The TechCrunch team made the hard choice to stop production on this show but we encourage everyone who has enjoyed listening to Darrell break down the week's top stories to go check out and subscribe to Equity, which comes out every Monday, Wednesday and Friday and covers the numbers and nuance behind the headlines. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Darrell called it last October: Meta has built their own Twitter dupe, Threads, and it’s going pretty well so far with 30 million signups in the first 24 hours. Of course, this is a Meta product, so the platform isn’t perfect with it’s non-chronological timeline and security issues. This week we’re hearing from TechCrunch’s Taylor Hatmaker and Morgan Sung on Threads’ staying power and how Meta nailed the timing of this launch.Articles from the episode:Twitter limits the number of tweets users can read amid extended outageTwitter silently removes login requirement for viewing tweetsDoorDash offers delivery workers hourly rate, but there’s a catchMeta’s Threads app is a privacy nightmare that won’t launch in EU yetThreads passes 30M sign-ups in less than 24 hoursMeta’s Threads app is a privacy nightmare that won’t launch in EU yetThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
hein invited several fashion influencers to its facilities in China and, surprising no one but Shein and the influencers who took the trip, the internet isn’t thrilled with the viral factory tours. Shein doesn’t appear to think this latest press is bad, though, as they filed confidentially for a US IPO this week. This week Darrell is talking with Amanda Silberling about why Shein is on the "sheouts."Articles from the episode:How Shein’s influencer trip to a Chinese factory backfiredNetflix quietly axes its basic plan in CanadaUnicorn social app IRL to shut down after admitting 95% of its users were fakeDeepMind claims its next chatbot will rival ChatGPTLetMeSpy, a phone tracking app spying on thousands, says it was hackedThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
It’s rare for all of a company’s users to turn against it in such an intense way, but Reddit has managed to alienate all of their users at once. After a recent announcement that the company will no longer be offering their API for third-party apps, users have closed ranks and made the site virtually unusable. This week guest-host Haje Kamps talks with TechCrunch Sr. Reporter Morgan Sung about whether there is room for compromise between the moderators who keep the site running, third-party apps that users love, and the profit-motivated Reddit management team.Articles from the episode:A whistleblower raised safety concerns about OceanGate’s submersible in 2018. Then he was fired.Volkswagen’s breakthrough could spark a battery manufacturing gold rushWhatsApp introduces feature to automatically silence calls from unknown numbersNetflix launches website based on the fictional streaming service from ‘Black Mirror’Hundreds of subreddits plan to go dark indefinitely after Reddit CEO’s internal memoReddit communities adopt alternative forms of protest, as the company threatens action on moderatorsHackers threaten to leak 80GB of confidential data stolen from RedditThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction.. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
This week we're revisiting Inside Startup Battlefield, the four-part series that takes you behind TechCrunch’s Startup Battlefield competition. If you haven't already be sure to get your tickets to TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco on September 19-21. Save an additional 15% with promo code CRUNCH. Visit techcrunch.com/disrupt to learn more.In this episode, our host and Startup Battlefield Editor Neesha Tambe breaks down how the Battlefield companies are selected for the TechCrunch Disrupt stage. Then we take a deep dive into what makes a pitch-perfect with pitch coach and TechCrunch writer Haje Jan Kamps and Startup Battlefield judge and VC Nisha Dua. You’ll also hear from: Julia Somerdin from Labby, Young-Jae Kim and Tara Peters from Anthill, Quddus Pativada from Digest AI, Blessing Adesiyan from Mother Honestly, Hikari Senju from Omneky, Mitch Tolson from Ally Robotics, Elizabeth Lawler from App map, Aaron Hall from Intropic materials. Sheeba Dawood from Minerva. The TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
