Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Facebook. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Facebook. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 26 de septiembre de 2020

Former Facebook, Dropbox, Amazon, Convoy leaders are building a secretive new Seattle startup

Linda Lian. (Madrona Venture Group Photo)

Four leaders from top Seattle tech companies are working together on a stealthy new startup.

Linda Lian, a former associate at Madrona Venture Group and senior product marketing manager at Amazon Web Services, is leading a group that also includes:

Tom Kleinpeter, most recently a principal engineer at Dropbox who sold a music streaming startup to the cloud giant in 2012.Francis Luu, a designer who spent 10 years at Facebook.Viraj Mody, formerly the engineering director at Dropbox and technical advisor to the CEO at Seattle startup Convoy.

The company is working on tools that help users build digital communities, according to a recent tweet from Lian. Lian declined to provide additional details when contacted by GeekWire.

Lian was previously a product marketing manager on the AWS Lambda team. She spent about a year at Madrona and formerly worked as a financial analyst at cybersecurity startup Lookout, as well as Morgan Stanley.

Mody previously led Dropbox’s Seattle office. He joined Convoy in 2018 as its senior director of engineering, then transitioned into a role advising CEO Dan Lewis. Convoy is building a digital freight network and is one of Seattle’s most valuable tech startups.

Kleinpeter sold two startups: Audiogalaxy to Dropbox and FolderShare to Microsoft in 2005. He spent nearly eight years at Dropbox.

Luu joined Facebook in 2009, working on products such as News Feed, Groups, and others.

We’ll update this story as we learn more about the new company.

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miércoles, 19 de agosto de 2020

Facebook extends work from home option for employees until July 2021

Facebook’s Arbor Blocks office in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Nat Levy)

Facebook, which operates a large engineering outpost in Seattle, said today that it will allow employees to work from home until July 2021 as COVID-19 continues to spread throughout the U.S.

It’s the latest tech company to alter its work from home policy. Last month, Amazon — Seattle’s largest tech employer — said it was extending its work from home policy for employees through Jan. 8, 2021. Meanwhile, Zillow Group will allow 90% of its workforce — more than 2,700 in Seattle alone — to work remotely, at least part of the time, indefinitely.

Just last year, Facebook started moving employees into a new Seattle building called Arbor Blocks 300, which was the first in a two-structure complex designed to house 2,000 employees in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood.

Last September, GeekWire reported that Facebook employed more than 5,000 people at various buildings in the Seattle area. A month prior to that report, Facebook inked a lease for a 200,000 square foot space in Bellevue’s Spring District, adding to the 338,000 square foot building it had leased in the development.

A Facebook spokeswoman tells CNET that the company made the decision “based on guidance from health and government experts” and “internal discussions.” Facebook employed 52,534 people as of June 30.

As GeekWire reported earlier today, the absence of large tech employers in downtown Seattle is causing a crisis for many small business owners who rely on office workers to purchase lunch, drinks and other services.

Previously on GeekWire: ‘How long can we hold on?’ As Zillow workers stay remote, businesses near Seattle HQ fight to survive

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viernes, 7 de agosto de 2020

Watch: Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google CEOs testify before Congress in historic antitrust hearing

The top executives at four of the world’s largest and most powerful technology companies are testifying Wednesday before Congress in the culmination of a year-long antitrust inquiry.

The House Judiciary Committee’s antitrust arm will grill Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Apple’s Tim Cook, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Google’s Sundar Pichai on the power their companies wield in the tech sector.

“Our founders would not bow before a king nor should we bow before the emperors of a digital economy,” said Rep. David Cicilline, chair of the antitrust subcommittee, in opening remarks.

The executives are testifying remotely due to the ongoing coronavirus threat, creating a different dynamic than the blockbuster hearings of the past, like Zuckerberg’s testimony on election interference in 2018. Cicilline reminded the CEOs that they are not allowed to take input from their teams during testimony, but it isn’t clear how or if the committee is enforcing that rule.

Early questioning focused on Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram, Apple’s treatment of third-party app developers, and Google’s dominance in search. More than an hour into the hearing, lawmakers still hadn’t posed any questions to Bezos, even though it is the Amazon chief’s first time testifying before Congress.

After nearly two hours, the first question for Bezos came from Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat from Washington who represents Amazon’s hometown, Seattle.

“The issue that we’re concerned with here his very simple,” she said. “You have access to data that far exceeds the sellers on your platform with whom you compete … you have access to the entirety of sellers’ pricing and inventory — information past, present, and future — and you dictate the participation of third-party sellers on your platform, so you can set the rules of the game for your competitors but not follow those rules yourself. Do you think that’s fair to the mom and pop businesses who can sell on your platform?”

