Uber CEO Travis Kalanick Is Leaving Trump's Advisory Council

Uber CEO Travis Kalanick

Money Sharma / AFP / Getty Images

Uber CEO Travis Kalanick has dropped out of President Trump’s economic advisory council after backlash from customers that spurred a viral social media revolt and internal dissent. Uber confirmed to BuzzFeed News that Kalanick has left the group.

News of Kalanick&;s decision was first reported by The New York Times.

Kalanick&039;s decision to resign from the advisory group before its first meeting this Friday comes after a protest outside the company&039;s San Francisco headquarters the day of Trump&039;s inauguration, and after Uber was forced to automate its account-deletion process following a viral DeleteUber campaign. At an all-hands meeting with employees on Tuesday in San Francisco, Kalanick said sitting on the council would offer a better chance for Uber to affect change, sources present at the meeting told BuzzFeed News.

The DeleteUber social media revolt began Saturday night, about a day after Trump&039;s controversial executive order restricting immigration – hours after Uber had already announced it would pay drivers affected the order for three months if they could not work. Since then, many thousands of customers have deleted their accounts. Kalanick, who previously had not spoken to Trump, told employees in a memo that “Earlier today I spoke briefly with the President about the immigration executive order and its issues for our community.” Kalanick had previously described his choice to attend the first meeting of the White House advisory group as a means to express dissent against measures like the immigration ban as a voice on the inside.

Protests were scheduled to take place at Uber offices throughout the country — including San Francisco, New York and New Orleans — on Thursday; organizers in Palo Alto said those demonstrations will continue, despite Kalanick’s decision to step down as an advisor to Trump.

Here&039;s the full email Kalanick sent employees announcing his departure from the advisory group:

Dear Team,

Earlier today I spoke briefly with the President about the immigration executive order and its issues for our community. I also let him know that I would not be able to participate on his economic council. Joining the group was not meant to be an endorsement of the President or his agenda but unfortunately it has been misinterpreted to be exactly that.

I spent a lot of time thinking about this and mapping it to our values. There are a couple that are particularly relevant:

Inside Out – The implicit assumption that Uber (or I) was somehow endorsing the Administration’s agenda has created a perception-reality gap between who people think we are, and who we actually are.

Just Change – We must believe that the actions we take ultimately move the ball forward. There are many ways we will continue to advocate for just change on immigration but staying on the council was going to get in the way of that. The executive order is hurting many people in communities all across America. Families are being separated, people are stranded overseas and there’s a growing fear the U.S. is no longer a place that welcomes immigrants.

Immigration and openness to refugees is an important part of our country’s success and quite honestly to Uber’s. I am incredibly proud to work directly with people like Thuan and Emil, both of whom were refugees who came here to build a better life for themselves. I know it has been a tough week for many of you and your families, as well as many thousands of drivers whose stories are heartfelt and heart-wrenching.

Please know, your questions and stories on Tuesday, along with what I heard from drivers, have kept me resilient and reminded me of one of our most essential cultural values, Be Yourself. We will fight for the rights of immigrants in our communities so that each of us can be who we are with optimism and hope for the future.

Travis

This story is developing. Check back for updates.

Quelle: <a href="Uber CEO Travis Kalanick Is Leaving Trump&039;s Advisory Council“>BuzzFeed

Event Hubs .NET Standard client is now generally available

After several months of testing, both internally and by our users (thank you), we are releasing our newest Event Hubs clients to general availability. This means that these new libraries are production ready and fully supported by Microsoft.

What new libraries are available?

Consistent with our past design decisions, we are releasing two new NuGet packages:

Microsoft.Azure.EventHubs – This library comprises the Event Hubs specific functionality that is currently found in the WindowsAzure.ServiceBus library. In here you will be able to do things like send and receive events from an Event Hub.
Microsoft.Azure.EventHubs.Processor – Replaces functionality of the Microsoft.Azure.ServiceBus.EventProcessorHost library. This is the easiest way to receive events from an Event Hub, and keeps you from having to remember things such as offsets and partition information between receivers.

What does this mean for you?