At WWDC this week, Apple revealed its new Vision Pro headset, a platform it described as the advent of spatial computing. The company clearly put a lot of work into building Vision Pro, and VisionOS, the software that powers it, but is it as revolutionary as Apple marketing would have you believe? Today, Darrell is joined by Brian Heater to talk about Apple Vision Pro, and what the future might hold for spatial computing.Articles from the episode:Fidelity has cut Reddit valuation by 41% since 2021 investmentCharacter.AI, the a16z-backed chatbot startup, tops 1.7M installs in first weekFirst impressions: Yes, Apple Vision Pro works and yes, it’s goodApple WWDC 2023: Everything announced from the Apple Vision Pro to iOS 17, MacBook Air and moreThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Many of the leading voices in AI have co-signed yet another ominous open letter warning that we should be“Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI." However, the voices shouting for regulation the loudest have us wondering how much of the AI fear-mongering is warranted, and how much is self-serving theater. This week Darrell is joined by Devin Coldewey to talk about why AI doomerism is overblown, and why the blowhards doing the blowing want it that way.Articles from the episode:OpenAI’s Altman and other AI giants back warning of advanced AI as ‘extinction’ riskEU and US lawmakers move to draft AI Code of Conduct fastA popular Android app began secretly spying on its users months after it was listed on Google PlayElizabeth Holmes is now behind bars: How we got hereNo ChatGPT in my court: Judge orders all AI-generated content must be declared and checkedWhile parents worry, teens are bullying Snapchat AIMeta Quest 3 revealedThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
This week Meta was ordered to suspend Facebook EU’s data flows and was hit with a fine of 1.2 billion Euros under GDPR. This fine has big implications for the way these companies will be allowed to collect and share data and it may lead to big changes - either in the laws that govern the use and protection of data, or in the way Meta and other tech giants operate at a fundamental level - or both. In this episode, Natasha Lomas is here to break down a years-long security saga that’s still unfolding.Articles from the episode:Meta ordered to suspend Facebook EU data flows as it’s hit with record €1.2BN privacy fine under GDPRTwitter technical issues crash Ron DeSantis’s 2024 campaign announcement The surgeon general’s advisory on risks of youth social media use could shift the conversationVirgin Orbit’s launch business sold for parts to Vast, Stratolaunch, and Rocket LabOpenAI launches an official ChatGPT app for iOSThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction.. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
We don’t spend a lot of time taking a deep-dive into the consumer experience of gaming. But one of the biggest stories in tech this week is the much-anticipated release of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom for the Nintendo Switch. So Darrell is joined by Taylor Hatmaker to have a moderately spoiler-free conversation about what Link is getting up to.Articles from the episode:Hardware startup Telly launches a free smart TV entirely supported by adsTelly, the ‘free’ smart TV with ads, has privacy policy red flagsAfter a 29-year run, Vice files for bankruptcyElon Musk appoints new Twitter CEO, NBCU’s Linda YaccarinoThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Tech conference season is here and this week TechCrunch reporters attended Google I/O to try the tech, attend talks and demos, and listen to Google CEO Sundar Pichai talk about how they’re integrating AI responsibly. On this episode, Darrell is joined by TechCrunch reporter Brian Heater to talk about all the hits from Google I/O.Articles from the episode:Peloton recalls millions of exercise bikes after reports of injuriesShopify to reduce workforce by 20%, sells logistics business to Flexport for 13% equityHow Shopify bungled its latest layoffs and made employees feel like NPCsIBM intros a slew of new AI services, including generative modelsThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Meta is monetizing kids as much as they are the rest of us. But this week the US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has alleged that Meta has violated a 2020 order to protect kids on the site, as well as running afoul of the agency’s Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act. The FTC will not just be doling out another financial slap on the wrist, they’re moving to completely prohibit Meta from monetizing children at all. This is the TechCrunch Podcast where we talk about the top stories in tech with the people who cover them. This week, Darrell is joined by TechCrunch reporter Devin Coldewey to talk about if Meta’s cavalier approach to compliance will finally be coming to a close.Articles from the episode:FTC moves to completely prohibit Meta from monetizing kidsAI can’t replace human writersHackers are increasingly using ChatGPT lures to spread malware on FacebookStripe, a longtime partner of Lyft, signs a big deal with UberMicrosoft launches Pegasus program for startups, awarding up to $350,000 in creditsThe TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episode drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found, and Chain Reaction. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Snapchat Rolled out their generative AI chatbot, My AI to their 750 million monthly users so it feels like the right time to pause and ask whether we’re ready for the real thing – and ready or not, whether anybody wants one. This week on the TechCrunch Podcast, Darrell Etherington is talking to TechCrunch reporter, Amanda Silberling about making robot friends on the internet.Articles from the episode:Snapchat’s AI chatbot is now free for all global usSnapchat sees spike in 1-star reviews as users pan the ‘My AI’ feature, calling for its removalMissouri trans ‘snitch form’ down after people spammed it with the ‘Bee Movie’ scriptSpaceX’s successful failure is a wake-up call for Starship’s timelineGoogle’s Bard AI chatbot can now generate and debug codeApple wins antitrust court battle with Epic Games, appeals court rules Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Welcome back to the TechCrunch podcast. This week we're bringing you a special treat from our friends over at Equity. This week, Alex recorded at Early Stage, TechCrunch's event for founders who are building startups from the ground up. Happily, Darrell from the TechCrunch team was sitting next to us on the show floor so we tagged him in for some rocket knowledge.Anyhoo, here's the run of show!All things Early Stage: Notes from the show floor, what we can infer about attendance and a vibe check.Elon's new, larger rocket went up (very good) and then went "boom" (not as good). Happily for the space race, the overall result of the launch was good. Rockets have a tendency to go boom when they are new, and it's a bit of the, well, testing process to have them do so. Sure, a non-boom result would have been better, but SpaceX wasn't planning on trying to reuse the parts anyway.Tesla's earnings came out and investors are not that pleased. While there was some good stuff in the numerical set, price cuts at the company and moderating cash flow indicate that profitability gains could be harder to reach in the future.And layoffs. Meta is cutting staff. Insider is cutting staff. BuzzFeed is cutting staff. It's a mess out there. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Blue checkmarks on Twitter and Instagram are used by public figures and media outlets to say, “you can trust I am who I say I am and you can trust me.” But now both Twitter and Meta have changed the rules of how to get verified, and in the process have stripped some of the legitimacy of the all-powerful checkmark. This week on the TechCrunch Podcast, Darrell Etherington is talking to TechCrunch’s newest reporter, Morgan Sung about the price of being verified on social media.Use Promo code TCPOD to ger 40% founder and investor passes to Early Stage on April 20 in Boston.Articles from the episode:Meta Verified is under fire in sex work circles for revealing users’ legal namesElon Musk admits he only bought Twitter because he thought he’d be forced toWith Bedrock, Amazon enters the generative AI raceFTC orders supplement maker to pay $600K in first case involving hijacked Amazon reviewsTruecaller brings live caller ID to iPhone… but with a catch Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
The internet is always changing but something about Generative AI feels different. With the advent of Open AI’s Chat GPT, the machines are evolving beyond remix and delivery machines to become the content creators themselves. In this week’s episode of the TechCrunch Podcast, Darrell Etherington talks with Techcrunch Senior reporter Devin Coldewey about how the AI hype is overshadowing some of its shadier possible cultural side effects. Use Promo code TCPOD to ger 40% founder and investor passes to Early Stage on April 20 in Boston.Articles from the episode:The Great PretenderThe takeaways from Stanford’s 386-page report on the state of AIA knife so sharp you don’t feel it cut More from TechCrunchThousands of Gen Z creators are using Fanfix to monetize content and interact with fansHype grows for SpaceX’s Starship orbital flight test, but barriers remainTwitter’s