Image: Jernej Furman / Protocol
Apple vs. app fairness

Good morning! This Friday, The Coalition For App Fairness has a bone to pick with Apple, Amazon launched all the Alexa devices, and Daniel Ek has a billion dollars he'd like to spend making European tech amazing.
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If you've ever watched "Parks & Recreation," you know about The Reasonabilists, the group of people who believe a lizard god is coming back to melt everyone's faces. But who could call a Reasonabilist crazy? That's what I thought of yesterday, reading about The Coalition for App Fairness. Who could be against app fairness?
The Coalition's fight is overwhelmingly against Apple. Google barely gets any mention on its website, even though most of its rules are the same. It's escaping the worst of the blowback for two reasons, I think: It's at least technically possible to sideload apps on Android, and the Play Store isn't nearly as powerful a business as the App Store.
As for what the coalition ultimately wants? It's fighting for 10 principles, which run from the eminently reasonable ("A developer's data should not be used to compete with the developer") to the never-ever-gonna-happen (they want Apple to allow other app stores on iOS).
The big question here is increasingly this: Does Apple get to do whatever it wants with the App Store, or is it too big and too important and thus needs to be regulated in other ways? Nobody's yelling at Twitter to let you post to Facebook, or for Netflix to show you Hulu shows, but something about apps feels different.
Janko Roettgers writes: Amazon used its annual fall press event Thursday to introduce what felt like 10,000 new devices in just 45 minutes. It showed off two new TV sticks, four new speakers, a new smart display, two new routers, three automotive devices and a home security drone that flies around your home looking for burglars. Amazon's internal tagline for Alexa devices clearly continues to be: "Sure, why not?"
Weirdly, for Amazon this all about making Alexa disappear. Amid all of those product updates, Amazon execs talked about their vision of the ambient home, a big part of which is an Alexa that does more … and talks less.
When you do talk to your virtual assistant, though, Reid's team has been hard at work making Alexa better at participating in conversations. That includes something the company calls "natural turn-taking," which is coming to Alexa devices next year. Think of it as Alexa being able to take part in conversations with multiple people, and only respond when it's needed, without every sentence starting with "Alexa."
The ultimate goal of all of this is to turn Alexa from that vaguely human-sounding robot into an assistant that learns from you, knows when and how to respond, and also when to shut up. It was described to me yesterday as a "North Star dream, the truly conversational AI." Of course, that's been the dream for a long time, and it's still a ways off. But Amazon's inching closer.
Shakeel Hashim writes: Daniel Ek wants more big European tech companies. And he wants to help build them. "I will devote €1 billion of my personal resources to enable the ecosystem of builders to achieve this European dream over the next decade," he said at an event yesterday. "And I will do so by funding so-called 'moonshots,' focusing on the deep technology necessary to make a significant positive dent."
Consider this part of a broader move for European tech sovereignty. Ek expressed his frustration with European founders selling their companies to American giants, which he thinks prevents the whole European tech ecosystem from growing. And by the sounds of it, he thinks Europeans might be able to build better companies than Americans.
This isn't Jack Dorsey-style philanthropy. Though the €1 billion is a significant portion of his wealth — more than a quarter, according to Forbes — Ek is investing the money, not giving it away. That means, presumably, that he'll be looking for things he can get a return on. But he won't be looking for them in San Francisco.
Stronger care … from more efficient operations
In a defining moment for healthcare, it's even more crucial to deliver patient-centered care efficiently. At Philips, we are committed to providing intelligent, automated workflows that seek to improve patient care. More efficient healthcare means stronger, more resilient healthcare.
On Protocol: All the new tech we're creating, AI and quantum and stuff? We need to use it for science, IBM's Dario Gil said:
Facebook's Oversight Board is getting ready to start work, and Helle Thorning-Schmidt said having more voices in moderation conversations will immediately be a good thing:
An AWS employee emailed coworkers, saying their bosses were snooping for labor-organizing activity:
China's Digital Currency Electronic Payment will one day dominate the world, Bitcoin scion Chandler Guo said:
The TikTok deal may not make sense, but Marc Benioff said kudos to Larry Ellison for making it happen:
Clearview.AI raised $8.6 million this week. In the process, everyone's favorite ultra-controversial facial recognition company also disclosed two new board members: Murtaza Akbar, of Liberty City Ventures, and Hal Lambert, of Point Bridge Capital.
Kevin Mayer may have a new job.The New York Times reported he's in talks to join RedBird Capital, an investment firm with lots of media holdings and experience. Definitely less complicated than TikTok!
Maria Renz is joining DoorDash's board, Bloomberg reports. She is an executive VP at SoFi, and was previously vice president of delivery experience at Amazon.
Some sites you just think will never change. They're almost not allowed to. Well just two, really: Craigslist and Wikipedia. But Wikipedia is undergoing a huge redesign over the next year, trying particularly to work better for newer internet users. It's going to be cool to watch this pillar of the web change, but dear lord, can you imagine the infighting and edit battles that are going to happen? The page about the redesign is going to be the best, and worst, thing on Wikipedia for sure.
Stronger care … from more efficient operations
In a defining moment for healthcare, it's even more crucial to deliver patient-centered care efficiently. At Philips, we are committed to providing intelligent, automated workflows that seek to improve patient care. More efficient healthcare means stronger, more resilient healthcare.
Today's Source Code was written by David Pierce, with help from Shakeel Hashim. Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to david@protocol.com, or our tips line, tips@protocol.com. Enjoy your day, see you tomorrow.
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