Releasing these new libraries provides three major benefits:

Runtime portability – Using .NET Standard, we now have the ability to write a single code base that is portable across different .NET runtimes, including .NET Core, .NET framework, and the Universal Windows Platform. You can take this library and run it on Windows Server with .NET Framework 4.6, or on a Mac/Linux machine using .NET Core.
Open source – Yes! We are very excited that these new libraries are open source and available on GitHub. We love the interactions that we have with our customers, whether it be an issue or pull request.
Event Hubs now has its own library – while Event Hubs and Service Bus have been seemingly joined in the past, the use cases between these two products are often times different. Previously, you needed to download a Service Bus library in order to use Event Hubs. These new libraries are specific to Event Hubs, so we hope that they will make things more clear for our new users.

What&;s next?

For those of you currently using the WindowsAzure.ServiceBus library, we will continue to support Event Hubs workloads on this library for the foreseeable future. With that said, we currently have a .NET Standard Service Bus library in preview!

For more information on getting started with these new libraries , check out our updated getting started documentation.

So take the new libraries for a spin, and let us know what you think!
Quelle: Azure

Indian IT Minister Says Apple Plans To Make iPhones In Bengaluru

Priyank Kharge, Minister IT & BT || Tourism : Govt of Karnataka / Via Twitter: @PriyankKharge

Apple&;s plans to pursue iPhone manufacturing operations in India seem to be moving along well. In a statement issued to Bengaluru&039;s local press late on Thursday, the IT minister of the Indian state of Karnataka, Priyank Kharge, said he welcomed “Apple Inc.’s proposal to commence initial manufacturing operations in the state.”

He followed the statement with a tweet: “Glad to announce initial manufacturing operations of the world&039;s most valued company: Apple, in Karnataka. Another validation for Karnataka.”

Kharge offered no other details on the proposal.

Apple has been in talks with the Indian government about manufacturing locally for months, and had asked India for major incentives, including a 15-year exemption on customs duty among other things.

Twitter: @chandrarsrikant

Apple declined comment on the minister&039;s statement, but instead pointed BuzzFeed News to a statement it issued a few weeks ago: “We&039;ve been working hard to develop our operations in India and are proud to deliver the best products and services in the world to our customers here. We appreciate the constructive and open dialogue we’ve had with government about further expanding our local operations.”

Quelle: <a href="Indian IT Minister Says Apple Plans To Make iPhones In Bengaluru“>BuzzFeed

Microsoft Urges Trump To Exempt Students And Workers From The Travel Ban

David Ramos / Getty Images

Microsoft is urging the Trump administration to create an exemption in its controversial travel ban to allow foreign-born students, workers, and people with family emergencies to leave and enter the United States.

In an executive order signed last week, President Donald Trump indefinitely suspended Syrian refugees from entering the US and has blocked people from Iraq, Iran, Sudan, Somalia, Libya, and Yemen from entering the country for 90 days.

In a letter to the head of Homeland Security and the Secretary of State, Microsoft President Brad Smith said the immigration order has impacted people with “pressing needs,” noting situations in which parents and children have been separated, individuals stranded, and travel for family medical emergencies blocked. Microsoft has 76 employees and 41 dependents who are impacted by the immigration order. But Smith added, “These situations almost certainly are not unique to our employees and their families.”

In the letter, Microsoft proposed an exemption to the travel ban. Individuals with valid travel documents, and who have committed no crimes, would be permitted to enter the US. And employees with work travel or family members with medical emergencies would be allowed to leave and enter the US, within a two-week window of time. Under Microsoft&;s proposal, travel to one of the seven Muslim majority countries for family-related emergencies would require approval on a case-by-case basis.

“We believe such an exception under the existing framework of the Executive Order
would help address compelling personal needs without compromising the Executive
Order’s security-related objectives,” wrote Smith.

To bolster Microsoft&039;s case, Smith notes that the president&039;s executive order explicitly grants Homeland Security and the State Department discretion to grant such exemptions.

“We therefore believe that the process we are proposing here is not only consistent with the Executive Order, but was contemplated by it.”

Based in Washington state, Microsoft has also lent its support to a lawsuit there challenging the president&039;s immigration order. Washington-based businesses Amazon and Expedia filed sworn statements in support of the suit, which was led by Attorney General Bob Ferguson. Earlier this week, a spokesperson for the company told BuzzFeed News, “Microsoft has been supportive and has provided information to the Attorney General and is willing to provide further testimony if necessary.”

