April 2020

Mandy Moore showed off some extremely '90s memorabilia from her early career

A pandemic isn't the ideal time to release your first new album in a decade. Fortunately, Mandy Moore is using the time she would have been on tour to dig up some memorabilia from her early career.

Moore showed off her finds to Jimmy Kimmel on Thursday, which included an extremely '90s photo with the Backstreet Boys and an unauthorised Mandy Moore book.

"It's an actual book that was for sale for $12.95 that someone wrote without me knowing about it," said Moore. "But it has lots of fun facts. Like, this page here is '10 Things We Love About Mandy,' and the very first fact is 'Mandy is proud of her big feet.'"  Read more...

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'Failed to provide any leadership': Seth Meyers examines how Trump left U.S. states on their own

The coronavirus pandemic has the U.S. is in shambles right now, but what else is new? Trump has continued to Trump throughout the crisis, stubbornly blustering on with his ill-informed ideas in defiance of all medical advice or logic. Now BuzzFeed News reports a man with no background in medical supplies was awarded a $69 million ventilator contract after tweeting at Trump that he could provide them. Shockingly, not a single one has arrived.

"There's literally a law that allows him to compel companies to make ventilators, and he's combing through his Twitter replies like he's putting a band together," quipped Late Night host Seth Meyers on Thursday. "Honestly, how long until he replies to a spam email offering free boner pills?" Read more...

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The best dumbbell sets for working out at home

Working from home can have a massive impact on your health and fitness, especially when it disrupts your normal routine. 

Gone are the days of nipping to the gym on your lunch break or squeezing in a class before your last train home. Your fitness can start to spiral without a regular workout plan, and it can be difficult to recover. It's not impossible, though.

You can fully commit to working out from home if you have the right equipment and plenty of motivation. You really haven't got any excuses any more, because you can purchase everything from treadmills to ellipticals online. Motivation is a little more tricky, but surrounding yourself with quality fitness gear may provide a push to get started. Read more...

More about Lifestyle, Fitness, Dumbbell, Shopping Uk, and Uk Deals
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IMAGE: Amazon

BEST FOR DURABILITY

York Fitness Rubber Hex Dumbbells

Rubber coated ends provide durability and protection, and stop your weights from rolling away.

    £39.99 from Amazon
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    IMAGE: Amazon

    BEST FOR STRENGTH TRAINING

    MultiWare Adjustable Dumbbell Set

    These dumbbells can be converted into a barbell, meaning you can effectively train your whole body with one set.

      £59.99 from Amazon
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      IMAGE: Amazon

      BEST FOR VERSATILITY

      Sportstech 2-in-1 Dumbbell Set

      This practical dumbbell set is the ideal partner for weight training in the comfort of your own home.

        £69.95 from Amazon
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        IMAGE: Amazon

        BEST FOR BEGINNERS

        Mirafit Dumbbell Weight Set

        Neoprene weights are suitable for a wide range of exercises.

          £44.99 from Amazon
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          IMAGE: Argos

          BEST FOR COMFORT

          Men's Health Rubber Dumbbell Set

          Knurled bar provides a secure and comfortable grip for when you need it most.

            £59.99 from Argos
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            IMAGE: Argos

            BEST FOR TONING

            Opti Vinyl Dumbbell Set

            Strengthen and tone your whole body with this cheap set of dumbbells.

              £24.99 from Argos



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              The 'Parks and Recreation' reunion song was the most beautiful thing since Lil' Sebastian

              Communities and friends band together in tough times — if anyone knows that, it's the former employees of the Parks and Recreation department of Pawnee, Indiana. The core cast of Parks and Recreation reunited for a socially distant special on Thursday to raise money for Feeding America.

              When Leslie (Amy Poehler) lets on that phone trees and media outreach might be slightly tiring her out both mentally and emotionally, Ron (Nick Offerman) knows exactly what to do. He merges their video call to include all of Leslie's best friends as they join in a chorus of "5,000 Candles In The Wind." The rendition quickly put a smile on Leslie's face and ours as well. Sometimes a quick singalong with friends — even fictitious ones — is all you need for a little uplift.  Read more...

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              Quibi leaked users' emails to Google, Facebook, and Twitter

              Mobile streaming service Quibi is less than a month old, but it's already shoving its sticky little fingers where they don't belong. 

              A new report by Victory Medium researcher Zach Edwards has revealed Quibi leaked user's signup emails to multiple third-party advertisers, including Google, Snapchat, Facebook, and Twitter. 

              In order to create a Quibi account, new users were asked to provide an email address to which the company would send a confirmation link. However, unbeknownst to said users, clicking the link sent their email address to third-party advertisers and analytics companies in plain text. Read more...

              More about Security, Streaming Services, Data Breach, Data Leaks, and Quibi


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              iPhone sales may be down, but business is booming for Apple Music and the App Store

              Consumers aren't rushing to buy as many iPhones, iPads, or other Apple products as before the pandemic, but the company's services seem to be doing just fine. 

              During Thursday's earnings call, Apple disclosed that its services category, which includes the App Store and Apple TV+, hit an all-time revenue record of $13.3 billion for the second quarter.

              The company saw strong performance within the App Store (for both downloads and search ads), Apple Music, video, and cloud services. App Store revenue also grew by double digits, as people continue to make in-app purchases and opt into subscriptions.  Read more...

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              Reddit VP: 'Ya, we f*cked up.'

              Reddit botched the rollout of a new feature that could have endangered some vulnerable users — and now it is eating crow.

              On Wednesday, Reddit announced that it was initiating a limited rollout of a new group chat feature called "Start Chatting" that would allow subreddit members to speak directly with each other in chatrooms. It was originally positioned as a way for Redditors to connect with people during COVID-19 social distancing.

