• Google Hit With Fresh Privacy Lawsuit
    After mobile consumers opt out of sharing information, Google continues to track user activity through hundreds of thousands of apps, a fresh lawsuit claims.
  • Facebook, Sony Speed Up Production Of Gaming Devices
    Both Facebook and Sony are preparing to increase production of upcoming gaming devices by up to 50%, the Nikkei Asian Review reports.
  • Pandemic Proves Again That AI Is Important To Brands
    Artificial intelligence can help brands quickly change content and messages across channels — a priority during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here’s an analysis of why AI is important, and how marketers can leverage it. 
  • Amazon Debuts 'Dash Carts'
    Amazon just unveiled Dash Carts -- physical shopping carts that can track items added and removed by shoppers, CNBC reports.
  • Apple Asking Retail Staff To Focus On Online Sales
    Amid the reclosing of multiple stores across the country, Apple is encouraging retail staff to work remotely, Bloomberg reports.
  • UK Banning Huawei 5G Equipment
    At the end of the year, the UK government is instructing regional mobile providers to stop buying Huawei 5G equipment, BBC News reports.
  • Teletherapy Apps Facing Growing Pains
    Protocol takes a closer look at Talkspace and other leaders of the growing teletherapy market. "The ongoing mental-health crisis has forced Talkspace and other virtual-care services, like BetterHealth and MDLive, to rethink how they work and whether they can scale," it writes.
  • Google Investing $10B In India
    Over the next five to seven years, Google is investing somewhere in the neighborhood of $10 billion in India through equity investments and tie-ups, Reuters reports.
  • Meet Facebook's 'Unofficial Leader Of The Black Employee Base'
    CNBC profiles Ime Archibong -- Facebook's head of new product experimentation, and "among the highest-ranking Black executives at the company, and the unofficial leader of the Black employee base."
  • Amazon To Require More Transparency From Third-Party Sellers
    Beginning in September, Amazon will require that third-party sellers on its U.S. marketplace display their business name and address on their public-facing profiles, CNBC reports.
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