Source Code

Source Code: Welcome to a new kind of tech publication

Your five-minute guide to what's happening in tech this Wednesday, from the app that crashed the Iowa caucus to the reasons behind Tesla's remarkable run.

Welcome to Source Code

Good morning, and welcome to Protocol! If you don't know what Protocol is, that's OK. We're a new publication from Robert Allbritton, the publisher of POLITICO , dedicated to covering the people, power and politics of tech. Today is our launch day. Check out protocol.com to see the stories of the day as well as a note from Tim Grieve , our executive editor, about who we are and what we're up to.

But before you do that, let me introduce myself. My name is David Pierce, and I'm Protocol's editor at large. This is Source Code, our daily briefing on the most important stories in tech. Normally, this newsletter won't start with a long preamble from me — it'll be a quick, fun and essential way to start your weekdays. If we do it right, you should be ready to win the day before you finish your coffee. Maybe even before it's done brewing.

I have more to tell you about Protocol and Source Code, but we'll get to that later. Let's get to the news.

People Are Talking

Steve Wozniak says he still appreciates his weekly paycheck from Apple —even though it's only $50 or so:

  • "It's small, but it's out of loyalty, because what could I do that's more important in my life? Nobody's going to fire me. And I really do have strong feelings always for Apple."

Clearview AI has a right to collect people's photos according to its CEO, Hoan Ton-That :

  • "There is a First Amendment right to public information. So the way we have built our system is to only take publicly available information and index it that way." (Ton-That will be on "CBS This Morning" today, and the interview should be … something.)

The Iowa chaos is a bad sign , Joshua Greenbaum, CTO at the U.S. Vote Foundation, told Protocol's Charles Levinson:

  • "What we're seeing is there's a tech bro culture trying to impose itself on the election world." (More on Iowa down below.)

Is Facebook too involved with Libra? Mastercard CEO Ajay Banga thinks so :

  • "It went from this altruistic idea into their own wallet. If you get paid in Libra … which go into Calibras, which go back into pounds to buy rice, I don't understand how that works."

The Big Story

How an app crashed a caucus

Last March, Gerard Niemira, the CEO of a company called Shadow Inc., told Protocol's Issie Lapowsky that Democratic election tech was a "tangled morass." He said this in the midst of talking about how he could fix things.

But Shadow's app was at the center of Monday's Iowa caucus debacle. It took a while, but we now have a much clearer picture of what happened:

  • The app, which was designed to make it easy to tabulate and share caucus data, was built in only a couple of months and given to caucus volunteers with little training or testing.
  • Motherboard got screenshots of the app , which volunteers had to install on their personal phones through a third-party testing service before going through a complicated login and security system (that didn't actually work). Even in the best case, that process is roughly as intuitive as reading hieroglyphs. And they had to do it this way because they didn't have enough time to go through an app store review process.
  • In Iowa, The NYT reports, only a quarter of the 1,765 precinct chairs even managed to download and install the app.

The mess up has had immediate consequences. Nevada — which had planned to use Shadow's app for its caucuses in a few weeks — announced that it's changing plans. And the whole idea of using tech in elections is suddenly up for debate (again).

Niemira told Bloomberg that he is "really disappointed that some of our technology created an issue that made the caucus difficult." He blamed the issues on "a bug in the code that transmits results data into the state party's data warehouse."

Read Issie's story to find out why the problem is so, so much deeper than that.

A MESSAGE FROM NASDAQ

Reimagining Markets Everywhere

Nasdaq Technology is reshaping the future of global markets by redefining what a marketplace can be.

Learn more here.

Electric Cars

Tesla's meteoric rise continues

Every day this week, Tesla's share price has gone on a virtually unprecedented upward journey. It seems impossible, outlandish, ridiculous, overblown. Until it happens again the next day.

  • Tesla's stock closed at $887.06 on Tuesday, up more than $107 from just the day before. (And it was still climbing after hours.) Only a month ago it closed at $443.
  • In case you're wondering: yes, that's insane.

