Lime
The billion-dollar scooter shakeup

Good morning! This Wednesday, a power shakeup in the scooter wars, big layoffs at Airbnb, and Tom Cruise hopes to head to space for a movie.
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From Protocol: Airbnb laid off about a quarter of its staff, and Brian Chesky wrote a long note explaining why to the whole company:
Some companies are giving back their PPP loans, and Zumper CEO Anthemos Georgiades said it's creating an optics nightmare:
Twitter's Sunita Saligram explained why the platform is experimenting with prompting people to revise offensive tweets before they send them:
For a while there, it seemed anyone with a Google Maps API key and a warehouse full of Ninebot-made scooters could raise millions of dollars. Scooters were going to revolutionize transportation, take over the world, fix climate change, remake cities altogether! Personally, I rode a scooter to and from the office every single day. It was awesome.
And then coronavirus happened.
The question now isn't whether scooters were a good idea (they definitely are) or if they represent a viable business model. It's how many of the companies are going to be left to answer those pre-existing questions when the pandemic is over?
One company, though, is trying to take back the streets. Spin, the scooter company owned by Ford, restarted service in some cities yesterday. It's offering free rides to healthcare workers, cleaning scooters more often, and generally hoping that now is a good moment to win some market share.
Spin did shut down service in 60 of its 70 markets, but Poon said that with staff still on board and scooters in warehouses ready to go, getting things back up to speed won't take much time at all. As the rest of the scooter market crashes back to reality, Spin might be about to take off.
The are-gig-workers-employees debate felt like it had hit some sort of stalemate. California passed AB 5, but Uber, Lyft, DoorDash and others were fighting to change the way the law was applied — and it didn't seem like a huge amount of progress was being made. Who knew where things would end up?
Well, California AG Xavier Becerra seems to have a vision. Becerra, along with the cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, yesterday sued Uber and Lyft, alleging that "both companies continue to misclassify their drivers — and have exploited hundreds of thousands of California workers — in direct contravention of California law."
The lawsuit was filed in the Superior Court of San Francisco, and is surely just one more in a long line of legal moves between the two sides. But unlike drivers or advocacy groups, these accusers have the resources to go the distance.
The Workforce of Tomorrow Requires Better Tools Today
The role for government centers on deriving better data sets, enabling better credential interoperability, and creating better reskilling incentives.
So far, most performances in lockdown — think SNL and all your favorite morning shows — have worked despite the technology limitations, not because of them. But a small Minnesotan theater troupe is pushing the medium to new heights. Protocol's Sofie Kodner watched an entirely Zoom-based rendition of "The Diary of Anne Frank," and may have just seen a new kind of theater:
So is Zoom just a platform? Or can it also be an artform? From theater to reality TV to that awesome Parks & Recreation reunion special, Zoom has emerged as a new home for creativity. The shows that can turn the production constraints into assets — through thematic support or by tapping into the authenticity of it all — have a shot at outlasting the pandemic. There's definitely more Zoom-based avant garde performance art to come, at least.
That's how many dollars a new bill, authored by Ron Wyden, will request for fighting and preventing online child sex abuse. The New York Times reports that the bill would create nearly 200 dedicated positions in law enforcement groups, along with a Senate-confirmed official in the White House to oversee how the money was spent. Wyden and his co-sponsors are making a point we're hearing more often: Without empowered, well-funded enforcement, cybersecurity and privacy legislation is nothing but empty words.
Most wild stories about filming a movie in space should be taken with a grain of salt. When Tom Cruise is involved? Expect to see it in theaters in a year or so. In this case, Cruise is apparently working with SpaceX and NASA to plan a movie shot aboard the International Space Station. Cruise, the man who hangs out of helicopters and jumps from skyscrapers, feels like the perfect person to make this cinematic leap, especially because I'm not sure you could fit Dwayne Johnson inside a rocket's cockpit. Can't wait to see how much Quibi spends to make this flick happen.
The Workforce of Tomorrow Requires Better Tools Today
The role for government centers on deriving better data sets, enabling better credential interoperability, and creating better reskilling incentives.
Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to me, david@protocol.com, or our tips line, tips@protocol.com. Enjoy your day, see you tomorrow.
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