NEWSWORTHY
We interrupt this interruption. Not enough beeps and boops in your day? A Senate legislative proposal with strong backing wants to make those national emergency alerts that pop up on our phones also show up on video streaming services. Netflix and unchill?
Truth and consequences. An algorithm used in the healthcare industry to guide the treatment of tens of millions of people is biased against black patients, according to a new study published in the journal Science last week. The study of records from 50,000 patients found that the computer formula systematically downplayed the health needs of black patients. The study did not name the algorithm or the company that sells it.
Not a pretty picture. Customer data from 7.5 million users of Adobe's Creative Cloud service were found in an unsecured online database. The information included user names and email addresses but not passwords or financial data.
Heartbreaker. The tech startup founded by Will.i.am is struggling and some workers say they have not been paid in weeks, The Verge reports. The startup, called i.am+, sells an assortment of gadgetry and hardware, including wireless earbuds and a smartwatch called Puls.
What you asked for. On Wall Street, AT&T saw shrinkage while Spotify posted a surprise profit. At AT&T, revenue dropped 3% to $44.6 billion, worse than analysts expected, but the company also said it would sell some "non-strategic assets," as activist hedge fund Elliott Management sought. AT&T shares, previously up 29% this year, gained 2% in premarket trading on Monday. Spotify said it was able to reduce marketing and R&D costs , leading to a profit of $267 million. Analysts were expecting a loss. Shares of the music streaming giant, up only 6% in 2019, gained another 6%.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
A problem you might not have considered that can hold back societal progress? Database programming decisions made in the 1950s. Writer Meredith Broussard explores how so much database code reinforces a binary gender worldview. In a piece for Slate, she explains some of the complications.
It's not inclusive. It is specifically exclusionary to someone like Zemí Yukiyú Atabey, an NYU graduate student who identifies as genderqueer and nonbinary. Atabey's pronouns are ze ("Where is ze?")/zem ("I don't have the tickets. I gave them to zem."). "As a nonbinary person, there is no option most of the time," ze says of entering personal information in databases. "There's only male or female, which doesn't fit my reality or identity." Microsoft Word, the program I used to compose this story, marked all of Atabey's pronouns with the red squiggly underline. Meaning: The people at Microsoft who wrote Word do not recognize Atabey's pronouns as acceptable English words, even though the genderqueer community has been suggesting the use of ze and hir as pronouns for at least 20 years.
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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Mastercard Moves Beyond Plastic With New Bets in Healthcare, Supply Chain and Fintech By Rey Mashayekhi
Strength in Numbers: How Women From Twitter, Facebook, and Uber Are Teaming Up to Fund Silicon Valley's Future By Emma Hinchliffe
5 Things You Need to Know About Facebook's Just Announced News Tab By Alyssa Newcomb
Air Quality Monitors Are Quickly Becoming 2019's Must-Have Gadget By Jennifer Alsever
A.I. Has a Bias Problem, and Only Humans Can Make It a Thing of the Past By Gwen Moran
A Year of Listing Dangerously: Lessons from 2019's Biggest IPOs By Anne Sraders
French Publishers Have Gone to War With Google. They Are Not Likely to Win By David Meyer
BEFORE YOU GO
We certainly have a bounty of sketch comedy to enjoy in the mobile video age, as we've evolved far from just SNL bits going online. Washington Post pop culture critic Elahe Izadi posted a list of the 20 most influential comedy skits, including works by everyone from Robot Chicken to Key & Peele (and enough SNL, too). There's plenty of laughs–and room for some debate.
Aaron Pressman
On Twitter:@ampressman
Email: aaron.pressman@fortune.com
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