Snips announces an ICO and its own voice assistant device

French startup Snips has been working on voice assistant technology that respects your privacy. And the company is going to use its own voice assistant for a set of consumer devices. As part of this consumer push, the company is also announcing an initial coin offering.

Yes, it sounds a bit like Snips is playing a game of buzzword bingo. Anyone can currently download the open source Snips SDK and play with it with a Raspberry Pi, a microphone and a speaker. Itprivate by design, you can even make it work without any internet connection. Companies can partner with Snips to embed a voice assistant in their own devices too.

But Snips is adding a B2C element to its business. This time, the company is going to compete directly with Amazon Echo and Google Home speakers. You&ll be able to buy the Snips AIR Base and Snips AIR Satellites.

The base will be a good old smart speaker, while satellites will be tiny portable speakers that you can put in all your rooms. The company plans to launch those devices in 18 months.

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By default, Snips devices will come with basic skills to control your smart home devices, get the weather, control music, timers, alarms, calendars and reminders. Unlike the Amazon Echo or Google Home, voice commands won&t be sent to Googleor Amazonservers.

Developers will be able to create skills and publish them on a marketplace. That marketplace will run on a new blockchain — the AIR blockchain.

And thatwhere the ICO comes along. The marketplace will accept AIR tokens to buy more skills. You&ll also be able to generate training data for voice commands using AIR tokens. To be honest, I&m not sure why good old credit card transactions weren&t enough. But I guess thata good way to raise money.

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Spotify is reportedly rethinking its ‘hateful conduct& policy

Spotify caused a stir when it unveiled its &hateful conduct& policy earlier this month. Now, a few weeks later, itreportedly already rethinking the tact, after pushback from artists and inside the company itself.

According to a new report from Bloomberg, the streaming service has been in discussions to reinstate at least one of the artists it singled out when it announced a policy that would pull artists from editorial-curated playlists for actions outside of music.

&We don&t censor content because of an artistor creatorbehavior, but we want our editorial decisions — what we choose to program — to reflect our values,& the company wrote on May 10. &When an artist or creator does something that is especially harmful or hateful (for example, violence against children and sexual violence), it may affect the ways we work with or support that artist or creator.&

In particular, Spotify seemingly went out of its way to single out R. Kelly and rapper XXXTentacion. The latter had been pulled from the servicepopular Rap Caviar playlists after video emerged of the rapper striking a woman — the latest in a line of assault claims.

But new reports claim that Spotify will eventually bring XXXTentacion back to its curated playlists as it works to negotiate new terms. R. Kelly, however, appears to still be on the outs.

We&ve reached out to Spotify for comment.

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Earlier this week, it came to light that Apple had removed a number of VoIP-based calling apps from the App Store, at the request of the Chinese government. The apps had been using CallKit, Applenew developer toolset that provides the calling interface for VoIP apps, freeing up developers to handle the backend communications. Chinagovernment asked developers, by way of Apple, to remove CallKit from their apps sold on the China App Store, or they can remove their apps entirely.

Notices Apple sent out to the developers were first spotted by 9to5Mac, who shared a snippet from of one of the emails.

GoogleDuo and CiscoWebex Teams among the VoIP apps pulled from the China App Store

The email states that the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) &requested that CallKit be deactivated in app apps available on the China App Store,& and informed the developer they would need to comply with this regulation in order to have their app approved.

The regulation only impacts apps distributed in the China App Store.

We understand that the apps can still use CallKit and be sold in other markets outside the region.

Apple is not publicly commenting on the matter.

The pushback against CallKit is another means of discouraging people from developing or using VoIP services in China, without having to go so far as to ban the apps directly. It wouldn&t be the first time China has cracked down in this area. In November, MicrosoftSkype was also pulled from the Apple and Android app stores.

The government also last year ordered VPN apps, which help users route around the Great Firewall, to be pulled from app stores & another order with which Apple complied.

Other social media apps, like WhatsApp and Facebook, are also disrupted at times, and newspapers& apps like those from The NYT and WSJ are blocked, too.

According to data pulled by app store intelligence firm Sensor Tower, two dozen apps with CallKit had been removed during the week prior to the news reports.

That list, along with the date removed and publisher name, is below:

GoogleDuo and CiscoWebex Teams among the VoIP apps pulled from the China App Store

Sensor Tower notes itpossible that there are other apps removed from additional stores, but doesn&t have that data.

In addition, this list only includes those apps that have been downloaded enough times to rank in the top 1,500 of an app category at some point & beyond that Sensor Tower wouldn&t pick it up. But an app that wasn&t ranked would have had so few downloads that the impact of its removal would be minimal.