Quelle: <a href="Microsoft Urges Trump To Exempt Students And Workers From The Travel Ban“>BuzzFeed

How Many Startups Does It Take To Change A Lightbulb?

Two years ago, as it prepared to build a new office on Manhattan’s West Side, the ad firm R/GA surveyed its 1,000-odd employees to ask what improvements they wanted made to their workplace. Number one was sit-stand desks. Easy enough. Number two was natural light: Some of R/GA’s New York employees had very little exposure to the sun.

That was trickier. Though 5 West Street, a hulking brutalist ziggurat nicknamed the “Tyrell Building” for its unfortunate resemblance to the headquarters of the evil corporation in Blade Runner, was about to undergo an architectural facelift that would transform its facade from an opaque beige scowl into a clear glass grin, there was nothing to be done about the building’s floor plates, which were larger than football fields. The office was simply too big for everyone to sit near a window.

“It was a gutted, filthy, old warehouse,” said Julia Goldberg, R/GA’s senior vice president of global office services. “The lighting was terrible.”

Goldberg had to figure out how to brighten up the place. She considered a commercial lighting system built by Philips, but it had no back end — no software to control the whole thing. For a 220,000-square-foot office, that was pretty important, if for no other reason than the time it would take to wander around turning on and off all the lights. Then, last June, Goldberg discovered Ketra, an LED lighting startup from Austin that promised some pretty big things.

The first was what Ketra calls “natural light”: white light sources that imperceptibly change their color and intensity throughout the day to mimic the lighting conditions outside. The second was an extreme degree of control. Ketra lights could be wirelessly grouped into zones of any number of lights that could all be separately adjusted via custom software on a wall panel, computer, or phone. The third was precision. Each Ketra bulb contained a patented sensor that measured its own color 360 times a minute to make sure the light being produced was the light being requested. Ketra was selling precisely measured, nature-approximating light, accessible throughout the massive office at the press of a button.

They sold the idea of light, not lighting.

It was exactly what Goldberg — who was under a mandate to design an office that embodied R/GA’s recent rebrand as “an agency for the connected age” — wanted to hear. And it helped that the two Ketra employees who showed up to pitch her didn’t simply treat lighting as a utility or a mundane problem to be solved. Nav Sooch, the CEO, was a design-focused, Stanford-trained engineer who had already hit it big with a semiconductor company; Michael Heinemeier, the sales director, had previously worked on a light installation with the artist James Turrell, a MacArthur “genius.” These were creative technologists preaching high-quality light as a convenient, aesthetically pleasing, and healthy lifestyle choice. They sold the idea of light, not lighting. Goldberg was in.

Throughout the relatively short history of electric light, most improvements have been aimed at making light bulbs last longer or use less energy. Ketra is selling something different than dull efficiency: light as an object of beauty, light as a perk. For millennia, we made do with candles, torches, oil lamps, and the dim flickering of all manner of flames. Sure, the chandeliers at Versailles were nice, but the flames themselves were no different than what you’d light in the most modest hovel. Now technology has advanced to the point where illumination itself is a luxury good. What Ketra is selling is the idea that it can make your life better by giving you more control over how it is lit, in really minute detail — that electric light has contributed to making us unhealthier, and that electric light will make us healthy again.

R/GA&;s office, complete with Ketra lighting, after the renovation.

Courtesy of R/GA

Eighteen months and more than a million dollars of Ketra products later, the R/GA headquarters is a sight to behold, as cavernous as a hangar and as white and austere as a nun’s wimple. The space has accessorized terrifically with the humans inside it. On a recent afternoon, top-knotted men ordered lattes from an on-site Brooklyn Roasting Company. Women in black beanies, black sweaters, and black Nikes glided under dozens of massive projection screens displaying the agency’s work. And lining the ceilings, 2,000 white fixtures held 8,837 white Ketra lamps, casting cool, crisp white light worthy of an Apple ad on all the industry below.

