More top reads Was that all spent in one place?: Chinese auto chip maker Black Sesame recently filed to go public in Hong Kong, and that means we can now take a look at their numbers, which include burning $140 million a year. Into the breach: In security news today, the U.K. battles a hacking wave as ransomware gang claims “biggest ever” NHS breach, JumpCloud resets customer API keys citing an "ongoing incident," and the Bangladesh government takes down exposed citizens' data. What's up, Doc?: Christine reports that Verifiable validates its healthcare credentialing software with another $27 million. Good AI: Let's now celebrate a smart way to use artificial intelligence. Wildfire detection startup Pano, which can detect a fire and issue a warning in 14 minutes, added another $17 million to its Series A. Out with the new, in with the old: Twitter made it quite challenging to use TweetDeck recently, but if you're mourning its old version, we show you how to get it back. Get it while you can — you know how fickle they are over there. Isn't it great when a plan comes together?: "Personal data can now flow freely and safely from the European Economic Area to the United States without any further conditions or authorizations" thanks to Europe adopting the U.S. data adequacy decision. Putting all of your links out there: Snap teams up with Linktree to let users include links in their profiles. "Dumber and much cheaper": That's how Longshot Space is describing its vision for making space launches. Wakanda forever: Electronic Arts, better known as EA, joins with Marvel Games to launch a single-player Black Panther video game. Can't escape those spreadsheets: But what if they were more fun? Sourcetable raised $3 million and is going cell-to-cell with some of the spreadsheet's biggest corporate fans to retool this fundamental business tool. |