NEWSWORTHY
Hand in the cookie jar. A former Amazon software engineer was arrested on Monday in Seattle for hacking into credit card company Capitol One's servers and stealing consumer data from tens of millions of credit card applications. Paige A. Thompson, aka the hacker Erratic, was charged with computer fraud and faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Disruption in aisle three. Meanwhile, in another part of the city, Amazon is "quietly exploring" creating another grocery chain alongside Whole Foods that would shake up the industry with a greater focus on pickup and delivery options, The New York Times reports. Amazon declined to comment.
The real world. Now a public company and facing greater pressure to, I don't know, turn a profit some day, Uber on Monday cut its marketing department by one-third, laying off 400 people. "This happens naturally as companies get bigger," CEO Dara Khosrowshahi wrote to his staff in an email obtained by Bloomberg.
That's one way to stop leaks. Google pre-announced that its forthcoming Pixel 4 phone would have a face unlock feature much like current iPhones and will use a form of radar to pick up a user's control gestures made in midair, above the device.
Fly me to the moon. Researchers at the University of California Berkeley built a solar-powered drone with lighter, more efficient photovoltaic cell technology that could transform the industry. The new thermophotovoltaic cells could eventually power a house with a generator the size of an envelope, the researchers said.
I'll be your server for this evening. With more companies following a so-called hybrid cloud strategy, seeking to keep some data and apps on local servers, Google is getting closer to VMware. Google's cloud service will start supporting VMware Cloud Foundation, used by companies who set up hybrid cloud arrangements. Elsewhere in enterprise computing land, Microsoft acquired startup BlueTalon , which helps companies control data sharing, for an undisclosed sum. And AT&T won a 15-year, $1 billion contract to provide communications services to the Justice Department.
ON THE MOVE
My kids use an expression that was new to me: yeet. It means to leave, to bug out, to fly the coop. So let this be the yeeting edition of On the Move...Jon McNeill, who was hired last year to run Lyft's operations, is leaving the company. His responsibilities will be distributed to others...the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission's cyber unit, Robert Cohen, is stepping down next month...Expedia president Aman Bhutani, who oversees the company's online travel businesses, is leaving for another opportunity...We do have one joiner. Former Homeland Security Advisor and U.S. cybersecurity chief, Tom Bossert, started at start-up Trinity Cyber as chief strategy officer.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
As the debate around Facebook's Libra digital currency proposal stirs, it's interesting to recall the history of paper money, itself a wild invention that nearly broke the global financial system. John Lanchester has a wide-ranging recounting of the history of money, filled with plenty of interesting digressions, in The New Yorker. The first paper money was used in China in the 13th century, as explorer Marco Polo discovered.
Marco Polo was right to be amazed. The instruments of trade and finance are inventions, in the same way that creations of art and discoveries of science are inventions—products of the human imagination. Paper money, backed by the authority of the state, was an astonishing innovation, one that reshaped the world. That's hard to remember: we grow used to the ways we pay our bills and are paid for our work, to the dance of numbers in our bank balances and credit-card statements. It's only at moments when the system buckles that we start to wonder why these things are worth what they seem to be worth. The credit crunch in 2008 triggered a panic when people throughout the financial system wondered whether the numbers on balance sheets meant what they were supposed to mean. As a direct response to the crisis, in October, 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto, whoever he or she or they might be, published the white paper that outlined the idea of Bitcoin, a new form of money based on nothing but the power of cryptography.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
The Top 10 U.S. Cities for Tech Jobs By Anne Fisher
Blockchain Launches 'Fastest' Crypto Exchange in the World By Jeff John Roberts
What CEOs, Bankers, and Tech Execs Think About a Coming Recession By Robert Hackett
Amazon's TV Bosses Want to Remind You (Again) Why They Are Not Netflix By Stacey Wilson Hunt
The Bond Market Is Betting Tesla Is in Trouble By Erik Sherman
NBA 2K League, Tencent Team up to Bring the Phenomenon of e-Sports Basketball to China By Lisa Marie Segarra
Here's What Analysts Expect From Apple's Upcoming Earnings By Aaron Pressman
BEFORE YOU GO
It ain't my fault that I'm out here makin' news, so goes the super-catchy new tune Juice by Lizzo. The multi-talented singer visited NPR on Monday and spent some time in the network's "Tiny Desk" studio playing some of her new hits. Worth a listen (many expletives in use, however).
This edition of Data Sheet was curated by Aaron Pressman. Find past issues, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters.
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