              The problem? Not only was there no way for communities to opt out of the feature, but moderators also would not be able to, well, moderate them. In the over 1,500 comments to the original announcement, many mods quickly pointed out that this made the chat function ripe for abuse by trolls. Read more...

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              Just as challenger banks have appeared in the B2C space, so to have B2B startup banks aimed small businesses, among them startups like Qonto (Fr), Tide (UK), Penta (GER) and CountingUp (UK).

              Today another such firm, Finom, has closed a €6.5m ($7M) seed funding round led by Target Global, with participation from General Catalyst. Further investors include FJ Labs, Raisin founders Tamaz Georgadze, Frank Freund and Michael Stephan, and Ilya Kondrashov, the founder of MarketFinance.

              The company will primarily use the fresh capital to develop its banking product, and to expand further into Italy, France and Germany in the summer of 2020.

              Finom puts accounting, financial management and banking functions for early-stage businesses and SMEs into one ‘mobile-first’ product. Businesses can set up an online account, with accounts payable and account receivable from both the app and the site in fairly short order. The company was started by the team that also launched Modulbank, ‘neobank’ for SMEs in Russia.

              Konstantin Stiskin, co-founder of Finom, told Techcrunch: “The EU SME banking market size is more than €100bn. But according to McKinsey research, European entrepreneurs spend 74% of their time on non-core activities and pay for expensive and inconvenient products. Our goal is to enable small businesses in Europe to become more efficient and to thrive.”

              He added: “We are not just a card with an account. We aim to be a foundation for SME’s and their everyday business, covering banking, accounting and financial management within one product.

              Finom is now live in Italy, starting with e-invoicing, which allowed it to gain market knowledge and collect the data for accounting/payments and lending. The next countries to be launched will be France and Germany.

              Mike Lobanov, General Partner and COO at Target Global said: “At Target Global we are great believers in the SME segment… The team of exceptional entrepreneurs standing behind Finom shares our view, and has already built a new standard for offering financial services to SMEs.”

              Although Target Global is headquartered in Berlin, it has more than €800m in assets under management, with offices in London, Tel Aviv and Barcelona. Poortfolio includes companies such as Auto1, Delivery Hero, Omio (formerly GoEuro), TravelPerk, Rapyd and WeFox.




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              Get $600 worth of bespoke design assets for just $39 with this deal

              TL;DR: Streamline your productivity with this bundle of design assets for $39, a 93% savings as of April 30.


              Whether you're hoping to expand your brand while stuck at home, launch a new business, or just keep yours afloat, great design can make a major difference. But depending on the size of the project and expertise of the artist, graphic design services can cost up to $850 on average nationwide. So, um, not exactly a low-cost endeavor. Creating the designs yourself ain't a walk in the park, either, unless you have the right stuff in your toolbox.

              With this Design From Home: Creative Market Bundle, you can streamline your productivity and save yourself time, money, and sanity. The bundle consists of 25 design assets that are handpicked specifically from Creative Market for your new work-from-home lifestyle — including nine premium fonts, three scene creators/mockups, three PowerPoint presentations, five Instagram grid templates to spice up your social feed, four procreate brushes, and one animated texture. They're all compatible with top design and presentation programs, like Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator, Microsoft Powerpoint, Google Slides, Affinity Designer, and more. Read more...

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              Save $35 on this fancy immersion blender set from Wolfgang Puck

              TL;DR: Whip up a delicious creation with Wolfgang Puck's 7-in-1 Immersion Blender for $64.99, a 34% savings as of April 30.


              There are two personality types while social distancing: those who love to cook and those who cook to live. While some folks are living for all the Pinterest-worthy recipes they've been whipping up, others are searching for ways to spend the least amount of time in the kitchen as possible. For those in the latter category, we've got just the thing: this Wolfgang Puck 7-in-1 Immersion Blender.

              Gone are the days of energy-sucking slicing, dicing, chopping, blending, whisking, shredding, and mashing. This fancy blender from master chef Wolfgang Puck can handle all seven of those tasks in one, thanks to its 400-watt motor, built-in functions, and adjustable speed dial with two-speed pulse control. Better yet, it can do it all in just minutes, saving you lots of time and energy. Read more...

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              23 ways to honor Mother's Day — without breaking the bank

              You can't exactly take mom or the motherly figure in your life out to dinner for Mother's Day this year, but don't fret. There are still plenty of ways to show her you care — whether that means sending her a bouquet of flowers, helping her enjoy a full day of self care, or showering her with jewelry to spruce up her quarantine attire.

              All these gifts are an extra 15% off with the code MOMSDAY15, so you can treat her to the best of the best without breaking the bank.

              Flowers

              Preserved Roses in Small Square Classic Box

              Picked at their perfect bloom and dipped into a non-toxic formula to preserve their natural beauty, these stunning roses will last for an entire year with no need for maintenance. The small classic box includes four extra-large red roses and is on sale for just $49.29 (usually $79) with the code MOMSDAY15. Choose from the classic square black box or white box. Read more...

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              We found a few more face masks on sale (while supplies last, of course)

              Thanks to COVID-19, masks have become one of the world's most coveted commodities — even a fashion statement in some circles. Many people are rushing to buy masks, and it should be noted that N95 and surgical face masks are in critical supply. If you manage to get your hands on some, you may want to consider donating them to a local hospital instead. 

              If you can't quite figure out how to make one at home and are still looking to purchase a mask of your own, here are four great deals you can shop while supplies last.