5 West Street is the biggest project the seven-year-old Ketra has ever finished, but it won’t be for long. It’s currently working on a new 300,000-square-foot headquarters for Stripe, the $5 billion payments startup. And Stripe marks the latest in a run of successes for Ketra, which has seemingly come out of nowhere in the past two years to light the spaces of some of the world’s biggest startups, trendiest businesses, and most august cultural institutions: Apple, Facebook (where it lights the Facebook Live studio in New York), Google, Vice, Eataly, the upscale salad chain Sweetgreen, the Art Institute of Chicago. (And, oh&; BuzzFeed.) Meanwhile, R/GA, which runs its own consulting business, has started recommending the lights to its corporate clients. Recent converts include what Julia Goldberg would only refer to as “a well-known apparel company” (R/GA famously counts Nike as a client), as well as a “large hotelier” and Sheikh Mohammed of Dubai.

Ketra has positioned itself to illuminate our affluent, healthy, wired, and well-cultured future in part by being as chameleonic as its LEDs, which, in addition to emulating the sun, can turn millions of colors. To architectural lighting designers, the finicky aficionados of the lighting world, they comprise a creative tool kit par excellence. To facilities bosses with blank slates and enormous budgets, like Julia Goldberg, they are highly customizable, networkable, energy-saving conveniences. And to a crop of health-focused businesses — and tech companies eager to tout how lavishly they take care of their employees — they are wellness orbs, radiating futuristic vim.

But who really needs them? Being all things to all people doesn’t come cheap. A single Ketra bulb costs about $100. (That’s a lot for an LED: The Sweethome’s recommended bulb sells at $20 for four.) It’s even more considering the context of a gadget world that produces inexpensive and reasonably good knockoffs faster than ever, not to mention an LED industry with a built-in existential crisis — the bulbs last so long that selling their replacements isn’t necessarily good business. Nav Sooch is fond of saying that his company has invented a new category of product. And there’s no question Ketra has built a bleeding-edge light source and a sophisticated way to control it. But before you can sell millions of dollars of high-tech lighting to some of the world’s biggest companies, you have to convince them that there is a very big problem with their light.

The kitchen at Vice&039;s headquarters in Brooklyn.

Courtesy of Ketra

It is the sad fate of artificial lighting to be a historical invention that most people only notice when it isn’t working. Ever since the advent and spread of modern incandescent lighting in the first half of the 20th century — a wonder enabling untold advances in every field of contemporary human endeavor — people basically think of their lightbulbs only when they burn out, or when it’s too dim to read, or too bright to take off their clothes.

“Everyone thinks light just happens,” said Sean O’Connor, a Los Angeles architectural lighting designer. “People just expect there to be light everywhere they go.”

“Everyone thinks light just happens,” said Sean O’Connor, a Los Angeles architectural lighting designer. “People just expect there to be light everywhere they go.”

If public awareness of lighting has nudged up a smidge over the past 10 years, it’s because of 2007 federal regulations requiring more efficient bulbs. So consumers made the change from traditional incandescents, which had been the standard for more than a century — and it was a pain. At first we switched to more efficient incandescents and compact fluorescent lamps, the ones that look like little curled pigtails. But CFLs can be hard to dim, contain mercury, and give off harsh, antiseptic light. People hated them. And now they’re dying: Earlier this year, GE announced that it would stop manufacturing and selling CFLs in the US.

That left LEDs, which produce white light either by mixing red, green, and blue or by slathering a yellow phosphor over a blue LED. Once prohibitively expensive and of highly varying quality, LEDs in recent years have plunged in cost and generally give off light that’s not all that far off, quality-wise, from daylight or incandescent light. They’re the present and the future of lighting, a $15 billion industry in 2014 that is on pace to exceed $21 billion by 2019.

But the LED industry faces its own day of reckoning. As J.B. MacKinnon has written, LEDs last so long that they undermine the traditional “planned obsolescence” business model of incandescents. How can companies maintain their profit margins when people only need to buy their $5 products every 15 years? Three of the huge players in the industry — GE, Philips, and Osram — have responded by spinning off part or all of their lighting businesses in the face of likely declining revenue. If people only care about light when their bulbs burn out, and if their bulbs almost never burn out, won’t people just stop thinking about light?

Maybe, unless companies like Ketra can define new ways that our lights aren’t working.

The inner workings of a Ketra lightbulb.

Julia Robinson for BuzzFeed News

One afternoon in 2009 — long before affordable and high-quality LEDs could be bought at Home Depot — David Knapp accompanied his wife to a lighting store in Austin. The couple were building a new house, and he was more or less tagging along in case she picked out something he really hated. As Knapp wandered to the back of the showroom, he saw some lights that he thought looked odd and familiar, like light-emitting diodes.

