Image: Apple
Your watch could detect COVID-19

Good morning! This Friday, wearables are fulfilling their health-tech promise thanks to COVID-19, Twitch started a safety committee, and the next big tech hub might be in Arizona.
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Forcing people to go back to the office is a losing strategy, Eric Schmidt said:
Angela Merkel's email was hacked in 2015, and she's pretty certain Russia was behind it:
Will anyone go to the movies this year? One executive said it all depends on Christopher Nolan:
AT&T spent $4 billion to get HBO Max going, and WarnerMedia's Bob Greenblatt said it did so at lightning speed:
Oura CEO Harpreet Rai told me he wasn't really thinking about how his company's product, a ring that tracks users' vitals to help them sleep better, could be a tool in the fight against COVID-19.
But then a user in Finland who had no COVID-19 symptoms was told by their Oura that their temperature was elevated and they might be sick. So they went to get tested for the virus — and it turned out they had it.
Companies around the wearables industry, whose products seemed for so long to sit somewhere between fitness devices and pseudoscience, are now hoping to prove their ability to help people understand their health and do something about it.
Rai said Oura has been slow to communicate observations to users — saying "your temperature is a bit high!" is one thing, attributing it to an illness is something else entirely. "Having the backing of an independent party, if we were to do anything, is super important," he said.
Just how much wearables can tell us is still hard to know – and how companies and devices should communicate information like that is key, too. It's the same with contact-tracing apps: How do you give people the right information without scaring them unnecessarily or underselling the situation?
Twitch gets a lot of flack for its policies — whether they're too strict (like when a streamer was suspended for nudity over her use of body paint) or too loose (a 35 minute livestream of a terrorist attack was broadcast on the site last fall). With traffic skyrocketing on the platform during lockdown, Twitch is looking to find a balance — and it's asking for outside help.
The company created a new Safety Advisory Council, made up of eight members: a mix of academics and professionals with online safety expertise, plus a few Twitch creators.
In addition to community safety, there's a huge financial incentive for Twitch to figure this out.
In some ways, the council is a way to improve the platform's relationship with its creators, many of whom make their living streaming on Twitch. One of the major issues listed that the council will address: work-life balance.
Your growing remote workforce comes with an exponential growth of security challenges.
Watch yesterday's webcast to hear from leading cybersecurity experts on how you can lower your organization's cybersecurity risk and ensure business continuity.
At this point, computers have pretty much learned to see. Which is both exciting (all your pictures look better!) and terrifying (the facial-recognition panopticon is upon us!).
Now Sony's leveling up on the whole situation:
Cameras with tech like this could do facial recognition without uploading photos anywhere, for instance, and thus avoid creating hackable or searchable databases. Sony's also touting possibilities for automation, where having super-fast object recognition is hugely important.
Let's not get carried away, though: This is just the first generation, and the new sensors are more than twice the price of the current iPhone's camera rig — which uses three Sony sensors, in case you were wondering. So it's going to be a while before this shows up in your pocket. But I bet it'll get there.
Cruise, GM's self-driving company, laid off 8% of its staff and closed an office in Pasadena, but actually plans to continue hiring. Rather than force budget-related cuts, COVID-19 seems to have prompted Cruise to rethink its priorities.
Envoy named Philip Lacor as its first-ever CRO. He was previously global VP of sales at Dropbox, and he'll now be tasked with getting Envoy into as many companies' office-reopening plans as possible.
Apple acquired NextVR, an event-focused VR startup. Why? Apple never answers that about its acquisitions, but it's clearly interested in AR and VR, entertainment, and streaming. NextVR hits them all.
I've never played a single second of Animal Crossing. And yet I'm totally fascinated by what's being built inside this adorable world — from a terrific talk show called Animal Talking to the unbelievably intricate worlds inspired by John Wick and filled with flowers and so many other things. Between this, Minecraft, and Fortnite's creative modes, there's no denying the art that's being created inside video games. Even celebs are getting into it. Everybody's saying it's time to build, and I can't think of a better place to do so.
Your growing remote workforce comes with an exponential growth of security challenges.
Watch yesterday's webcast to hear from leading cybersecurity experts on how you can lower your organization's cybersecurity risk and ensure business continuity.
A quick end-of-week thanks to Jamie Condliffe, Source Code's editor, and Sofie Kodner and Shakeel Hashim, its producers. Most of all, thank you for reading!
Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to me, david@protocol.com, or our tips line, tips@protocol.com. Enjoy your weekend, see you Monday.
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