report claiming the social media app is losing steam by saying it now has 25 million daily users. Find out why BeReal objects.

Europe's got capital: Two large equity funds launched out of Europe this week. What are we to make of this?

VC Office Hours: Pivotal Ventures' Erin Harkless Moore discusses how data can help improve social impact investing. Learn how. (TC+)

Off balance: Startups may have trouble finding their enterprise footing, even with the software market softening. Here's why. (TC+)

More top reads image

Image Credits: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg / Getty Images

How to pitch me: 7 investors discuss what they're looking for in September 2023

This week, Walter Thompson surveyed seven venture capitalists about what early-stage investors are currently looking for in a new investment. You're also in luck — six out of the seven listed below included their contact details.

Now the only hard part is crafting a story about your startup that's so convincing, they'll recognize the value in your idea and wire you some cash.

Read how the following investors prefer to be approached and which questions they're most likely to ask once you're in the room:

  • Maria Buitron, principal, Piva Capital
  • Karl Alomar, managing partner, M13
  • Raja Ghawi, partner, Era Ventures
  • Anamitra Banerji, managing partner, Afore Capital
  • Mukaya (Tai) Panich, CIO and CEO, SCB 10X
  • David Phelps, founder, chairman and CEO; Merlin Ventures and Merlin Cyber
  • Kavita Gupta, founder and general partner, Delta Blockchain Fund

TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code "DC" for a 15% discount on an annual subscription.

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On the pods

Equity has the update on the writers strike’s implications on AI, deals of the week from OpenAI and Arc, YC and the role of accelerators in the startup world, and shifts in the tech labor market as layoffs subside. Listen here.

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Friday, September 29, 2023

In cost-cutting move, Epic Games lays off approximately 870 workers

TechCrunch Newsletter
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By Christine Hall

Thursday, September 28, 2023

In today's top story, Fortnite maker Epic Games said it is laying off about 870 people, or 16% of its workforce. Learn more. Meanwhile, the company asks the Supreme Court to weigh in on its beef with Apple. Not to be outdone, Apple also asked the Supreme Court to reconsider one of its rulings in favor of Epic.

The Raspberry Pi 5 is here, and it looks yummier than ever. Get your fork ready.

And Reddit is making some changes, chiefly to remove the ability to opt out of ad personalization based on your activity on the platform. Find out what this means.

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Image Credits: Epic

More top reads

Ads are safe for now: Amazon wins interim stay on delivering a public ads archive in early challenge to the EU's Digital Services Act. Read more. Meanwhile, the company launches its Bedrock generative AI service in general availability and gives CodeWhisperer an enterprise tier.

Your photos, but better: Adobe launches Photoshop's web version with Firefly-powered AI tools. Go ahead, play around.

AI boom: What products and services are poised to benefit from this generative AI boom we keep reading about? Well, for starters, Alex Wilhelm says it could make the OS cool again. (TC+)

Speaking of AI: Bumble CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd shares how AI will "supercharge" love and relationships. The power of love . . . and technology.

In the nick of time: Google rushes to patch a zero-day vulnerability exploited by some commercial spyware vendor. Read more.

Not that much of a stretch: Fitbit brings Pixel Watch features to the Charge 6. Learn more.

Time to get social: Artifact co-founder Mike Krieger says there's a "flavor" of Twitter in the app’s latest release. Here's why.

For the founders: African VC firm Enza Capital launches founder partner program as it closes $58 million across funds. Read on.

More for your Thursday:

Worldcoin doubles down on emerging markets amid wider criticism (TC+)

Blend uses generative AI to give you a personalized clothing guide

Zapier launches Canvas, an AI-powered flowchart tool

Mercury Fund closes largest fund to invest in SaaS startups between the coasts

Google patches zero-day exploited by commercial spyware vendor

More top reads image

Image Credits: Marcos del Mazo/LightRocket / Getty Images

Creating strategic defensibility as an early-stage startup

In the first column of a four-part series, Startup Battlefield editor and director of community Neesha Tambe hosted a master class on strategic defensibility with Mike Ghaffary, general partner at Canvas Ventures.

"In this session, Ghaffary outlined the important components of startup defensibility, the key strategic advantage buckets, and what startups can do to stay competitive as they build and scale," she writes.

TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code "DC" for a 15% discount on an annual subscription.

