Hi, you’re receiving our free Tech In Brief newsletter because you had been getting one of Bloomberg’s technology newsletters that are now subscriber-only. You can manage your subscriptions here. Tech Across the GlobeChina restricts investments: Chinese regulators plan to restrict technology firms including some of the country’s highest-profile AI pioneers from accepting US capital without government approval. See what spurred the move. Meta and Amazon deal on chips: The two companies have struck a multibillion-dollar agreement for the social-media giant to rent hundreds of thousands of Amazon’s general-purpose chips for its AI efforts. Here’s how it benefits both sides. Social media crackdown: Norway plans to join a growing number of countries and restrict children younger than 16 from social media sites. Officials say this is why it matters. Related StoriesBloomberg Podcast
When Bob Lee, a well known tech executive famous for creating Cash App, was found stabbed to death in San Francisco, his killing set off a wave of online fury and speculation. But when a suspect was arrested for his murder, it became clear the rumors could not be further from the truth. Listen to Foundering: The Killing of Bob Lee.
Must ReadThe planned purchase of AI coding startup Cursor by Elon Musk’s SpaceX has put one of Cursor’s key benefactors — Nvidia — in an awkward position, Ed Ludlow reports in today’s Tech In Depth. Get the Tech In Depth newsletter for analysis and scoops about the business of technology from Bloomberg’s journalists around the world. New From BloombergComing soon: Get the AI Today newsletter — chronicling the disruptions and threats of AI to businesses, workers, governments and economies with analysis from Bloomberg’s global newsroom. This Week in Game OnMost video games are all about making linear progress, but one increasingly popular category, called “roguelikes” after the seminal 1980 game Rogue, makes loss more impactful, Jason Schreier writes in this week’s Game On. Games in this genre can differ wildly but if you die, you lose all your progress and have to start again from the beginning. To some, the repetition can be mind-numbing, he writes. But to others, there’s something calming, almost meditative, about it. Sign up for the Game On newsletter to go deep inside the video game business with reporting and analysis from Jason Schreier. More from BloombergGet Tech In Depth and more Bloomberg Tech newsletters in your inbox:
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Billionaire-backed babies
Plus: Stephen King is America’s Shakespeare. ...
