NEWSWORTHY
Should I stay or should I go now? It's a moment of truth for the company formerly known as WeWork today. The We Co. board meets to decide between competing offers from major shareholder SoftBank Group and banking titan JPMorgan Chase. SoftBank's debt-and-equity proposal would crater WeWork's valuation and JPMorgan's bond package would saddle the firm massive debt, Fortune's Rey Mashayekhi explains.
Seven strangers picked to live in a house. The new streaming service at Disney won't ignore the non-fiction realm. Disney+ will be chock full of new reality shows (The Hero Project–A celebration of stellar kids who get "Marvel-ized" as their own comic-book heroes) and documentaries (Beauty and the Beast–the life story of song writer Howard Ashman, the genius behind iconic musicals like Aladdin and The Little Mermaid).
Won't get fooled again. Heading into the 2020 election season, Facebook announced a series of measures to combat misinformation and other misuses of its platform for political ends, including banning inauthentic networks from Russia and Iran. "We have a big responsibility to secure our platforms," CEO Mark Zuckerberg told reporters. At the other end of the political process, Facebook and Amazon ramped up their federal lobbying spending to record levels in the third quarter.
You say potato. Remember way back last month when researchers at Google said they'd demonstrated a quantum computer's "quantum supremacy"? Well, researchers at rival IBM say not so fast. The problem solved by Google's computer wasn't as tough as it seemed, so the quantum solution isn't so impressive, IBM's team contends.
They are a very festive people. A food fight is breaking out in Europe's food delivery scene. Naspers spinoff Prosus offered $6.5 billion for Just Eat, which already has a $6.2 billion offer from Takeaway.com on the table.
Autonomous knowledge. The latest issue of our new newsletter, Eye on A.I., hits later today. Subscribe now to get your copy of the in-depth take on the artificial intelligence scene.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
What's the old saying in the ad business? I know that I'm wasting half of what I spend, I'm just not sure which half. With fashion and cosmetic brands in the lead, so-called online influencers will rake in up to $8 billion this year for promoting products on Instagram, YouTube, and the like. Wall Street Journal reporters Suzanne Kapner and Sharon Terlep take a deep dive into the world of influencers to examine what brands are getting in return.
But a whiff of deceit now taints the influencer marketplace. Influencers have strained ties with advertisers by inflating the number of their followers, sometimes buying fake ones by the thousands. They also have damaged their credibility with real-life followers by promoting products they don't use.
"All these paid posts make you question whether influencers are genuine or just doing it for the money," said JaLynn Evans, a 19-year-old student at Virginia Commonwealth University. The loss of trust undermines the power of influencers, according to Marcelo Camberos, Ipsy's chief executive. "Have they peaked? I don't know," he said. These days, the firm is recruiting its own customers to post products—for free.
ON THE MOVE
Deepening ties to China,
Apple CEO Tim Cook
is taking the chair role on the advisory board of the School of Economics and Management of
Tsinghua University in Beijing...Karen DeSalvo, former HHS assistant secretary in the Obama administration, joined
Google as its first chief health officer... Javier Soltero, who oversaw
Microsoft's revamp of its Outlook email app, has also jumped to
Google where he
will run the G Suite productivity app unit...The company formerly known as
WeWork has been losing top execs during its current financial turmoil.
Among the recent departees is chief communications officer Jimmy Asci, who joined six months ago from Teneo.
IN CASE YOU MISSED IT
Facebook Is Still Figuring Out How to Police Deepfakes By Danielle Abril
NordVPN Suffered a Security Breach, Denies Being Hacked By Lisa Marie Segarra
How a Chinese Developer at Tencent Is Shaping the Future of Gaming By Grady McGregor
After WeWork, Private Investors Have a Message For Startups: Lose Money 'Thoughtfully' By Karen Yuan
Samsung Joins Google and Amazon in Backing 'Trapped Ion' Quantum Computer Startup By Robert Hackett
Streaming Wars Will Cost Netflix Another $2 Billion By Chris Morris
Verizon Adds Home 5G Internet Service in One More City By Aaron Pressman
BEFORE YOU GO
In case you didn't happen to be watching Monday Night Football last night (and if you did, sorry, Jets fans), here is the final trailer to the final movie in the Star Wars saga. Looks like a real humdinger.
Aaron Pressman
On Twitter:@ampressman
Email: aaron.pressman@fortune.com
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