TechCrunch Master Template TechCrunch Newsletter
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Good afternoon, folks, and welcome to TechCrunch PM. Itâs been a busy day, so I wonât delay. Today, PayPal has a plan for offline payments, and Google will make you regret anything youâve typed into Gemini. Then say âgood-byeâ to those annoying AI-voiced robocalls and âhelloâ to Plaidâs new president. â Christine |
| Image Credits: Photo by Thomas Trutschel/Photothek / Getty Images (Image has been modified) |
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TechCrunch PM Top 3 PayPal wants to be a true pay pal: PayPal says it will be âreadyâ to take advantage of the new European Unionâs newest regulation, the Digital Markets Act, when it goes into effect next month. This includes a plan for offline payments, or those taking place in physical retail stores. Sarah Perez writes this is an area PayPal has unsuccessfully tried to expand into for years. Write it, regret it: Thatâs the message Google is sending in a new support document where it reveals that it saves conversations with its AI-powered Gemini apps for years. âI would have gotten away with it, too, if it werenât for you meddling kids!â: A fake app made to look like the password manager LastPass was removed from the Apple App Store. Apple isnât commenting yet, so we arenât sure who removed it. Learn what we do know. |
| Image Credits: Artur Widak/NurPhoto / Getty Images |
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More top reads FCC hangs up on some robocallers: The Federal Communications Commission declared AI-voiced robocallers illegal. This comes a few days after New Hampshire residents received calls from someone who sounded like President Joe Biden. It might not be a permanent fix, but itâs a step in the right direction. Speaking of fake: The European Union is looking at draft election security mitigations with a goal to cut down on the amount of generative AI and deepfakes that are increasingly being posted on social media, imposing risks to democratic processes. More on Ivanti: Here we go again â researchers say hackers have begun mass exploiting a third vulnerability affecting Ivantiâs widely used enterprise VPN appliance. Seeing is believing: Brilliant Labs is carving out a niche for itself in the augmented reality space with its glass that features multimodal AI. Investors love it, too, and gave them more money. Closinglock wants to make sure you donât lose your house downpayment: The Austin-based startup grabbed another $12 million to continue developing its secure portal for wiring real estate transactions. New hires: It was a day for brand-new roles. Over at General Motors, Kurt Kelty, a battery expert and ex-Tesla executive, is the automakerâs new vice president of batteries. Meanwhile, Plaid snagged former Cloudflare chief product officer Jennifer Taylor, who steps into the role of the fintech startupâs president. Even more AI: Itâs everywhere, including all over this newsletter. Crux snagged $2.6 million to develop a generative AI platform to power business intelligence tools. Next, serverless data platform Upstash also has a new stack of cash and hit annual recurring revenue of $1 million just two years after its seed funding. And Glass is tapping into AI to supercharge smartphone cameras. Meanwhile, over on TechCrunch+, Alex says AI-powered software will be the stuff company dreams are made of. Helmet head: Apparently Livallâs smart ski and bike helmet had a security flaw that allowed silent location tracking. |
| Image Credits: Bryce Durbin / TechCrunch |
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| Image Credits: Bryce Durbin |
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