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On the pods

For this week's episode, Jacquelyn interviewed Tiago Sada, head of product for Tools for Humanity and core contributor to Worldcoin, at TechCrunch's Disrupt 2023 in San Francisco.

Tools for Humanity, which is the team building Worldcoin, raised $115 million in a Series C round back in May with investors like Blockchain Capital, a16z, Bain Capital Crypto and Distributed Global. In March 2022, Worldcoin raised $100 million at a $3 billion valuation. We dive into why someone would scan their eyes, as well as alternate options and privacy concerns some skeptics have about the project. Listen here.

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Thursday, September 28, 2023

Russian zero-day purchase platform posts $20M bounty for iOS, Android hacking tools

TechCrunch Newsletter
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By Christine Hall

Wednesday, September 27, 2023

In today's top story, a Russian zero-day seller is now offering to pay researchers $20 million for hacking tools that would allow its customers to hack iPhones and Android devices. Get the scoop.

Next, read about a former Tinder CEO's startup out to fight loneliness with an AI chatbot. Investors like it.

Meanwhile, a Brazilian super app developer secured $30 million in new funding to add insurance and financing components. Read more.

And Meta's annual Connect conference started today, and we reported on all the new hardware and software, including Meta Quest 3. Here are some highlights:

Finally, as seen on TV: Senior reporter Kyle Wiggers will appear on CBS tomorrow at 12:35 p.m. ET to discuss the latest news about ChatGPT.

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Image Credits: Benoit Daoust / Shutterstock

More top reads

What's that shaking?: Google launches earthquake alerts on Android in India. Read more.

Smoothing out Africa's payment landscape: QED and Partech back South African payment orchestration platform Revio in a $5.2 million seed round. Here's how Revio plans to take on payment failures.

The fabric of our developer lives: Meet Rayon, a collaborative design tool for architects and designers. Now draw.

Businesses need payment love, too: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was one of the many backers of Slope's $30 million round. Learn how it digitizes B2B payments.

Head in the Cloudfare: Cloudflare launches new AI tools to help customers deploy and run models. Read more.

Speaking of OpenAI: Lots of reports on OpenAI. First, the company is reportedly in talks with Jony Ive about a hardware project. Get that scoop. This news follows yesterday's rumor that OpenAI plans to raise new funding at a valuation of $80 billion to $90 billion.

Mercedes boy: You will have a ball navigating the freeways with Mercedes' hands-off, eyes-off automated driving system. See it in action.

It's not you, it's me: Though less than a year in, Snap decides to shutter its enterprise services division. Find out why.

Well, now what?: Some new research suggests that a vast majority of VC-backed U.K. startups do "nothing" on climate emissions. Read for yourself.

More for your Wednesday:

Industry Ventures, with stakes in more than 600 venture firms, just raised $1.7B to snap up more stakes — and companies

Was tech's 'bull run' simply a temporary surge? (TC+)

Walmart returns to Roblox after its first games were attacked by consumer advocacy groups

Elon Musk's X removes general option to report misleading info about politics

More top reads image

Image Credits: Brian Heater

TC Opinion: Fintech actually has a value system: Here's how we can reclaim it

“Fintechs would do well to lean into the current economic moment and focus on applications that blunt the impact of inflation and financial uncertainty on workers and consumers,” writes Avliere CEO and co-founder Yuval Brisker in TechCrunch Opinion.

“One of the big lessons of the social finance backlash is that empowerment without education can do more harm than good.”

If you’d like to submit an opinion column to TechCrunch, please read our new editorial guidelines.

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TC Opinion: Fintech actually has a value system: Here's how we can reclaim it image

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Bootstrapping is cool once again

Several factors combined to dampen investor interest in early-stage startups over the last year and change, leading more founders to explore funding alternatives.

Dominic Madori-Davis spoke to Hussein Yahfoufi (product lead at Arta Finance) and Healthie founder Erica Jain last week at Disrupt to get their advice for connecting with angels and conserving cash.

“Bootstrapping isn't necessarily an all-or-nothing [endeavor]," said Jain. “It's about thinking through the long term and being in control about how you think about the capital journey of your business.”

TechCrunch+ is our membership program that helps founders and startup teams get ahead of the pack. You can sign up here. Use code "DC" for a 15% discount on an annual subscription.

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Image Credits: M. Reinertson/The Photo Group for TechCrunch / Flickr

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