Nevertheless, you can see list includes a few well-known names, including CiscoWebex Teams and GoogleDuo video calling app, among those from other operators and VoIP calling providers.

The full text of Appleemail is below:

From Apple 5. Legal: Preamble Guideline 5.0 & Legal

Recently, the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) requested that CallKit functionality be deactivated in all apps available on the China App Store. During our review, we found that your app currently includes CallKit functionality and has China listed as an available territory in iTunes Connect.

Next Steps

This app cannot be approved with CallKit functionality active in China. Please make the appropriate changes and resubmit this app for review. If you have already ensured that CallKit functionality is not active in China, you may reply to this message in Resolution Center to confirm. Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) call functionality continues to be allowed but can no longer take advantage of CallKitintuitive look and feel. CallKit can continue to be used in apps outside of China.

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Hello and welcome back toEquity, TechCrunchventure capital-focused podcast where we unpack the numbers behind the headlines.

This week was fun for a few reasons. First, it was our ownConnie Loizosfirst time leading, and it was our very first regular episode that included us recording remotely. I mention that as Matthew Lynley and I were in different places, meaning that we had a bump or two to smooth out. Your patience is more than appreciated.

Happily, we didn&t have to adventure alone, as Jonathan Abrams ofFounders Den was on hand to help us cart through the news.

Up first: A huge round for Rover, bringing even more money into the dog- and pet-focused space. As you&ll surely recall, this is not the first time that a tectonic sum has been disbursed into the pet-care vertical. Hell, Rover $155 million in new capital, while impressive, still can&t touch Wagepic $300 million infusionthat happened earlier in the cycle.

While we were on the subject, another SoftBank-backed company made waves: Uber . Yes, our favorite and least favorite topic is back.

This time Uber released yet another grip of statistics relating to its financial performance in the first quarter. The big picture More gross spend, more net revenue, smaller losses. But how you measure Uberpace of financial improvement depends on how you measure its lossesand its remaining markets.

This being Equity, however, we couldn&t avoid the IPO topic. So, in order:

  • A Foxconn subsidiary will soon bemaking big waves in China with a huge debut;
  • A Dutch payments unicorn is going public on the back of great results;
  • GreenSky went out, and did pretty OK, which was a change of pace from recent debuts.

All that and we had a laugh. Thanks for listening in, and we are back next week.

Equity drops every Friday at 6:00 am PT, so subscribe to us onApple Podcasts,Overcast, Pocket Casts, Downcast and all the casts.

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Kaltura acquires interactive video startup Rapt Media

Kaltura is expanding its enterprise video platform with the acquisition of Rapt Media.

Kaltura already offers support for some interactivity in videos, particularly with quizzes, but co-founder and CEO Ron Yekutiel predicted that this technology is going to become increasingly important: &The bigger play in the world of enterprise and the world of education is a play towards interactivity and personalization.&

Kaltura isn&t the only interactive video startup — for example, I&ve been impressed by the branching narratives powered by Eko. But Yekutiel said Rapt stood out because it offers true interactivity (not just adding a few buttons and links to a linear video) for marketing, education and HR. He also praised its &high availability and reliability with zero lag time.&

In addition, Yekutiel said Kaltura customers had already expressed interest in integrating with Rapt, and he argued that the biggest benefit comes in bringing the technology into the broader Kaltura platform.

&We consider interactivity as one layer of this layer cake,& Yekutiel said. &Nobody wants to connect to 20 technology companies for video … They want to have one platform for all their video needs.&

The financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Rapt Media was founded in 2011 and has raised $12 million in funding from investors including Boulder Ventures.Yekutiel said Rapt team members will continue to work out of their office in Boulder, Colorado and bring the total Kaltura headcount to more than 450.

&What an honor it is for our vision and technology to be recognized by a video technology powerhouse like Kaltura,& said Rapt Media founder and CEO Erika Trautman in the announcement. &I am excited that Rapt Media customers can now benefit from Kalturawide range of video solutions and easily expand their video strategy to support any use case that may arise today and in the future.&

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OnePlus 6 doesn't have wireless charging, yet has a glass back - here's why

The new OnePlus 6 has almost everything you'd want in a flagship phone for a very affordable price, but it is missing one feature we expected: wireless charging.

It's surprising because the OnePlus 6 has a glass back, a switch from the aluminum shell on the OnePlus 5T and all OnePlus phones before it (except the old OnePlus X). 

Electricity easily

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