Knapp knew LEDs. He had sold his first company, which pioneered the use of LED fiber optics to network multimedia devices in cars, in 2005. Now in his late forties and with time on his hands, he was intrigued.

“Yeah, they suck,” the salesperson told him. “We don’t recommend them.”

The clerk went on to explain that LEDs were bad at rendering colors and were marred by a whole range of issues related to color control (they were too bright and harsh), dimming (they didn’t, or did erratically), and aging (they changed color over time).

“I’d like to buy one of every one of those that you have,” Knapp responded.

That night, Knapp went home with a bundle of LED lights, where he “tore them apart, and started investigating why they were not the ideal solution. How do you address that? That’s what we spent the next six to eight years doing.” Knapp recruited Horace Ho, with whom he had built his first company, and together they invested more than $5 million of their own money into solving the problem.

Their solution was, basically, a self-conscious LED — one that never stops analyzing the light that it produces. At the heart of Ketra’s tech is an LED chip capable of temperature-optical feedback, which senses heat and color output in real time and adjusts itself according to that data. Knapp’s early prototypes were on 12-inch printed circuit boards as big as laptops, but the results were encouraging enough to attract investors, including Nav Sooch, who had known Knapp and Ho since their days as young engineers. Sooch had made millions in the ’90s and early 2000s founding Silicon Labs, an Austin-based semiconductor company.

Nav Sooch, CEO of Ketra, at the company&039;s showroom in New York City on Jan. 3, 2017.

Bryan Derballa for BuzzFeed News

In 2012, Sooch traveled with Knapp to Korea and China to meet with major lighting manufacturers to try to sell them the Ketra chip. “They asked us questions about how they would turn that into a system,” Sooch said. It was, he thought, as if Elon Musk had taken the Tesla battery to Honda and they&039;d asked him how to make a car out of it. Philosophically, the big lighting companies didn’t get it, and practically, they weren’t set up to make processors; why waste time waiting?

“If we’re going to sell a chip to these big lighting folks, what do we make, a dollar or two per chip?” Knapp said. “We came back and were like, &039;These guys don’t know what they’re doing, and we have to build the whole thing.&039;”

Workers review panels of lights as they are tested at the Ketra manufacturing facility in Austin.

Julia Robinson for BuzzFeed News

As Ketra expanded (it now employees 85 people) and began to design actual light sources, it solicited the interest of professional light obsessives, people who draw up elaborate specifications to ensure spaces are lit just so. In early 2013, Tom Hamilton, Ketra’s head of marketing, showed an early mockup — a big white translucent globe with the Ketra chip inside — to Sean O’Connor, the architectural lighting designer who does high-end retail, hospitality (think the St. Regis Aspen and the Beverly Hills Hotel), and residential projects. The advent of LEDs, inconsistent and unreliable, had made his job much more complicated and stressful.

“When we do an LED project, before we can write the specifications, we have to see samples from everybody to see if it does what it says it does. Historically, it doesn’t,” O’Connor said. “Everything is fiction until you try it.” It was as if an architect couldn’t be sure that a steel beam was the length they had ordered until they saw it in person.

Ketra, even with its goofy globe, promised what O’Connor regarded as “the holy grail” for LED architectural lighting: flexibility and standards. That is, an LED that dimmed like an incandescent, could shift between different kinds of white light while maintaining a high rendering quality, and did it every time, right out of the box. No other LED product on the market that did dynamic white — such as the popular Philips Hue, which O’Connor dismissed as “a consumer toy” — had the special chip inside ensuring consistent color temperature.

Michelle Rial / BuzzFeed News

“It&039;s very easy to use an LED just to sense &039;is there light there or no?&039; but to sense the color and the intensity to get that level of information — I don’t know of anybody else who could do it,” said Maury Wright, the editor-in-chief of LEDs Magazine. “Hue says, &039;What’s the difference if it’s a little more or a little less red?&039; For professional products, you want light matching exactly in terms of spectral energy.”

Winning over skeptics got Ketra in the door with an entire universe of places that depend on rigorously exact light: upscale restaurants, stores, and galleries. In early 2015, another architectural lighting designer suggested Ketra to David Thurm, the Art Institute of Chicago’s chief operating officer. Thurm had been trying to find LEDs to light his masterworks for years, but every time he gathered the curators together to run a test, they left unsatisfied.

