Workplace management platform Envoy nabs $111M to power the hybrid workforce
Workplace management platform Envoy has raised $111 million in a round of funding at a $1.4 billion valuation. Read More
Google in last-ditch lobbying attempt to influence incoming EU tech rules
Enlarge (credit: Jorisvo | Getty Images)
Google is making a last-ditch effort to change the EU’s incoming laws on Big Tech with a flurry of advertising, emails, and targeted social media posts aimed at politicians and officials in Brussels.
As EU policymakers put the finishing touches to the Digital Markets Act (DMA), executives at Google’s headquarters in Silicon Valley are stepping up their efforts to water down parts of the legislation that they fear may have a severe impact on their business.
“Top executives in California have known about the DMA all along, but they are only waking up now,” said one Google insider.
Lootex raises $9M for its blockchain metaverse marketplace
Lootex has closed a round of fundraising for its metaverse marketplace, which would allow gamers to trade NFTs on multiple blockchains.Read More
Drake Star Partners: Game deals topped $85B across 1,159 transactions in 2021
Game industries deals surpassed an unparalleled $85 billion across 1,149 transactions in 2021, according to a report by Drake Star Partners.Read More
PassiveLogic, which creates digital twins of buildings, lands $34M
PassiveLogic, a startup developing a platform to help manage buildings through simulation and digital twins, has raised $34 million.Read More
New York Game Awards 2022 goes virtual, releases list of nominees
The New York Video Game Critics Circle has decided that the New York Game Awards will be virtual again this year.Read More
“Aw, screw it”: LAPD cops hunted Pokémon instead of responding to robbery
Enlarge / Visitors view a 10-meter-tall Pikachu glass and steel sculpture in Shanghai, China, on November 28, 2021. (credit: Getty Images | Future Publishing)
A California appeals court has upheld the firings of two Los Angeles Police Department officers who failed to respond to a robbery in progress and instead went searching for a Snorlax in the Pokémon Go augmented reality game.
Officers Louis Lozano and Eric Mitchell were being recorded by a digital in-car video system (DICVS) when they decided to catch a Pokémon after not responding to a robbery on Saturday, April 15, 2017, according to the California Court of Appeal ruling issued Friday. A board of rights found the officers “guilty on multiple counts of misconduct” based in part on the “recording that captured petitioners willfully abdicating their duty to assist a commanding officer’s response to a robbery in progress and playing a Pokémon mobile phone game while on duty,” the ruling said.
The former officers appealed, claiming the city “proceeded in a manner contrary to the law by using the DICVS recording in their disciplinary proceeding and by denying them the protections of the Public Safety Officers Procedural Bill of Rights Act,” Friday’s ruling said. A trial court denied the petition challenging the firings, and a three-judge panel at the appeals court unanimously upheld that decision on Friday.
After ruining Android messaging, Google says iMessage is too powerful
Google took to Twitter this weekend to complain that iMessage is just too darn influential with today’s kids. The company was responding to a Wall Street Journal report detailing the lock-in and social pressure Apple’s walled garden is creating among US teens. iMessage brands texts from iPhone users with a blue background and gives them additional features, while texts from Android phones are shown in green and only have the base SMS feature set. According to the article, “Teens and college students said they dread the ostracism that comes with a green text. The social pressure is palpable, with some reporting being ostracized or singled out after switching away from iPhones.” Google feels this is a problem.
“iMessage should not benefit from bullying,” the official Android Twitter account wrote. “Texting should bring us together, and the solution exists. Let’s fix this as one industry.” Google SVP Hiroshi Lockheimer chimed in, too, saying, “Apple’s iMessage lock-in is a documented strategy. Using peer pressure and bullying as a way to sell products is disingenuous for a company that has humanity and equity as a core part of its marketing. The standards exist today to fix this.”
The “solution” Google is pushing here is RCS, or Rich Communication Services, a GSMA standard from 2008 that has slowly gained traction as an upgrade to SMS. RCS adds typing indicators, user presence, and better image sharing to carrier messaging. It is a 14-year-old carrier standard, though, so it lacks many of the features you would want from a modern messaging service, like end-to-end encryption and support for non-phone devices. Google tries to band-aid over the aging standard with its “Google Messaging” client, but the result is a lot of clunky solutions that don’t add up to a good modern messaging service.