Underlying Jayapal’s line of questioning is a Wall Street Journal investigation from April that found Amazon uses detailed data on third-party sellers in its marketplace to inform the development of in-house products.

Bezos said Amazon has a policy prohibiting such use of seller data but, “I can’t guarantee you that that policy has never been violated.”

Jayapal was following up on testimony that Amazon attorney Nate Sutton gave one year ago before the same committee claiming the company does not use individual seller data to inform its private-label product strategy.

Jayapal also grilled Zuckerberg on its acquisition strategy, accusing Facebook of threatening to copy Instagram and Snapchat while in discussions about buying them.

“You’ve used Facebook’s power to threaten smaller competitors and ensure that you always get your way,” she said. “These tactics increase your dominance … Facebook’s model makes it impossible for new companies to flourish successfully.”

Zuckerberg said he did not remember threatening competitors and defended the practice of developing features that consumers were demanding at the time.

Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon raised a controversial price war between Amazon and Diapers.com that ultimately ended in Amazon acquiring the competitor’s parent company and then shutting it down. Scanlon claimed Amazon lowered prices on diapers to drive the competitor out of business and then raised them when the competitive threat was eliminated.

“I don’t remember that at all,” Bezos said. “What I remember is that we matched competitor prices.”

The long-awaited hearing comes as the companies in question field investigations into alleged anti-competitive behavior from regulators in the United States and abroad.

The Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice have divvied up the four companies as they investigate whether antitrust law has been violated. The House began its own inquiry a year ago and several states are also looking into the dominance of the nation’s largest tech companies.

We’ll be following along and updating this story throughout the day. Check back for highlights and analysis from the historic hearing and read prepared remarks from Bezos, Cook, Zuckerberg, and Pichai.

View the original article here



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sábado, 1 de agosto de 2020

Watch: Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google CEOs testify before Congress in historic antitrust hearing

The top executives at four of the world’s largest and most powerful technology companies are testifying Wednesday before Congress in the culmination of a year-long antitrust inquiry.

The House Judiciary Committee’s antitrust arm will grill Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, Apple’s Tim Cook, Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, and Google’s Sundar Pichai on the power their companies wield in the tech sector.

“Our founders would not bow before a king nor should we bow before the emperors of a digital economy,” said Rep. David Cicilline, chair of the antitrust subcommittee, in opening remarks.

The executives are testifying remotely due to the ongoing coronavirus threat, creating a different dynamic than the blockbuster hearings of the past, like Zuckerberg’s testimony on election interference in 2018. Cicilline reminded the CEOs that they are not allowed to take input from their teams during testimony, but it isn’t clear how or if the committee is enforcing that rule.

Early questioning focused on Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram, Apple’s treatment of third-party app developers, and Google’s dominance in search. More than an hour into the hearing, lawmakers still hadn’t posed any questions to Bezos, even though it is the Amazon chief’s first time testifying before Congress.

After nearly two hours, the first question for Bezos came from Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat from Washington who represents Amazon’s hometown, Seattle.

“The issue that we’re concerned with here his very simple,” she said. “You have access to data that far exceeds the sellers on your platform with whom you compete … you have access to the entirety of sellers’ pricing and inventory — information past, present, and future — and you dictate the participation of third-party sellers on your platform, so you can set the rules of the game for your competitors but not follow those rules yourself. Do you think that’s fair to the mom and pop businesses who can sell on your platform?”

Underlying Jayapal’s line of questioning is a Wall Street Journal investigation from April that found Amazon uses detailed data on third-party sellers in its marketplace to inform the development of in-house products.

Bezos said Amazon has a policy prohibiting such use of seller data but, “I can’t guarantee you that that policy has never been violated.”

Jayapal was following up on testimony that Amazon attorney Nate Sutton gave one year ago before the same committee claiming the company does not use individual seller data to inform its private-label product strategy.

Jayapal also grilled Zuckerberg on its acquisition strategy, accusing Facebook of threatening to copy Instagram and Snapchat while in discussions about buying them.

“You’ve used Facebook’s power to threaten smaller competitors and ensure that you always get your way,” she said. “These tactics increase your dominance … Facebook’s model makes it impossible for new companies to flourish successfully.”

Zuckerberg said he did not remember threatening competitors and defended the practice of developing features that consumers were demanding at the time.

Rep. Mary Gay Scanlon raised a controversial price war between Amazon and Diapers.com that ultimately ended in Amazon acquiring the competitor’s parent company and then shutting it down. Scanlon claimed Amazon lowered prices on diapers to drive the competitor out of business and then raised them when the competitive threat was eliminated.

“I don’t remember that at all,” Bezos said. “What I remember is that we matched competitor prices.”

The long-awaited hearing comes as the companies in question field investigations into alleged anti-competitive behavior from regulators in the United States and abroad.

The Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice have divvied up the four companies as they investigate whether antitrust law has been violated. The House began its own inquiry a year ago and several states are also looking into the dominance of the nation’s largest tech companies.

We’ll be following along and updating this story throughout the day. Check back for highlights and analysis from the historic hearing and read prepared remarks from Bezos, Cook, Zuckerberg, and Pichai.

View the original article here



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domingo, 26 de julio de 2020

Antitrust hearing with CEOs of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google will likely be delayed

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos speaking at the Economic Club of Washington, D.C. (Economic Club of Washington, D.C. Photo / Gary Cameron)

A hotly anticipated House antitrust hearing with the CEOs of Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google set for Monday will likely be delayed according to reports from CNBC, The Verge, and Axios.

The hearing is expected to be postponed due to memorial services for the late Rep. John Lewis next week. The civil rights champion will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol and a ceremony is scheduled for Monday afternoon.

Jeff Bezos, Tim Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, and Sundar Pichai were set to testify Monday before the House antitrust subcommittee on market dominance in the tech sector, the culmination of an inquiry into the companies they run that has lasted for more than a year. It is not clear when the new hearing date will be scheduled but Axios reports the committee is looking at the week of August 3.

The executives are expected to attend the hearing via video call due to the ongoing public health risk. It will be the first time all four CEOs have appeared together to address concerns about anti-competitive behavior in the tech industry. It will also be the first time Bezos testifies before Congress. The four tech giants are under antitrust scrutiny from several government entities in the U.S. and abroad.

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martes, 9 de junio de 2020

Collab es la nueva app de Facebook inspirada en TikTok

Facebook tiene una nueva aplicación, de momento en fase beta y sólo para iOS. Eso significa que si quieres acceder a ella tendrás que tener iPhone e invitación. Pero sí lo haces vas a poder empezar crear vídeos musicales de forma colaborativa con otros usuarios. Su nombre es Collab y sí, es similar a los duetos de TikTok.

Crear música juntos mientras estamos separados. Ese es el slogan de Collab, la nueva aplicación de Facebook. Una herramienta que por el momento sólo está disponible para usuarios de iOS y en fase beta, por lo que necesitas una invitación para poder acceder a ella y ver con tus propios ojos qué es lo que ofrece. Pero si no puedes, te vamos a contar qué es exactamente.

Collab es un desarrollo de la división de productos experimentales de Facebook, o NPE (New Product Experimentation). Esta aplicación tiene como base el poder crear vídeos musicales a través del trabajo colaborativo. Es decir, junto con amigos y conocidos o tu sólo haciendo de chico orquesta, la idea es grabar varios clips de vídeo con distintas piezas musicales que luego se juntan para dar como resultado la pieza final.

¿Aún no lo ves claro? Pues seguro que durante estas últimas semanas has visto muchos ejemplos de este estilo. Por ejemplo, el vídeo aquel en el que los responsables de la banda sonora de Animal Crossing interpretaron el tema principal del juego.

Pues Collab te va a permitir hacer eso de forma sencilla. Aunque sabiendo un poco de edición de vídeo, es cierto que facilita el poder hacerlo directamente desde el teléfono. Por tanto, ¿qué más ofrece esta nueva aplicación? Pues aquí llega lo interesante, todos esos clips de vídeos que grabes se han de publicar primero en el feed de Collab.

Cualquier vídeo publicado en el feed de Collab podrá ser usado por otros usuarios para crear su propia composición musical. Y esa es la parte en la que encontramos esa inspiración con TikTok, pues es una idea muy similar y exitosa de dicha plataforma: los duetos.

Como te explicamos, hacer un dúo en TikTok es muy sencillo y ha supuesto uno de los grandes atractivos para muchos usuarios de esta plataforma. Así que, en parte la nueva aplicación de Facebook se inspira en ellos para que cualquier usuario pueda crear nuevo contenido a partir del resto de contenido generado por otros usuarios. Incluso la propia plataforma podría crear nuevas piezas. Siempre dando crédito al usuario que creó cada fragmento.

Estos vídeos o composiciones nuevas luego se podrán compartir a través de otras redes sociales, no es algo exclusivo para ser publicado únicamente en Facebook. Lo cual también resulta interesante para atraer a nuevos usuarios que verían Collab más como una herramienta y no como algo ligado a una red social. Pero con el tiempo, si cala la idea, podría ser una de esas características que ayudarían a Facebook a competir con TikTok. Algo que lleva ya tiempo intentando a través de otras de sus plataformas estrellas, Instagram.

Si quieres probar Collab de Facebook necesitas invitación. Para ello puedes registrarte a través del formulario habilitado para la ocasión a través de este enlace. En teoría es algo sólo para usuarios de EEUU y Canadá, pero eso no quita que pudiese llegarte una invitación con la que acceder a la nueva herramienta.

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