The weirdest part is that no one seems to know exactly why it's happening. It's a squeeze on the market's most-shorted stock! It's a bunch of amateur investors who just think Elon Musk is hella cool! It's Saudi Arabia ! No, it's China ! Maybe listeners just really liked " Don't Doubt Ur Vibe "!

The most compelling explanation I've heard goes like this: Tesla has a long history of getting in its own way, with things like ill-advised tweets and inefficient production lines. But now, Gartner analyst Michael Ramsey told me, Tesla's starting to nail the basics:

  • "They've always had a super strong brand and have always had major flaws," Ramsey said. "And they still have flaws. It's just that the big flaws seem like they're fading."
  • Tesla's getting better at building factories, better at running them, better at delivering on promises, better at keeping its CEO out of trouble.

Whatever the reason, it looks like Musk's unusual compensation plan is going to work out. There's an increasingly plausible world in which Tesla makes Musk the world's richest person.

Have you bought or sold Tesla stock in the last couple of months? What made you move? How high do you think it's going? Send me a note: david@protocol.com .

Politics

The White House 5G dream, now with Big Tech

In an interview with the WSJ , Larry Kudlow said that the White House is working with American tech companies to build "an American soup-to-nuts infrastructure for 5G." That's what Trump has been asking for, Kudlow said.

  • Dell, Microsoft, and AT&T are all part of the project , the WSJ reports, and they could have a system running within 18 months.
  • Surprised? Well, you're not alone: One source at a U.S. telecoms association told Protocol's Adam Janofsky that they hadn't heard of the project before reading the WSJ story either.

The project's focus is on building cloud services and software that can run on top of virtually any company's hardware — because no American company is set up to compete head-on with Huawei in the 5G infrastructure business. Kudlow even allowed for the possibility that the America-first plan might need to include European companies like Nokia and Ericsson.

If you're skeptical, you're still probably not alone. "There were U.S. alternatives [to Huawei], but they essentially went bankrupt," NYU professor Sundeep Rangan told Adam. "Taxpayers would be very confused about the government investing money into an industry that already has low margins and had to consolidate."

This is just the latest in a number of Trump administration moves designed to fight Huawei's 5G dominance. Kudlow echoed the party line on that front, calling the company "a threat to our national security."

Making Moves

  • Michael Ronen, the U.S. head of SoftBank's Vision Fund , is leaving the company. He expressed … "issues" about SoftBank, according to the FT , and had been planning to leave for several weeks. The FT also reports that Ron Fisher, SoftBank's vice chairman, could be in the hot seat.
  • Splunk hired former Okta Chief Security Officer Yassir Abousselham as its own CISO. Splunk's previous CISO, Joel Fulton, is starting his own cybersecurity company.
  • Dan Houser, a co-founder of Rockstar Games , is turning the "extended break" he took last year into a permanent departure from the company. His last day will be March 11.
  • Liz Schimel, the head of business for Apple News , is leaving amidst a rough first year for Apple News+. Bloomberg says Apple is "seeking to hire a notable name from the publishing world" to replace her.