new dog icon is sending dogecoin — sigh — to the moonTwitter’s new homepage logo is very doge-yBob Lee, creator of Cash App and former CTO of Square, stabbed to death Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Welcome to another episode of The TechCrunch Podcast where we break down the biggest stories in tech news with the people who cover it. This week Darrell Etherington talks with Paul Sawers about the company that made a Woolly Mammoth meatball (and other lab-grown meat). And Amanda Silberling explains how AI images of Donald Trump getting arrested, the Balenciaga pope and a natural disaster that didn’t happen are fooling the internet. Use Promo code TCPOD to ger 40% founder and investor passes to Early Stage on April 20 in Boston.Articles from the episode:From Balenciaga Pope to the Great Cascadia Earthquake, AI images are creating a new realityCultured meat firm resurrects woolly mammoth in lab-grown meatballMore from TechCrunchFormer FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried charged for allegedly bribing Chinese officialsBinance and CEO Changpeng Zhao sued by CFTC over trading and derivative violationsOpenAI connects ChatGPT to the internetThat was fast! Microsoft slips ads into AI-powered Bing ChatTwitter announces new API with only free, basic and enterprise levels Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Welcome to another episode of The TechCrunch Podcast where we break down the biggest stories in tech news with the people who cover it. This week Darrell Etherington talks with Taylor Hatmaker about the TikTok CEO’s congressional testimony and Jaquie Melinek is here to catch us up on everything that’s been going on in Crypto from Do Kwon’s arrest to the SEC suing the Tron founder and many celebrities.Use Promo code TCPOD to get 40% founder and investor passes to Early Stage on April 20 in Boston.Articles from the episode:Terra creator Do Kwon reportedly arrested at Montenegro airport SEC sues Tron founder and celebrities, including Lindsay Lohan, Jake Paul and Soulja Boy, for crypto securities violations Coinbase execs weigh in on the crypto’s future in US amid regulatory scrutinyTikTok CEO testifies before CongressTikTok CEO says it wasn’t ‘spying’ when ByteDance employees surveilled journalistsMore from TechCrunchAmazon kills DPReview, the best camera review site on the webGoogle’s Bard lags behind GPT-4 and Claude in head-to-head comparisonAWS takes a hit in latest round of Amazon layoffsMicrosoft brings OpenAI’s DALL-E image creator to the new Bing Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Welcome to another episode of The TechCrunch Podcast where we break down the biggest stories in tech news with the people who cover it. This week Darrell Etherington talks with Dom-Madori Davis about how the SVB crash disproportionately affects Black founders. And Devin Coldewey fills us in on the improved capabilities of Open AI’s GPT-4.Articles from the episode:‘Trust is a hard thing to earn’: SVB’s closure could disproportionately affect Black founders5 ways GPT-4 outsmarts ChatGPTMore from TechCrunchMicrosoft lays off an ethical AI team as it doubles down on OpenAIY Combinator cuts nearly 20% of staff, scales back growth stage investmentsQualtrics accepts $12.5B all-cash acquisition offer to go private Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
Welcome to another episode of The TechCrunch Podcast. To address the elephant in the newsroom, the SVB debacle happened mere hours after we recorded this episode. So, this week Romain Dillet is here to talk about another big story the proposed bipartisan bill that could lead to banning TikTok in the US. And Zack Whittaker comes on to warn us about the dangers of startups selling our data.Articles from the episode:Proposed US bipartisan bill could lead to TikTok banToday’s startups should terrify youMore from TechCrunchRussian game developer bans and doxes 6,700 cheatersElon Musk apologizes after publicly mocking Twitter employee with disabilityMicrosoft brings an AI-powered Copilot to its business app suite Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
It’s the moment we’ve all been waiting for—the winner is announced! In this episode, we get to know the winner of the 2022 Startup Battlefield competition. We’ll hear what’s next for their company and get insight from TechCrunch staff, VCs, and audience members on why they were the right choice.Be sure to check out all of the other podcasts in the TechCrunch Podcast Network: Found, Equity, The TechCrunch Podcast, Chain Reaction and The TechCrunch Live Podcast. Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.