              3D comfort reusable KN95 masks

              Don't be fooled by the name: the KN95 designation is not the same as an N95 mask, but is tested to meet the standards for Chinese KN-95 (these masks are not FDA-approved so cannot be used in US hospitals). This five-pack of KN95 masks features a 3D comfort design and provides 90% filtration against particulate pollution, gases, bacteria, viruses, and most odors. They're made with comfortable stretch fabric so they're not a pain to wear, and they have convenient ear loops that offer a tight fit. They're reusable, too, so you don't have to keep restocking. The five-pack typically retails for $26.99, but it's Read more...

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              What the Mashable staff bought in April

              Wow, everything is just a dumpster fire right now, isn't it? For us online folk (and even offline folk, if we're being completely honest), it's hard to avoid an article, or even a tweet, that'll literally ruin your day. The bad news is everywhere you look (except maybe on Some Good News). 

              For that reason, it's important to get away from all the dread once in a while to talk about something a little more lowkey and not all that serious — like the cool stuff we bought this month to keep us from totally losing it. Hey, maybe you'll find something you want to get yourself, too.  Read more...

              More about Mashable Shopping, What We Bought, Culture, Work Life, and Consumer Tech


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              How to work from home when you don't have an office

              Working from home, while kind of awesome in some respects, presents a unique set of challenges that most office workers don't have to worry about. 

              Being home at all hours of the day can make you a little stir crazy. It's imperative that you find a routine, but even with a routine, it's sometimes easy to accidentally work from your bed all day. Or stay in the same pair of sweatpants for three days straight. Or turn on Netflix and inexplicably lose a few hours while your boss (eek!) has been trying to reach you on Slack for way too long.

              Plus, when you work in an actual corporate office, you get sweet perks like free WiFi, a secure network, a desk phone, and maybe even complimentary snacks. Once you're at home, it's up to you to find solutions to all of those things, and then some.  Read more...

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              IMAGE: Purple

              A COMFORTABLE SEAT CUSHION

              The Purple Seat Cushion

              The Purple Royal Seat Cushion earns its price with its supportive, comfortable, and impressively ergonomic design — anyone who is using a hard chair for WFH would benefit from the investment.

                $79 from Purple
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                IMAGE: RingCentral

                A VOIP SERVICE

                RingCentral

                RingCentral is user friendly and boasts all the features that someone working from home would need, making it the best VoIP for your money.

                  $19.99 from RingCentral
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                  IMAGE: Best Buy

                  SOME NOISE-CANCELING HEADPHONES

                  Apple AirPods Pro

                  The AirPods Pro pack noise-cancelation, versatility, comfort, and portability, making it the perfect pair of headphones to keep you productive throughout the day.

                    $249.99 from Best Buy
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                    IMAGE: TunnelBear

                    A SECURE VPN

                    TunnelBear VPN

                    TunnelBear's affordable and approachable VPN service keeps your web traffic private and out of reach for data thieves, hitting on everything a basic VPN should do.

                      $4.99 from TunnelBear
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                      IMAGE: Best Buy

                      A RELIABLE COFFEE MAKER

                      Ninja 12-Cup Coffee Maker

                      Ninja's 12-cup coffee maker gets all the basics right, and that's really all you need on an especially busy WFH day.

                        $99.99 from Best Buy
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                        IMAGE: Office Depot

                        A COMPREHENSIVE PLANNER

                        Moleskine 18-Month Weekly Planner

                        Understated yet comprehensive, this Moleskine planner should simplify your weeks ahead and alleviate some of your WFH stressors.

                          $27.99 from Office Depot
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                          IMAGE: Best Buy

                          A FULL-COVERAGE WIFI ROUTER

                          Google Nest WiFi Router

                          Keeps your speeds constant and alleviates your internet connection woes — plus, you can add on WiFi points if you happen to move into a bigger space.

                            $149 from Best Buy
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                            IMAGE: Target

                            AN ERGONOMIC LAPTOP STAND

                            WorkEZ Adjustable Laptop Stand

                            A great laptop stand will change your day-to-day at work for the better, and this one from WorkEZ hits all the marks it needs to at an affordable price.

                              $59.99 from Target
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                              IMAGE: Jitsi Meet

                              A VIDEO CONFERENCING PROGRAM

                              Jitsi Meet

                              For $0, Jitsi Meet provides users with a simple and safe way to video conference — what more can you ask for?

                                $0 from Jitsi Meet
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                                IMAGE: Google Drive

                                AMPLE CLOUD STORAGE

                                Google Drive

                                Not only is Google Drive completely free up to 15GB, it also comes with a suite of high-quality productivity programs and ample cloud storage space for most remote workers.

                                  $0 from Google Drive



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                                  9 TV comedies we can't wait for this summer

                                  Spring is quickly slipping through our fingers, which means it's time to look forward to summer — or at least to summer TV. The coronavirus may have completely disrupted theatrical releases, but television continues to stream on schedule for the moment.

                                  Here are the TV comedies we can't wait for in May and June. 

                                  Trying (May 1)

                                  Nikki (Esther Smith) and Jason (Rafe Spall) just want to have a baby, but due to biological complications they learn they can't. They embark on the arduous journey of adopting to expand their family, but it won't be a quick or easy path. 

                                  Where to watch: Apple TV+ Read more...

                                  Solar Opposites (May 8)

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                                  Leslie Nope and Ron Swanson are social distancing in this tiny 'Parks and Recreation' reunion preview

                                  In case you hadn't heard the news, the Parks & Rec gang will soon be reuniting over video chat.

                                  As part of a one-off, half hour charity special, the Pawnee residents will be getting together to chat about their lives under social distancing — and in the preview above, we get our first (very tiny) sneak peak.