In Other News

Everything else you need to know

  • 28.6 million people have already signed up for Disney+ . That's more than analysts expected from the service's first quarter and puts the service already nearly on par with Hulu (which has been around for … many quarters). Here's hoping Baby Yoda gets a cut of the proceeds.
  • The hot new job title in Silicon Valley? Ethicist . Protocol's Linda Kinstler dug into what it's like trying to be the moral center of the tech industry. (Spoiler: tough.)
  • Foxconn hopes to "gradually" restart factories in China starting next week, in the wake of closures resulting from the coronavirus outbreak. Reuters reports that it could take one to two weeks for the plants to get back up to full speed.
  • Andreessen Horowitz is launching a new life-sciences venture fund , with $750 million to invest. "Bio is not the 'next new thing' — it's becoming everything," the partners wrote in the blog post announcing the fund.
  • Twitter announced new guidelines for how it handles "synthetic and manipulated media." Execs say it will either delete content that's been faked or changed in order to deceive viewers, or add a label saying what's happened. But the bar is high, and the onus for finding stuff is on users.
  • Instagram reportedly brought in about $20 billion in ad revenue last year . Facebook doesn't report Instagram's specific financials, but Bloomberg's figure places Instagram above the $15.1 billion in ad revenue that we now know YouTube made last year.
  • The owner of the NYSE wants to take over eBay . Intercontinental Exchange is reportedly interested in a deal in excess of $30 billion but says eBay "has not engaged in a meaningful way."
  • Tinder may be in GDPR hot water . Ireland's Data Protection Commission announced a formal inquiry into "ongoing processing of users' personal data," as well as how the company has communicated with users.

One More Thing

The Amazon van coming to a street near you

As you know, as FedEx and UPS know, and as everyone knows, Amazon is interested in taking more control over deliveries. It's working on drones, adorable robots, and who knows what else, but one of its more interesting plans might be a plain-old van. It's working with Rivian to manufacture 100,000 purpose-built vehicles and showed off some early designs on Tuesday . I can't believe I'm saying this, but the van is … kind of adorable? It pairs some Pixar-cuteness with an electric drivetrain, Alexa-powered smarts, and some seriously complicated ideas about packing efficiency. Coming to your Prime-subscribing curb in 2021.

A MESSAGE FROM NASDAQ

Reimagining Markets Everywhere

Nasdaq Technology is reshaping the future of global markets by redefining what a marketplace can be.

Learn more here.

That's it for us today. Source Code will come from me every morning, and you can always reach me at david@protocol.com or by replying to this email. (I'd love to see where you're reading this; I'll feature whoever sends a Protocol photo from the most remote location in tomorrow's newsletter.) But every day you'll also be seeing the work of Protocol's newsletter editor Jamie Condliffe and our terrific team of reporters. And I hope you'll see your own contributions here, too! Have a question or a story idea? Get a new job / have a birthday / sell your company / pull off an elaborate hack the likes of which the world has never seen? We want the Source Code community — the business leaders and tech insiders also getting this email — to hear all about it. (If you don't want to get this email anymore, you can unsubscribe below. I'll try not to hold it against you.)

Welcome to Source Code — I'm thrilled you're here, and I'm so excited to do this together.

Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to me, david@protocol.com , or our tips line, tips@protocol.com . See you tomorrow.


Fintech

Judge Zia Faruqui is trying to teach you crypto, one ‘SNL’ reference at a time

His decisions on major cryptocurrency cases have quoted "The Big Lebowski," "SNL," and "Dr. Strangelove." That’s because he wants you — yes, you — to read them.

The ways Zia Faruqui (right) has weighed on cases that have come before him can give lawyers clues as to what legal frameworks will pass muster.

Photo: Carolyn Van Houten/The Washington Post via Getty Images

“Cryptocurrency and related software analytics tools are ‘The wave of the future, Dude. One hundred percent electronic.’”

That’s not a quote from "The Big Lebowski" — at least, not directly. It’s a quote from a Washington, D.C., district court memorandum opinion on the role cryptocurrency analytics tools can play in government investigations. The author is Magistrate Judge Zia Faruqui.

Keep Reading Show less
Veronica Irwin

Veronica Irwin (@vronirwin) is a San Francisco-based reporter at Protocol covering fintech. Previously she was at the San Francisco Examiner, covering tech from a hyper-local angle. Before that, her byline was featured in SF Weekly, The Nation, Techworker, Ms. Magazine and The Frisc.

The financial technology transformation is driving competition, creating consumer choice, and shaping the future of finance. Hear from seven fintech leaders who are reshaping the future of finance, and join the inaugural Financial Technology Association Fintech Summit to learn more .