“We would get funny results,” Thurm said. “We easily went through 10 LED manufacturers.” And even if the light rendered a painting well, it might be untunable and change the color of the wall. Thurm said he had heard of other major art museums repainting their walls to deal with the problem.

The Art Institute has the world’s largest collection of Monet’s paintings of haystacks, the impressionist’s famous studies of light and time. Thurm set up a viewing of the paintings lit by Ketra, with the museum’s director, curators, and conservation staff. They were astonished.

“We could tune it to a place where the paintings looked beautiful,” Thurm said. “We’re very fussy about this stuff. And everything we were getting from incandescent, we were now getting from LED.”

Ketra&039;s showroom in New York City.

Courtesy of Ketra

Quelle: <a href="How Many Startups Does It Take To Change A Lightbulb?“>BuzzFeed

Merrick Garland Has A Higher "Scalia Score" Than Neil Gorsuch

Ravel

Neil Gorsuch, the judge President Trump selected to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court created after the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, has often been compared, in style and philosophy, to the judge he&;s been nominated to replace. But there&039;s another prominent federal appeals court judge that, according to data analysis of case law citations, fits the Scalia mold even more snugly: Merrick Garland.

Garland, the judge tapped by President Obama 50 weeks ago to join the Supreme Court but whom Senate Republicans refused to consider, has cited Justice Scalia in his opinions more often than Trump&039;s pick, as a percentage of their total citations, according to the legal search and analytics company Ravel.

The “Scalia Score,” Ravel&039;s cofounder and COO Nick Reed told BuzzFeed News, takes the number of times a judge cites opinions authored by Scalia and then divides them by the number of their total citations. Garland cited Scalia 2.16% of the time — slightly more than Gorsuch, who referenced Scalia in 2.06% of his citations. Gorsuch also had fewer citations than Garland; in his career, he&039;s made 7,972 of them, while Garland&039;s had 10,665, according to Ravel.

Reed noted that Garland sits on the DC Circuit, the same court that Scalia sat on before he became a Supreme Court Justice. “If you&039;re a DC Circuit judge, Scalia also wrote a lot of precedential case law that applies directly in your circuit.” Reed said. “Merrick just had more Scalia arguments to draw from.”

Ravel calculated Scalia scores for all 21 judges that Trump listed as his potential Supreme Court nominees. Gorsuch bested them all, which Ravel noted in a blog is an indication of his “ideology and conservative bonafides.”

“Of all of Trump&039;s picks, Gorsuch is the most like Scalia in the citation index, but Merrick Garland was even closer,” Reed said. “That&039;s something Republicans can chew on.”

After Scalia&039;s death last year, Ravel ran a series of calculations to reveal his influence in American legal thought. One of the insights gleaned from the data was that out of all active and inactive Supreme Court justices, Ruth Bader Ginsburg had the 6th most similar citation pattern compared to Scalia. Justice William Rehnquist took the top spot.

Quelle: <a href="Merrick Garland Has A Higher "Scalia Score" Than Neil Gorsuch“>BuzzFeed

Twitter Employees Are Donating $1.59 Million To The ACLU After Trump's Travel Ban

Teresa Kroeger / Getty Images

Employees at Twitter have raised $530,000 to support relief efforts following President Trump&;s controversial immigration order, according to Twitter employees who spoke with BuzzFeed News. That figure was matched by the company&039;s Executive Chair Omid Kordestani and CEO Jack Dorsey, the employees said, citing a company-wide email sent Wednesday evening. The total $1.59 million will be donated to the ACLU.

Reached for comment, Twitter confirmed the amounts.

“The Executive Order&039;s humanitarian and economic impact is real and upsetting,” Dorsey said on Twitter over the weekend. “We benefit from what refugees and immigrants bring to the U.S.”

Several other tech industry leaders have criticized the president&039;s order, including Tim Cook, Brian Chesky and Travis Kalanick, who is an economic advisor to Trump.

Elon Musk, another member of the president&039;s Strategic and Policy Forum said he would consult his fellow business leaders and propose amendments to the immigration order when the group meets with the president on Friday.