                                  "I come up here to hunt meat, so that I don't have to go to the grocery store," says Swanson (Nick Offerman) after Leslie Nope (Amy Poehler) asks him if he's up at his cabin. "I've built up about a 12-year supply of venison jerky, I can ship you some? You'd probably have to get your incisor teeth sharpened." Read more...

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                                  Meet Biloba, a French startup that wants to leverage tech to make it easier to keep your children healthy. The company recently launched a new mobile app that lets you chat with a doctor whenever you want between 8 AM and 8 PM. This way, if you have questions about your kids, you can get a quick answer.

                                  Of course, a text conversation will never replace a visit to the pediatrician. But chances are you have a ton of questions, especially if you’re a first-time parent. Instead of browsing obscure discussion forums, you can go straight to a doctor.

                                  Biloba isn’t working with pediatricians specifically. The company is also partnering with nurses and general practitioners. Eventually, the service is going to cost €10 per month but the company is waving fees during the lockdown.

                                  After just three weeks, the startup managed to attract 4,000 users with around 200 conversations per day. Compared to other telemedicine services in France, such as Doctolib, Biloba doesn’t rely on video consultation. This way, it’ll be easier to deal with a large influx of new patients even with a small group of partner doctors.

                                  The subscription business model is interesting for multiple reasons. First, Biloba isn’t covered by the French national healthcare system. In France, patients only get reimbursed if the doctor knows you already. That restriction has been lifted during the lockdown but it’s probably just a temporary lift.

                                  Many parents probably don’t want to pay €120 per year to chat with a doctor when they could pay €0 through the national healthcare system. But if you can afford it, the barrier to medical advice becomes much lower.

                                  Biloba previously released a vaccine reminder app that lets you enter information about your child’s vaccines and get reminders when the next scheduled vaccine is due.




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                                  San Francisco and Lagos-based fintech startup Flutterwave has launched Flutterwave Store, a portal for African merchants to create digital shops to sell online.

                                  The product is less Amazon and more eBay — with no inventory or warehouse requirements. Flutterwave insists the move doesn’t represent any shift away from its core payments business.

                                  The company accelerated the development of Flutterwave Store in response to COVID-19, which has brought restrictive measures to SMEs and traders operating in Africa’s largest economies.

                                  After creating a profile, users can showcase inventory and link up to a payment option. For pickup and delivery, Flutterwave Store operates through existing third party logistics providers, such as Sendy in Kenya and Sendbox in Nigeria.

                                  The service will start in 15 African countries and the only fees Flutterwave will charge (for now) are on payments. Otherwise, it’s free for SMEs to create an online storefront and for buyers and sellers to transact goods.

                                  While the initiative is born out of the spread of coronavirus cases in Africa, it will continue beyond the pandemic. And Flutterwave’s CEO Olugbenga Agboola — aka GB — is adamant Flutterwave Store is not a pivot for the fintech company, which is an alum of Silicon Valley accelerator Y-Combinator.

                                  “It’s not a direction change. We’re still a B2B payment infrastructure company. We are not moving into becoming an online retailer, and no we’re not looking to become Jumia,” GB told TechCrunch on a call.

                                  Image Credits: Flutterwave

                                  He was referring to Africa’s largest e-commerce company, which operates in 11 countries and listed in an NYSE IPO last year.

                                  Flutterwave has a very different business than the continent’s big e-commerce players and plans to stick with it, according to GB.

                                  When it comes to reach, VC and partnerships, the startup is one of the more connected and visible operating in Africa’s tech ecosystem. The Nigerian-founded venture’s main business is providing B2B payments services for companies operating in Africa to pay other companies on the continent and abroad.

                                  Launched in 2016, Flutterwave allows clients to tap its APIs and work with Flutterwave developers to customize payments applications. Existing customers include Uber and Booking.com.

                                  In 2019, Flutterwave processed 107 million transactions worth $5.4 billion, according to company data. Over the last 12 months the startup has been on a tear of investment, product and partnership activity.

                                  In July 2019, Flutterwave joined forces with Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba’s Alipay to offer digital payments between Africa and China.

                                  The Alipay collaboration followed one between Flutterwave and Visa to launch a consumer payment product for Africa, called GetBarter.

                                  Then in January of this year, the startup raised a $35 million Series B round and announced a partnership with Worldpay FIS for payments in Africa.

                                  On the potential for Flutterwave Store, there’s certainly a large pool of traders and small businesses across Africa that could appreciate the opportunity to take their businesses online. The IFC has estimated that SMEs make up 90% of Sub-Saharan Africa’s business serving the region’s one-billion people.

                                  Flutterwave confirmed Flutterwave Store’s initial 15 countries will include Africa’s top economies and population countries of Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya and South Africa.

                                  Those markets already have a number of players driving digital commerce, including options for small businesses to post their wares online. Jumia’s Jumia Marketplace allows vendors register on its platform and use the company’s resources to do online retail.

                                  Facebook has made a push into Africa that includes its overall push to get more users to sell on Facebook Marketplace. The social media giant now offers the service in Nigeria — with 200 million people and the continent’s largest economy.

                                  GB Flutterwave disrupt

                                  Flutterwave CEO GB, Image Credits: TechCrunch

                                  eBay has not yet gone live in Africa with its business to consumer website, that allows any cottage industry to create a storefront. The American company does have an arrangement with e-commerce startup MallforAfrica.com for limited sales of African goods on eBay’s U.S. shopping site.

                                  On where Flutterwave’s new product fits into Africa’s online sales space, CEO GB says Flutterwave Store will maintain a niche focus on mom and pop type businesses.

