Heya, folks, welcome to Week in Review (WiR), TechCrunch’s regular newsletter that recaps the past few days in tech. Google’s annual enterprise-focused dev conference, Google Cloud Next, dominated the headlines — and we had plenty of coverage from the event. But it wasn’t the only thing afoot (see: the spectacular eclipse). Lorenzo wrote about how…
The popular retail chain has been delisted from the New York Stock Exchange and it has met with its lenders to explore a possible bankruptcy filing…
The online retailer is fighting to gain market share in an area it abandoned during the Covid pandemic…
We are provisionally adding three new stocks to the FDI portfolio, but only if they trade down to their respective buy prices: Cracker Barrel Old Country Store (CBRL $54), kids’ clothes company Carter’s (CRI $71), and Ford Motor Company (F $12). PREMIUM CONTENTINVESTING NEWSLETTERS PREMIUM CONTENTINVESTING NEWSLETTERS Fast Forward Investing Forbes Billionaire Investor Forbes CryptoAsset
Pakistan repays $1 billion in Eurobonds, says central bank
ECB’s confidence in fight against inflation growing, Villeroy says
This week in Las Vegas, 30,000 folks came together to hear the latest and greatest from Google Cloud. What they heard was all generative AI, all the time. Google Cloud is first and foremost a cloud infrastructure and platform vendor. If you didn’t know that, you might have missed it in the onslaught of AI…
Noname Security, a cybersecurity startup that protects APIs, is in advanced talks with Akamai Technologies to sell itself for $500 million, according to a person familiar with the deal. Noname was co-founded in 2020 by Oz Golan and Shay Levi and is headquartered in Palo Alto but has Israeli roots. The startup raised $220 million…
It has become a very difficult market for companies that produce television shows as media consolidates…
Ad blockers might seem like an unlikely defense in the fight against spyware, but new reporting casts fresh light on how spyware makers are weaponizing online ads to allow governments to conduct surveillance. Spyware makers are reportedly capable of locating and stealthily infecting specific targets with spyware using banner ads. One of the startups that…





