- NYT: Email to Trump Jr. shows Russian gov...
The New York Times reports Donald Trump Jr. was told via email the Russian government wanted to aid the Trump campaign. Fmr. Watergate prosecutor Jill Wine-Banks says it looks like collusion. Ron Klain and Bill Browder, who knows the Russian lawyer... - Protests flare as GOP health/tax bill stalls
- Schiff notes Trump Jr in Russia hack timeline
- Schiff on potential Trump Russia criminality
- NYT: Trump Jr told of Russian campaign help
- Trump collusion questions gain in specificity
- Donald Trump's ritual humiliation of his...
- Republicans trying to rush health care...
- The president, the pageant, the pop star...
- Podesta: 'Starting to smell more & more...
- Lawyer who met with Trump Jr. speaks out
In an NBC News Exclusive interview, Keir Simmons talks with Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya about her June 2016 meeting with Donald Trump Jr. - 'This has a different feel for some...
- Trump Jr. received email on Russian govt....
- Christie gets into spat with talk-radio...
- House Democrat on Trump & Russia: This is...
- Lawyers: Trump had no knowledge of Donald...
- Bush ethics lawyer on Trump Jr.: This may...
- NYT: Donald Trump Jr. was told of Russian...
- NYT: Trump aggravated about another Russia...
- Trump's new Russia idea draws bipartisan...
- Despite condemning the mission, Trump...
Down the memory hole: Donald Trump is now celebrating the Mosul mission he used to condemn in bizarre ways. - Mike Pence voices support for radical...
- Sebastian Gorka on Trump Jr. Controversy: ...
- Fmr. Dallas police chief on being 'Called...
- McConnell far from giving up on a...
- Manchin: Trump Jr. could say 'I made a...
- 16 believed to be dead after military...
- Another stunning public disclosure, says...
- Collusion allegations come into focus in...
- Private option in health bill could help...
- Murphy on Don Jr. emails: Assume it's only...
Sen. Chris Murphy discusses with Mike Barnicle Donald Trump Jr.'s meeting with a Russia lawyer and Mitch McConnell's decision to delay the August recess over the health care bill. - Pence takes steps to blaze his own,...
- Trump on Son's Emails: 'I Applaud His...
- Emails show Trump Jr's eagerness to...
- Tuesday's Campaign Round-Up, 7.11.17
- Trump Jr. on Promised Clinton Dirt: 'I...
- The list of Kushner's meetings with Russians
- Senators Express Concern Over Trump Jr.,...
- Trump manages to make his voting...
- GOP Rep. Chris Stewart Wants Donald Trump...
- Manafort, Kushner and Don Jr.: They all knew
All those adamant denials from last summer about links to Russia don't look so good in retrospect. - Dan Rather on Trump Jr: 'Jaw-Dropping.....
- Warner: 'Strains credibility' that Trump...
- Matthews: Trump Jr has kept this meeting...
- Rep. Speier: We have the beginning of a...
- Trump Jr. emails suggest he welcomed...
- Dem Sen: Trump Jr. Russian Meeting Emails...
- Tuesday's Mini-Report, 7.11.17
- Are Trump Jr. Russian Meeting Emails...
- Schiff on Trump Jr. meeting: 'Deeply...
Tech News
- Sendence closes $1.5m seed round to simplify deployment of real-time applications
Sendence, a new startup based in New York City, announced a $1.5 million seed round today. The company is working on a platform for simplifying deployment of real-time applications. Investors include Boldstart Ventures, Greycroft, Contour Venture Partners, Notation Capital and Resolute Ventures.... - Gastric bypass surgery in a pill startup Allurion gets $27 million as it pursues FDA approval
Allurion, a Boston-based startup offering a non-invasive gastric balloon by swallowing a pill, has gained $27 million in Series C funding from previous investor Romulus Capital, with new participation from Cogepa Investments and IDO Investments, an innovation firm based in Oman. Read More - PayPal makes it easier for its merchants to sell products globally
- GoPro selects ten brands to be first to use the Fusion spherical camera
- Lyft adds automatic ride receipt forwarding for business profiles
- Microsoft to employ unused TV channels to offer rural broadband
Every internet company these days has a plan for connecting people who don’t otherwise have reliable connectivity – Microsoft’s play will utilize unused TV broadcast channels, also called ‘white spaces,’ to get broadband internet to rural communities in the U.S. The New York Times reports that M... - Amazon Prime Day deals that don’t suck
Happy Amazon Prime Day. Sure, it’s a crass, made up holiday created with the sole purpose of fueling the cold, heartless engine of capitalism — but doesn’t that description apply to most holidays? Amazon kicked off the annual event in 2015 and managed to surpass its own Black Friday sales in tha... - David Chang’s Ando launches a new menu, refocuses on the food
- Pew study says 41 percent of adults in the U.S. have been harassed online
- You can buy Tovala’s $399 smart oven starting today
- Blowing up the re-location industry, Move Guides raises $48M Series C