                                  “The goal is not be become like eBay, that’s advocating for everybody. We’re just giving small merchants the infrastructure to create an online store at zero cost right from scratch,” he said.

                                  That’s something Flutterwave expects to be useful to Africa’s SMEs through the COVID-19 crisis and beyond.




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                                  Prague based Resistant AI has nabbed a $2.75M seed round. The security startup’s machine learning technology is designed to be deployed on top of AI systems used for financial decision making to protect customers in markets such as financial services and ecommerce from attacks such as targeted manipulation, adversarial machine learning and advanced fraud.

                                  The seed round was co-led by Index Ventures (Jan Hammer) and Credo Ventures (Ondrej Bartos and Vladislav Jez). Seedcamp also participating, along with Daniel Dines, CEO of UiPath; Michal Pechoucek, CTO of Avast and other unnamed angel investors. Bartos joins the board of directors on behalf of the investors.

                                  The startup sells an additional layer of protection that’s specifically designed for tightening security around automated functions such as credit risk scoring and anti-money laundering by using tech to detect fake documents that feed such systems. Its tech is also aimed at uncovering suspicious patterns of transactions which might indicate a strategic attack on the model itself or an attempt to copy sensitive data.

                                  “Historically, all systems that make high-value financial decisions become targeted. This is already happening with the automated systems deployed by our fintech and financial customers and we are here to protect them,” said Martin Rehak, founder and CEO, in a statement.

                                  The seed round is Resistant AI’s first tranche of external funding, with the founders bootstrapping the company since starting up in February 2019.

                                  “We have onboarded the first customers in 2019 and the funding will help us scale our sales organisation to meet the rising demand from banks and fintechs,” Rehak told us. “We are protecting the AI&ML systems used in financial automation from manipulation or misuse by smart attackers.”

                                  Resistant AI has two products it offers its customers at this stage: First, document inspection. It offers a machine learning system that’s designed to flag and reject “malicious documents” submitted for automated processing. “Bank statements, payslips, invoices, purchase orders and KYC documents submitted to fintechs and banks are frequently manipulated or completely falsified,” explained Rehak. “Resistant Documents, our first service, identifies and rejects the suspicious or malicious inputs.”

                                  A second offering — Resistant Transactions — applies AI to spot problematic transaction patterns.

                                  “We work with the fact that most attacks on AI systems require extensive interaction to discover the vulnerability,” he said. “Our system is unique by inspecting all the customer queries (which can take form or payments, money transfers or credit applications assessed by the system we protect) in context of similar queries. By looking at the stream of queries statistically, we can recognise and block the attacks that seek to steal the information embodied in the model (information stealing) or, worse, aim to nudge the system into making the wrong decision by exploiting an existing bias in the system.”

                                  Resistant AI isn’t breaking out customer numbers yet but Rehak said it onboarded its first customers last year. “The funding will help us scale our sales organisation to meet the rising demand from banks and fintechs,” he added, saying also that it will be spending on building out product features and extending functionality, as well as on beefing up the sales and go-to-market team.

                                  “Right now, our target customers are financial and fintech startups, as well as other companies deploying the automated process (both software and RPA) in their financial processes,” he added. “The financial systems are our current focus, but the attacks on machine learning are relevant in many other areas: process automation, e-commerce, manipulation of ‘trend detection’ algorithms in social media and other opportunities.”

                                  It’s using a SaaS model — preferring a value approach to pricing, per Rehak. “Our problem and approach is new, and we feel that the value pricing model aligns the incentives between us and the customer in the optimal way,” he said on that.

                                  Asked who he sees as the main competitors for the business, he cited Google Brain plus the tech giant’s activities in adversarial machine learning.

                                  The majority of work in this area is currently done in-house by the large tech companies building their own proprietary systems — such as Google and Microsoft, he added.

                                  Other competitors he mentioned were Inpher, which is enabling machine learning on encrypted data; Sentilink, which is doing detection of synthetic identities in the US; and Bullwall (Denmark) and YC-backed Inscribe (US/Ireland) which are focused on document forgery.

                                  Resistant AI’s founders have a background in machine learning applied to cyber security problems having founded Cognitive Security, an earlier startup which they subsequently sold to Cisco in 2013. Over some 12 years working in the security industry Rehak said they saw how attackers targeting AI systems were getting increasingly sophisticated in avoiding detection — which gave them the idea for their latest business.

                                  Commenting on the seed funding in a statement, Jan Hammer, general partner at Index Ventures, added: “Automation, efficiency and reliability are cornerstones of financial innovation. As machine learning takes more and more nuanced financial decisions, it needs to be protected. And this is not true only in finance, but the attacks will rapidly spread to other domains as well. More of our activity today takes place online, a trend accelerated by COVID-19, and one we believe will last. With criminals ready to take advantage of every vulnerability, the need for solutions such as those from Resistant AI has never been greater.”




                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  Stephen Colbert rips into Jared Kushner's attempt to spin 1 million coronavirus cases as 'a great story'

                                  The U.S. recorded its millionth case of coronavirus on Tuesday, yet the Trump administration is trying to claim that as a victory. Speaking to Fox & Friends that same day, the president's son-in-law and waxen face of the White House's disastrous coronavirus response Jared Kushner claimed the current numbers are actually a "great story." Said numbers include 60,000 recorded deaths in the U.S. from the virus.

                                  "Yes, it's a great story," agreed Stephen Colbert in his monologue on Tuesday evening, mirroring Kushner's wooden-puppet-boy inflection. 

                                  "More people dying under this administration in 100 days than died in 20 years of the Vietnam War — that's a story that needs to be told. Perhaps in the blockbuster movie Preventable Apocalypse Now." Read more...

