NEWSWORTHY
The animals will love it if you do. Have a hankering to engage in some urban beekeeping, arctic fox photography, or paddleboarding with a corgi? Airbnb rolls out its "Animal Experiences" today and CEO Brian Chesky tries to explain the importance of the effort to Fortune. "There's very few people that are uninterested in animals," Chesky said. And, he points out: "There are only so many zoos."
Someone told me it's all happening at the zoo. At a hardware event in New York City on Wednesday, Microsoft surprised and then surprised again. After unveiling a bunch of boring updates to its Surface line of tablets and laptops (USB-C, wahoo!), the company brought out a folding Windows tablet with two 9-inch screens, dubbed the Surface Neo, and then a folding Android phone with two almost-6-inch screens, called the Surface Duo. Both cool-looking devices go on sale in fall 2020 at undisclosed prices. (YouTuber Marques Brownlee has a great preview.) Microsoft also revealed its own version of Apple's Airpods, just as rumors mount that Apple is revising its gadget with active noise cancellation tech.
It's a light and tumble journey. The price of trading stocks online has dropped to zero. A few years after startup Robinhood hit the scene offering free trading, this week Schwab, TD Ameritrade, and E*Trade dropped their charges to match on trades of stocks, ETFs, and options on U.S. and Canadian exchanges. And amid rumors that it planned to go public and let everyone trade its own stock for free, too, Robinhood this summer raised more than $300 million from VCs.
Just a fine and fancy ramble. As Adam previewed in the newsletter last week, hundreds of startup investors and entrepreneurs met at the Palace Hotel in San Francisco on Tuesday to discuss Wall Street's role in helping companies go public. "We're not out to start a fistfight, we're not out to vilify a particular bank," famed VC and longtime critic of traditional IPOs Bill Gurley told Bloomberg afterwards.
I do believe it's true. With the Supreme Court preparing to hear arguments on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, policy, Apple CEO Tim Cook and Deirdre O'Brien, senior vice president for retail and people, signed a brief to the justices in favor of upholding the Obama-era rules. "We are distressed at the prospect of ripping our DACA colleagues from the fabric of our company," Cook and O'Brien wrote in the brief. "This issue is a moral one: Our country made a deal with a highly vulnerable population interested in a bright future, and we should keep that deal."
The zookeeper is very fond of rum. I think The Next Web may have had the perfect headline for this story about the planned combination of two online "content" purveyors: Taboola and Outbrain, the two worst companies in the world, are merging.
(Headline reference explainer video.)
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
With computers getting increasingly good at making fake photos, fake videos, and even
fake phone calls from the boss, policymakers are gearing up to do something about the problem. Stephen Wolfram, famed software developer and tech thinker,
has a few ideas about fighting so-called
deep fakes. But it may not be as easy as programming A.I. apps to root out the phonies, he warns:
Machine learning on its own won't save us. There's not going to be a pure "fake or not" detector that can run on any image or video. Yes, there'll be ways to protect oneself against being "faked" by doing things like wearing a live cellular automaton tie. But the real way to combat deep fakes, I think, is to use blockchain technology—and to store on a public ledger cryptographic hashes of both images and sensor data from the environment where the images were acquired. The very presence of a hash can guarantee when an image was acquired; "triangulating" from sensor and other data can give confidence that what one is seeing was something that actually happened in the real world.
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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Google Maps Unveils a Pro-Privacy 'Incognito Mode' to Keep Users Off-the-Grid By Lisa Marie Segarra
Kamala Harris Asked Twitter to Suspend Donald Trump. Here's Why That Probably Won't Happen By Terry Collins
Digital Assets Will 'Trickle, Trickle, Trickle—Then Flood,' State Street Exec Says By Robert Hackett
Why Tesla Quietly Acquired DeepScale, a Machine Learning Startup That's 'Squeezing' A.I. By Don Reisinger
Credit Karma Is Launching a Savings Account. But as the Fed Cuts Interest Rates, 'High Yield' Is Relative By Jen Wieczner
Google Expands Its Coursera IT Training Course to 100 Community Colleges By Jeff John Roberts
Blue Origin Will 'Probably Not' Launch Crewed Space Mission in 2019, CEO Says By Jonathan Vanian
BEFORE YOU GO
Have you ever ridden a bike downhill fast, I mean really fast? It can be exhilarating. I thought I was into it–until I read about these crazy kids in MedellĂn, Colombia who hit speeds of almost 80 miles per hour hurtling down steep Andean slopes. Yikes.
This edition of Data Sheet was curated by Aaron Pressman. Find past issues, and sign up for other Fortune newsletters.
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