- Stranger Things Season 2 arrives on Netflix on October 27
- Tesla to triple service capability with repair fleet and service center expansion
- The Caliper Slide Rule Watch will help you multiply and divide in the coming end times
- The hunted becomes the hunter: How Cloudflare’s fight with a ‘patent troll’ could alter the game
Matthew Prince knew what was coming. The CEO of Cloudflare, an internet security company and content delivery network in San Francisco, was behind his desk when the emails began. College classmates-turned-defense attorneys were reaching out to say hello and to ask: did Prince perhaps need help t... - Suppose.tv launches a service that helps cord cutters find the best deal
With a growing number of streaming TV services entering the market, it’s becoming difficult for consumers to make comparisons. People want to know which service is best for them in terms of channel selection, feature set and price, but this involves a lot of research these days. A new startup la... - Disney puts a new spin on its accelerator
- Louis Vuitton introduces the pricey Tambour Horizon smart watch
- Score a prime 2-for-1 deal on Disrupt SF tickets today
- Inside the Q2 2017 global venture capital ecosystem
- Hyperledger Fabric releases version 1.0 of open source distributed ledger
- Siri usage and engagement dropped since last year, as Alexa and Cortana grew
- The Lemonade insurance social experiment results in $53K donation in year one
- Astronomer raises $3.5M to make data analytics more accessible
Astronomer aims to ease the pain around data analytics. Collecting data is just part of the operation. After the data has been collected, it needs to be assembled and organized and sometimes that’s the most time-consuming part of the process. Astronomer says its solution helps with this process,... - This scorecard shows which tech companies protect user data from the government (and which don’t)
The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s newest “Who Has Your Back?” report details what exactly tech giants are doing — or not — to protect their users from potentially invasive government data requests. The annual report includes a solid who’s who of tech’s most established players. Some of the wi... - Wiz Khalifa overtakes Psy to claim the most-watched YouTube video of all time
- Google bans its ads on sites that use those annoying ‘pop-unders’
- Early chatbot believers Howdy and Bot Metrics join forces to deliver on the promise of bots
- Audi’s new A8 will have Level 3 autonomy via ‘traffic jam pilot’
- Datatron raises $2.7M to help companies query real-time and historical data
- Facebook Messenger globally tests injecting display ads into inbox
- London fintech Curve closing in on $10M Series A
- Anna Patterson talks Gradient Ventures, Google’s new AI fund
It’s been pretty obvious for a few months now, but Google has finally admitted that it’s running its own investment fund targeting machine intelligence startups. The fund will go by the name Gradient Ventures and provide capital, resources and education to AI-first startups. Read More - Marketplace liquidity
Liquidity is a crucial metric for all marketplaces. But how can we truly evaluate this liquidity? The three keys to answering this question are density, appropriately balanced demand and supply and category concentration. Read More - Twitter’s new CFO is getting $15 million in stock
- A group of Twitter users is suing Trump for blocking them
- Facebook’s Messenger ads are bad and must be destroyed
- LeEco delays payroll until August due to ‘financial constraints’
- There are now more tickets available for the TechCrunch Summer Party at August Capital
- A.C. Slater hosts ex-reality stars playing competitive Candy Crush. What?
- Toyota launches venture capital fund targeting artificial intelligence startups
- Vizio files $100M lawsuit against LeEco
Last summer LeEco announced it intended to purchase the U.S.-based TV maker Vizio for $2 billion. The deal fell through in March amid myriad problems surrounding LeEco, including a major cash crunch. Allegedly the deal included a $100 million buyer-termination fee and now Vizio has filed suit in... - MIT’s Daniela Rus is leading a robotics revolution
Daniela Rus’s morning is packed. My arrival appears to come as a bit of a surprise. She considers the situation for a moment before inviting me in. Rus has allowed me to sit in for a packed morning of meetings. It’s a generous gesture, but more to the point, it’s the only way to manage some face... - Trump hotel guests had their credit card information hacked (again)
- Logitech picks up gaming hardware maker Astro for $85M
- Echo devices are Amazon Prime Day’s best sellers
- Optimizely hires Jay Larson as its new CEO
- Here’s how the Tesla Model 3 changed from prototype to production car
- Transfix keeps on truckin’, with $42 million in fresh funding led by NEA
- Bye-bye, Firefly: Waymo retires its autonomous prototype vehicle
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