                                  More about Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Jared Kushner, Coronavirus, Culture, and Politics


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  6 of the best digital radios for every listener

                                  Radio is alive and well, despite what you may have been led to believe. The likes of Amazon Music and Spotify were supposed to bring about a changing of the guard but radio has stubbornly refused to go anywhere, and that's a good thing.

                                  Millions of people still tune in to their favourite shows every week, despite all of the podcasts and on-demand music on offer. This is due in part to the growing popularity of DAB (digital audio broadcasting) radio, which allows for less interference, more stations, and a stronger signal. Sounds pretty good, right?

                                  More about Tech, Music, Radio, Consumer Tech, and Uk Deals
                                  5059529e 3cc0 46b3 92bb e1c235a4614e
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR VOICE CONTROL

                                  Roberts Revival iStream 3

                                  The Roberts Revival iStream 3 utilises Alexa to become a smart music system.

                                  • Battery recharging: Yes
                                  • Bluetooth: Yes
                                  • Works with Alexa: Yes
                                  £199.99 from Amazon
                                  Fef6a97f 6a98 4169 80fd fcf4ce88669b
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR MATERIALS

                                  VQ Monty

                                  The VQ Monty is designed and engineered with premium materials, including real wood.

                                  • Battery recharging: No
                                  • Bluetooth: Yes
                                  • Works with Alexa: No
                                  £99.99 from Amazon
                                  De13b233 f992 4584 ae39 eff6413f60df
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR STYLE

                                  Roberts Revival Uno

                                  This retro radio is tough to beat when it comes to style.

                                  • Battery recharging: No
                                  • Bluetooth: No
                                  • Works with Alexa: No
                                  £159.99 from Amazon
                                  E46ed609 53b9 4d2c 9d2e 1bb82e896a80
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR SMALL SPACES

                                  Pure Evoke H2

                                  This compact and stylish radio fits comfortably anywhere in your home.

                                  • Battery recharging: Yes (not included)
                                  • Bluetooth: Yes
                                  • Works with Alexa: No
                                  £99.99 from Amazon
                                  74ffb137 3666 4143 9954 3670b4c59550
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR TIGHT BUDGETS

                                  Roberts Radio Play10

                                  This compact radio is full of useful features but won't break the bank.

                                  • Battery recharging: No
                                  • Bluetooth: No
                                  • Works with Alexa: No
                                  £39.99 from Amazon
                                  1e314914 3f70 4e05 ac6f ecdd91fd76b8
                                  IMAGE: Amazon

                                  BEST FOR DISPLAY

                                  Sharp DR-450
                                  • Battery recharging: No
                                  • Bluetooth: Yes
                                  • Works with Alexa: No
                                  £69.99 from Amazon



                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  'It's the Mayo Clinic, not Daft Punk': Seth Meyers teaches Mike Pence how masks work

                                  "Trump's like a high school student doing a book report who not only didn't read the book, but even if he did you know it would go way over his head anyway," said Late Night host Seth Meyers on Wednesday.

                                  President Donald Trump is continuing to cop criticism for ignoring warnings about the coronavirus for months. Reports state Trump routinely neglects to read his daily intelligence briefings, and sometimes even shows disinterest in the oral summaries provided a few times per week.

                                  "What do they have to do to keep this guy's attention? Have his daily briefings delivered by pageant contestants?" said Meyers. "'My name is Brianna, I'm from Battle Creek, Michigan, and a new virus spreading across the globe has a 3.4 percent mortality rate!'" Read more...

                                  More about Donald Trump, Seth Meyers, Late Night With Seth Meyers, Mike Pence, and Coronavirus


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  Security researchers are sounding the alarm over a newly discovered Android malware that targets banking apps and cryptocurrency wallets.

                                  The malware, which researchers at security firm Cybereason recently discovered and called EventBot, masquerades as a legitimate Android app — like Adobe Flash or Microsoft Word for Android — which abuses Android’s in-built accessibility features to obtain deep access to the device’s operating system.

                                  Once installed — either by an unsuspecting user or by a malicious person with access to a victim’s phone — the EventBot-infected fake app quietly siphons off passwords for more than 200 banking and cryptocurrency apps — including PayPal, Coinbase, CapitalOne and HSBC — and intercepts and two-factor authentication text message codes.

                                  With a victim’s password and two-factor code, the hackers can break into bank accounts, apps and wallets, and steal a victim’s funds.

                                  “The developer behind Eventbot has invested a lot of time and resources into creating the code, and the level of sophistication and capabilities is really high,” Assaf Dahan, head of threat research at Cybereason, told TechCrunch.

                                  The malware quietly records every tap and key press, and can read notifications from other installed apps, giving the hackers a window into what’s happening on a victim’s device.

                                  Over time, the malware siphons off banking and cryptocurrency app passwords back to the hackers’ server.

                                  The researchers said that EventBot remains a work in progress. Over a period of several weeks since its discovery in March, the researchers saw the malware iteratively update every few days to include new malicious features. At one point the malware’s creators improved the encryption scheme it uses to communicate with the hackers’ server, and included a new feature that can grab a user’s device lock code, likely to allow the malware to grant itself higher privileges to the victim’s device like payments and system settings.

                                  But while the researchers are stumped as to who is behind the campaign, their research suggests the malware is brand new.

                                  “Thus far, we haven’t observed clear cases of copy-paste or code reuse from other malware and it seems to have been written from scratch,” said Dahan.