Amazon and Expedia filed sworn statements earlier this week in support of a Washington state lawsuit against the Trump administration&039;s travel ban. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos told his staff that the company will explore additional legal options, as did Apple&039;s Cook.

Quelle: <a href="Twitter Employees Are Donating .59 Million To The ACLU After Trump&039;s Travel Ban“>BuzzFeed

Warning Signs Abound As Snap Barrels Toward IPO

Snap Inc.

As Snap Inc. heads towards its highly anticipated IPO, new data obtained by BuzzFeed News raises questions about the company’s ability to sustain the sort of growth needed to justify its expected $20 to 25 billion valuation.

The emergence of Snapchat clones copying the app’s key features — most prominently Instagram’s knock off of its Stories feature — appears to have hurt Snap’s growth prospects, according to data from app analytics company App Annie. Though Snapchat is still growing, these clones are hampering growth in key markets like the United States, and potential future markets in Asia.

Snapchat once had a strong lead over Instagram on time-spent-in-app per user on Android devices worldwide. But in the spring of 2016 — before Instagram even copied Stories — it started to slip. As of December 2016, Instagram has not only surpassed Snapchat, but claimed a lead of 25%. That&;s a metric worth noting, because Snap is pitching Wall Street on its ability to maximize average revenue per user, according to Bloomberg. If users spend less time inside Snapchat, the ad supported company stands to make less money per user. As of late last year, Snap was selling major advertisers on the fact that its users spent 25-30 minutes in the app each day.

Snapchat continues to have significant momentum in the United States, but here too its time spent advantage over Instagram is shrinking. In December 2015, before Instagram cloned its popular Stories feature, Snapchat had a 35% lead over Instagram in time spent per user on Android devices in the US, according to App Annie. Instagram debuted its take on Stories in the summer of 2016 and by December, that lead had declined to 20%. A source familiar with the situation said a similar trend is playing out on iOS.

“A large portion of this movement occurred in the second half of 2016 and could have partly been due to the addition of Instagram Stories in August 2016,” App Annie told BuzzFeed News.

Meanwhile, Snap’s growth prospects in big markets like Asia appear fraught. Like Facebook and Twitter, Snapchat is banned in China. A Snapchat-like app called Snow currently dominates that market and outranks Snap in Japan and South Korea when it comes to monthly active users, according to App Annie data.

App Annie

As BuzzFeed News has previously reported, advertisers have been hesitant to dedicate big budgets to the Snapchat since its reach and data targeting capabilities pale in comparison to Facebook’s. The rampant cloning of key Snapchat features has only made the prospect of breaking through that barrier more daunting.

“Snapchat’s still not taken seriously enough to even be on the level of getting the kind of investment that Instagram is getting,” one advertising agency CEO told BuzzFeed News this week. Asked if Instagram’s clone would mean advertisers would direct dollars there instead of Snapchat, the executive said that “there was never enough money earmarked for Snapchat to move to Instagram.”

As Snapchat battles Instagram and its other clones, Snapchat’s top influencers and brands are reporting declines in Story views, as noted by Techcrunch. Talent managers and advertising executives told BuzzFeed News that they’re seeing declines in views of their stories extending from 20% to as high as 50%.

Meanwhile, the overall percentage of internet users watching Snapchat’s live stories has declined as well, falling to 12% in November 2016 from 14% in June 2015, according to UBS. “We think growth has stalled and in particular Instagram including similar features has helped keep people from leaving and going to Snapchat,” Ben Bajarin, principal analyst at Creative Strategies, told BuzzFeed News.

Snap Inc. declined comment.

Creative Strategies

Quelle: <a href="Warning Signs Abound As Snap Barrels Toward IPO“>BuzzFeed

Gorsuch Might Play Key Role In Cellphone Privacy Issues If Confirmed To The Supreme Court

Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court is one step closer to a full-nine person bench.

With the possible addition of Neil Gorsuch — a federal appeals court judge nominated by President Trump Tuesday night to fill the vacancy left after the death Antonin Scalia — to its ranks, the Supreme Court could soon consider important cases involving cellphone location data and Americans&; expectations of privacy.

