NEWSWORTHY
What did I say. Along with Greenblatt's remarks, a lot of people noticed that President Trump tweeted something racist on Sunday, but Twitter did not label the tweet as violating the company's standards. "I have to wonder: What would it take? What would he have to say to fall within the scope of their policies?" Malkia Devich-Cyril, executive director of advocacy group MediaJustice, told The Washington Post.
Follow the money. Leading ride sharing service Uber released its annual diversity report on Monday, showing that the percentage of woman in leadership roles rose to 28% from 21% a year ago. Uber also tied the 2022 compensation of top execs, including CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, to meeting diversity and inclusion goals.
Follow the money, part two. Stock market investors should get a chance to invest in a few more well-known tech and tech-ish companies this year. Airbnb, iHeartMedia, and the company formerly known as WeWork (now called the We Company) are among the top candidates to go public soon, along with Peloton, Postmates, Robinhood, and Casper.
On the outside. Program manager Meredith Whittaker is leaving Google. One of the company's most vocal employees criticizing its policies, Whittaker helped organize last year's walkout of workers to protest the way Google handled sexual harassment complaints.
Antivirus. The rumored acquisition of cybersecurity firm Symantec by chipmaker Broadcom is now rumored to be dead. Shares of Symantec fell 11% on Monday.
Nabbed. App install advertising company Vungle is being acquired by private equity firm Blackstone for a reported price of $750 million. As part of the acquisition, Vungle and Blackstone reached a settlement in the wrongful dismissal lawsuit filed by founder and former CEO Zain Jeffer.
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ON THE MOVE
Anish Acharya will join Andreessen Horowitz as a general partner focused on fintech investing. Acharya most recently served as the vice president of product management at Credit Karma...Walmart lost its e-commerce chief revenue officer, senior vice president Scott Hilton, Bloomberg reports. No word on a replacement yet...Former YouTube and Vine executive Jason Toff is joining Facebook as product management director for the company's new NPE unit...Care.com said CFO Michael Echenberg is resigning effective at the end of August and Michael Goss, VP of Finance, will be named acting CFO.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Some see the solution to Google's Internet domination in a break up of the tech giant. But pursuing that option would be legally difficult and have many unintended consequences. Robert Epstein, senior research psychologist at the American Institute for Behavioral Research and Technology, has a different idea, as he explains in a Bloomberg piece. Epstein's proposal is to force Google to share it gigantic index of the web with other companies via a simple API. Here's what would happen next, he writes:
Within a year or two, thousands of new search platforms might emerge, each with different strengths and weaknesses. Many would target niche audiences—some small, perhaps, like high-end shoppers, and some huge, like all the world's women, and most of these platforms would do a better job of serving their constituencies than Google ever could. These aren't just alternatives to Google, they are competitors—thousands of search platforms, each with its special focus and emphasis, each drawing on different subsets of information from Google's ever-expanding index, and each using different rules to decide how to organize the search results they display.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Teens Who Spend More Time on Social Media Have Increased Depression: Study By Chris Morris
Serena Williams and Mark Cuban Invest in Startup Fighting Maternal Mortality By Emma Hinchliffe
Microsoft Quantum Algorithm Boosts Medical Imaging By Jeremy Kahn
Move Over 'Little Mermaid,' 'Barbie' Movie Will Also Cast Minority Actors, Mattel CEO Says By Jen Wieczner
Economist Luigi Zingales: To Limit Big Tech's Power, Regulations Should Be Tailored By Danielle Abril
Verizon Tops the Speed Charts in Latest RootMetrics Study By Don Reisinger
Is Facebook Libra a Betrayal of Satoshi Nakamoto's Vision? By Timothy Massad
BEFORE YOU GO
We've previously told you to watch the third season of Netflix's Stranger Things, as has Jeff Bezos. If you've already streamed it, you know that a fictional version of the classic 1980s-era shopping mall plays a prominent role. New York Magazine's Vulture site has an interesting essay strolling down memory lane to examine the mall in the show and pop culture. Worth a read.
This edition of Data Sheet was curated by Aaron Pressman. Find past issues, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters.
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