                                  Android malware is not new, but it’s on the rise. Hackers and malware operators have increasingly targeted mobile users because many device owners have their banking apps, social media, and other sensitive services on their device. Google has improved Android security in recent years by screening apps in its app store and proactively blocking third-party apps to cut down on malware — with mixed results. Many malicious apps have evaded Google’s detection.

                                  Cybereason said it has not yet seen EventBot on Android’s app store or in active use in malware campaigns, limiting the exposure to potential victims — for now.

                                  But the researchers said users should avoid untrusted apps from third-party sites and stores, many of which don’t screen their apps for malware.




                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  'Bon voyage': Elon Musk tells Twitter followers to get lost following melt down

                                  Elon Musk is having a rough 24 hours, and if his Twitter followers don't like it, then they can just get bent. 

                                  The Tesla CEO made waves late last night for a bizarre rant about "freedom," only to completely melt down during a Wednesday Tesla earnings call when asked about Bay Area shelter-in-place orders. 

                                  Musk's appetite for self-righteousness apparently wasn't sated, however, and following the call he hopped on Twitter to tell his 33.4 million followers that if they didn't like his misrepresentation of facts then they should get lost. 

                                  Notably, Musk claimed incorrectly (among other things) that Bay Area officials are "forcibly imprisoning people in their homes." To be clear, they are not.  Read more...

                                  More about Twitter, Tesla, Elon Musk, Coronavirus, and Tech


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  Facebook sees a spike in monthly active users in the midst of the coronavirus outbreak

                                  It probably comes as a shock to no one that people are using Facebook and its additional social media platforms more than ever while under lockdown.

                                  During Wednesday's earnings call, the company announced it's seen a huge spike in its monthly active users with a 10 percent year over year increase.

                                  On the call, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg revealed that for the first time ever more than three billion people have been using Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, or Messenger each month.

                                  This includes 2.6 billion people using Facebook alone and more than 2.3 billion people using at least one of its services each day. Read more...

                                  More about Facebook, Instagram, Facebook Messenger, Whatsapp, and Tech


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  TikTok surpasses 2 billion global downloads

                                  Quarantine + addictive dance videos = app domination.

                                  TikTok has surpassed 2 billion downloads, mobile app analytics company Sensor Tower reported Wednesday. (April 29). The 315 million installs it gained in Q1 of 2020 alone also reportedly give it the title of "most downloads for any app ever in a quarter."

                                  Mashable has reached out to TikTok to confirm Sensor Tower's data, and will update this story if and when we hear back.

                                  Sensor Tower is attributing the burst in downloads at least in part to the global pandemic. While it notes that TikTok has been consistently on the rise, Sensor Tower views the spike in downloads over the last two months as a consequence of people being confined to their homes and, frankly, bored.  Read more...

                                  More about Tiktok, Tech, and Social Media Companies


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  Elon Musk calls stay-at-home order ‘fascist’ during Tesla earnings call

                                  Elon Musk had even more to say about social distancing measures after he rage-tweeted on the topic Wednesday morning.

                                  Tesla's first quarter earnings call Wednesday afternoon (April 29) started with prepared marks from CEO Elon Musk that noticeably and awkwardly avoided mentioning coronavirus or anything about the pandemic. 

                                  But as the call progressed, Musk's true feelings about shelter-in-place requirements, like those in the Bay Area that are keeping his Fremont, California car plant shut down until at least June, surfaced. He could barely contain himself as he used profanity to describe his thoughts on shelter-in-place efforts to curb the spread of COVID-19.  Read more...

                                  More about Tesla, Electric Vehicles, Tech, Elon Musk, and Transportation


                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  The coronavirus may be decimating some corners of the economy, but the impact on the digital music, as evidenced by the world’s biggest music streaming company, appears to be minimal. Today Spotify reported its earnings for Q1 with revenues of €1.848 billion ($2 billion at today’s rates) and an inching into a positive net income of $1 million. Monthly active users (not total subscribers) now stand at 286 million, with paid (premium) users at 130 million and ad-supported monthly active users at 163 million. Ad-supported are growing at a slightly higher rate at the moment, at 32% versus 31%, Spotify said.

                                  Spotify beat analysts’ forecasts on both sales — they had on average been expecting revenues of $1.86 billion — and EPS, which had been forecast to be -$0.49.

                                  The numbers underscore positive signals from the wider industry, which has seen a huge boost in streaming media services as more people are staying home and looking for ways to be entertained. Furthermore, earnings from at least one music label, Universal Music Group, also showed little impact from the coronavirus pandemic.

                                  “Despite the global uncertainty around COVID-19 in Q1, our business met or exceeded our forecast for all major metrics,” the company wrote in its introduction to shareholders. “For Q2 and the remainder of the year, our outlook for most of our key performance indicators has remained unchanged with the exception of revenue where a slowdown in advertising and significant changes in currency rates are having an impact.”

                                  In other words, while overall numbers appear to be stable, that is not to say that there haven’t been pockets of impact for the company in specific markets and in specific product areas.

                                  For example, Italy and Spain, two traditionally strong markets for the company, have been some of the hardest-hit by COVID-19 and its wider economic impacts, and in line with that, Spotify said it “saw a notable decline in Daily Active Users and consumption” in these markets that is now starting rebound and recover.

                                  And listening patterns are also changing, it said, adding that “Every day now looks like the weekend.” (I know what they mean…)

                                  Usage in Car, Wearable, and Web platforms have all dropped, but TV and Game Console use has grown more than 50% compared to a year ago. Ad-Supported MAU in the US via game consoles has been a top 2 or 3 platform in terms of consumption for the better part of the month, and connected device usage generally is up more than 40% among Ad-Supported users globally, it noted.