The Fourth Amendment In The Digital Age

Invisible, silent, and almost always by your side, the signals sent and received from your phone can tell a faithful story of your life, perhaps most intimately about all the places you&039;ve been. As courts around the country wrestle with the privacy implications of always-on data collection, experts tell BuzzFeed News that the Supreme Court in the coming years is primed to grapple with the uncertainty around phone location data and the Fourth Amendment.

Elizabeth Goitein, the co-director of the liberty and national security program at New York University Law School told BuzzFeed News that old legal doctrines are falling flat when it comes to protecting our privacy rights on mobile devices — specifically location information.

The Fourth Amendment prohibits unreasonable searches and seizures. But Goitein and other experts point to what&039;s known as the third party doctrine of the Fourth Amendment, which holds that people give up their expectation of privacy when they share information with third parties, like banks or telephone companies.

“That doctrine simply doesn&039;t work in the digital era, in which you can&039;t go 24 hours without sharing highly sensitive information with third parties,” she said.

Several appeals courts have used the third party doctrine in decisions against defendants in which their phone location information was obtained by law enforcement without a warrant.

“It&039;s impossible to go about your daily life in the digital age without leaving a trail of digital breadcrumbs behind you that can reveal some of the most private aspects of your life — even though you never intended to reveal them,” Nathan Freed Wessler, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, told BuzzFeed News.

While establishing probable cause is the legal threshold to obtain a warrant, many jurisdictions allow law enforcement to satisfy a lower standard, known as reasonable suspicion, if they request a person&039;s cellphone location information from a mobile provider. Wessler said that the uneven standard creates a patchwork of laws where citizens have fewer protections depending on what state they live in. The Supreme Court, he said, could provide much needed clarity.

In fact, lawyers involved in cellphone location cases in the 4th and 6th Circuits have petitioned the Supreme Court to rule on the issue. Experts say that the high court is likely to review such a case — because of the uncertainty in the federal court system and the national importance of defining privacy rights as technology increasingly shapes our lives.

Others see encryption on the Court&039;s horizon. While Apple and the Justice Department were poised for a high-stakes courtroom showdown last year, over an encrypted iPhone, the FBI was able to get into the device without Apple&039;s help, ending the case, but leaving the larger question of lawful access unresolved.

“We will see technical assistance to decrypt communications or facilitate access find its way to the Court,” Albert Gidari, the director of privacy at Stanford’s Center for Internet and Society, told BuzzFeed News. “Trump spoke to this issue during the campaign, and I think there are a number of cases in the works for the Department of Justice that would be good candidates.”

President Trump&039;s Supreme Court Pick

President Donald Trump announced Neil Gorsuch as his nominee for the Supreme Court Tuesday evening, and said the “image and genius” of the late Justice Antonin Scalia “was in my mind throughout the decision making process.” During his acceptance speech, Gorsuch, who still awaits confirmation by the Senate, offered a window into his judicial thinking.

“I respect … the fact that in our legal order it is for Congress and not the courts to write new laws.” Gorsich said in his acceptance speech. “It is the role of judges to apply, not alter, the work of the people&039;s representatives.”

If Gorsuch is confirmed by the Senate, how might a new justice, in the mold of Scalia, rule on Fourth Amendment cases?

“Judicial decisions on Fourth Amendment rights in the digital age do not break down cleanly along ideological lines,” Wessler said. For instance, in recent years the Court has ruled unanimously in favor of requiring warrants for searches of cell phones and for the GPS tracking of cars. And in 2001, Justice Scalia wrote an opinion requiring police to obtain a warrant before surveilling a home using a thermal-imaging camera. To allow the search without a warrant, he wrote, would “permit police technology to erode the privacy guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment.”

“The framers were not concerned about the internet — that&039;s one way to look at it,” Blake Reid, the director of the Technology Law & Policy Clinic at the University of Colorado told BuzzFeed News. Another approach, he said, could focus on the Fourth Amendment&039;s protections of people&039;s “papers and homes” with an eye on the new ways that police can surveil a person&039;s residence.

While it remains unclear what cases the Court may consider, Goitein said the shifting politics of the Trump era gives urgency to these Fourth Amendment cases. “The privacy threat gets more acute in the atmosphere we have right now, where I think there are those who view the results of the election as a mandate for law enforcement to get tougher than ever.”

Quelle: <a href="Gorsuch Might Play Key Role In Cellphone Privacy Issues If Confirmed To The Supreme Court“>BuzzFeed