Keep Reading Show less
FTA
The Financial Technology Association (FTA) represents industry leaders shaping the future of finance. We champion the power of technology-centered financial services and advocate for the modernization of financial regulation to support inclusion and responsible innovation.
Enterprise

AWS CEO: The cloud isn’t just about technology

As AWS preps for its annual re:Invent conference, Adam Selipsky talks product strategy, support for hybrid environments, and the value of the cloud in uncertain economic times.

Photo: Noah Berger/Getty Images for Amazon Web Services

AWS is gearing up for re:Invent, its annual cloud computing conference where announcements this year are expected to focus on its end-to-end data strategy and delivering new industry-specific services.

It will be the second re:Invent with CEO Adam Selipsky as leader of the industry’s largest cloud provider after his return last year to AWS from data visualization company Tableau Software.

Keep Reading Show less
Donna Goodison

Donna Goodison ( @dgoodison ) is Protocol's senior reporter focusing on enterprise infrastructure technology, from the 'Big 3' cloud computing providers to data centers. She previously covered the public cloud at CRN after 15 years as a business reporter for the Boston Herald. Based in Massachusetts, she also has worked as a Boston Globe freelancer, business reporter at the Boston Business Journal and real estate reporter at Banker & Tradesman after toiling at weekly newspapers.

Image: Protocol

We launched Protocol in February 2020 to cover the evolving power center of tech. It is with deep sadness that just under three years later, we are winding down the publication.

As of today, we will not publish any more stories. All of our newsletters, apart from our flagship, Source Code, will no longer be sent. Source Code will be published and sent for the next few weeks, but it will also close down in December.

Keep Reading Show less
Bennett Richardson

Bennett Richardson ( @bennettrich ) is the president of Protocol. Prior to joining Protocol in 2019, Bennett was executive director of global strategic partnerships at POLITICO, where he led strategic growth efforts including POLITICO's European expansion in Brussels and POLITICO's creative agency POLITICO Focus during his six years with the company. Prior to POLITICO, Bennett was co-founder and CMO of Hinge, the mobile dating company recently acquired by Match Group. Bennett began his career in digital and social brand marketing working with major brands across tech, energy, and health care at leading marketing and communications agencies including Edelman and GMMB. Bennett is originally from Portland, Maine, and received his bachelor's degree from Colgate University.

Enterprise

Why large enterprises struggle to find suitable platforms for MLops

As companies expand their use of AI beyond running just a few machine learning models, and as larger enterprises go from deploying hundreds of models to thousands and even millions of models, ML practitioners say that they have yet to find what they need from prepackaged MLops systems.

As companies expand their use of AI beyond running just a few machine learning models, ML practitioners say that they have yet to find what they need from prepackaged MLops systems.

Photo: artpartner-images via Getty Images

On any given day, Lily AI runs hundreds of machine learning models using computer vision and natural language processing that are customized for its retail and ecommerce clients to make website product recommendations, forecast demand, and plan merchandising. But this spring when the company was in the market for a machine learning operations platform to manage its expanding model roster, it wasn’t easy to find a suitable off-the-shelf system that could handle such a large number of models in deployment while also meeting other criteria.

Some MLops platforms are not well-suited for maintaining even more than 10 machine learning models when it comes to keeping track of data, navigating their user interfaces, or reporting capabilities, Matthew Nokleby, machine learning manager for Lily AI’s product intelligence team, told Protocol earlier this year. “The duct tape starts to show,” he said.

Keep Reading Show less
Kate Kaye

Kate Kaye is an award-winning multimedia reporter digging deep and telling print, digital and audio stories. She covers AI and data for Protocol. Her reporting on AI and tech ethics issues has been published in OneZero, Fast Company, MIT Technology Review, CityLab, Ad Age and Digiday and heard on NPR. Kate is the creator of RedTailMedia.org and is the author of "Campaign '08: A Turning Point for Digital Media," a book about how the 2008 presidential campaigns used digital media and data.

Latest Stories
Bulletins