                                  Listening time around activities like cooking, doing chores, family time, and relaxing at home have each been up double digits over the past few weeks, it said, adding that “Audio has also taken on a greater role in managing the stress and anxiety many are feeling in today’s unprecedented environment.”

                                  In terms of subscriber numbers, free users continue to outpace those who pay monthly, and continue to be a springboard for upsetting to paid tiers, and seems to be an even stronger model in the current climate.

                                  “The past few months have only strengthened our belief in the Freemium model,” the company noted. “As mentioned, we have seen strong growth in users, both new and returning. Historically, over 60% of our Premium users start as Ad-Supported users, so continuing to grow the top of the funnel is very healthy for our ecosystem. We also know that roughly 70% of churned users are back with Spotify within 45 days of leaving, which includes coming back through either our Premium or Ad-Supported experience. While our sincere hope is for some sense of ‘normalcy’ to return to people’s lives as quickly as possible, we do believe our model is uniquely positioned to not just weather this storm, but to come out the other side even stronger.”

                                  Also of note: the company’s shift to making more of its own content — note here the big boost we’ve seen in its podcasting business — seems to be paying off dividends.

                                  Gross margins, it pointed out, were at 25.5% and “exceeded our expectations and finished at the high end of our guidance range.” The reason, it said, was “the core royalty component due to product mix, offset somewhat by one-time reductions.” This will be impacted because of a slowdown in production at the current time.

                                  The company announced at the start of this month (so not part of these earnings that end March 30) a new global licensing partnership with Warner Music Group that covers more markets. “We are pleased with the outcome, and as stated previously, do not believe the new deal will materially impact music economics. We look forward to working together with Warner to grow the music industry over the long term.”

                                  The company has been fully working remotely for the last seven weeks, and unlike a number of other tech businesses it has not seen any layoffs so far. It did note that it would be reducing hiring, however, for the rest of 2020, reducing previous numbers by 30%.

                                  More to come.




                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  Is it feast or famine for food delivery startups during the coronavirus pandemic? The UK’s Deliveroo has confirmed it’s axing more than 350 staff — or around 15% of its global headcount.

                                  Late yesterday the Telegraph reported that the London-based startup will be cutting 367 staff and furloughing a further 50 out of a total headcount of more than 2,500.

                                  A Deliveroo spokesman blamed the cuts on the coronavirus crisis, saying the public health emergency has put pressure on the business to reduce long-term costs.

                                  He did not confirm which types of roles are being eliminated nor the markets where the axe is falling.

                                  “The extraordinary global health crisis we are living through has impacted nearly all businesses. As a result, like so many others, Deliveroo has had to examine how to overcome the challenges we all face, as well as ensure we are in the strongest position possible following the crisis,” the spokesman said in a statement.

                                  “This requires us to look at how we operate in order to reduce long-term costs, which sadly means some roles are at risk of redundancy and others will be put on furlough. This has been extremely difficult for everyone at the company, and our absolute priority is to make sure those who are impacted are fully supported.”

                                  The UK startup operates in 13 markets globally, mostly split between Europe and the Middle East and Asia.

                                  Last year it saw a big jump in revenue for full-year 2018, after expanding into new markets, but its losses also widened — and that was before COVID-19 snowballed into a pandemic.

                                  The highly infectious virus has derailed business as usual for all sorts of companies but, at first glance, meal delivery startups may have seemed positioned to benefit from nationwide quarantines that have people locked down at home.

                                  However, with many restaurants shuttering at least temporarily and home-bound customers concerned about economic uncertainty so likely to rein in discretionary spending grocery delivery looks to be emerging as the bigger winner.

                                  A lot more people spending a lot more time at home appears to be a recipe for cooking more, rather than ordering lots of take out. Certainly in the short term. While the urban density and convenience-led demand that powered on-demand food delivery growth in the years prior to the coronavirus pandemic remains severely disrupted by the pandemic and its tricky requirement for social distancing.

                                  Earlier this month CNBC reported on plummeting demand in the UK leaving delivery couriers struggling to earn enough money to live on.

                                  How all this shakes out will depend on many factors, including how governments structure the lifting of lockdowns (in Spain, for example, the government has said it will let restaurants reopen for takeaway only, initially, which could help generate demand).

                                  But the kind of mass appetite for fast food at the push of a button — which has led to years of frenzied competition in the on demand space — may be a longer term casualty of the pandemic.




                                  via Tingle Tech

                                  With $13.6 million in funding from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, a new  collaboration will pull together researchers at UCSF, Stanford and CZI-adjacent medical research nonprofit the Chan Zuckerberg Biohub to study the spread of COVID-19 in the Bay Area. The research team will conduct two separate large-scale studies over the course of nine months as part of the data-intensive public health effort, which seeks to answer some key questions about the virus that have eluded researchers.

                                  For the first study, researchers will recruit 4,500 Bay Area residents who previously came up negative for the virus, testing them one time each month with both a serological test that detects antibodies and a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test, which detects the presence of infection. Using viral genome data, the research teams hope to glean insight on the chain of transmission within the area as well as any evidence about how that the virus traveled into the community from outside the region.

                                  The second study will examine COVID-19 infection among Bay Area healthcare workers, and the potential that an infection results in immunity from the virus—an area of current “significant knowledge gaps.” That research will follow 3,500 healthcare workers in the Bay Area who are negative for the virus, tracking them for three months of testing to determine infection trends among frontline health workers.

                                  Both studies aim to collect data that can be translated directly into local public health policy.

                                  “To reopen society in the Bay Area and keep healthcare workers safe, we need to first understand the epidemiology of this disease,” CZI co-founder Dr. Priscilla Chan said of the research.




                                  via Tingle Tech

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