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Texting tech bros and the danger of earnings blowouts

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This week: Big Tech's monster profits and the backlash danger

Tim Cook Apple CEO
Apple CEO Tim Cook. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

It's been an action packed week in tech, with earnings, IPOs and ongoing pandemic problems. 

In what may be a first, several tech companies posted financial results that were too good.

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Robinhood had its long-awaited IPO this week.

And the pandemic continues to upend the best laid plans for tech companies to bring their workers back to the office. 

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Tanium's Tech Bro Trial

Cybersecurity company Tanium is in a bitter legal fight with another security startup called Wiz, which poached four of Tanium's top sales employees. Among the many interesting tidibits revealed in the case are text messages among the departing Tanium employees on their way out.

Employee 1: He asked if any other reps were leaving...I said I don't know...going to be awkward when 4 guys leave for Wiz lol

Employee 2: Hahaha 😁 oh yes it is.

--------

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Employee 2: I wonder who else is going to leave that we don't know about

Employee 1: Bro who would stay??

Read the full story here:

Texts from former Tanium employees surface as the $9 billion startup sues them and the firm that poached them.


From the curious file:

Elon Musk
Elon Musk. Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File
  • Rules for talking about Elon Musk: A training manual for drivers piloting Teslas in Musk's Las Vegas tunnel provides instructions on how to answer passengers' questions about the boss. "Be as brief as possible and do your best to shut down such conversation." If a rider persists? Simple, reads the script:  "Yup, he's a great leader. He motivates us to do great work!" 
  • The sport of kings: It may not be an Olympic sport yet, but hydrofoiling is all the rage among tech moguls, from Larry Page to Mark Zuckerberg. If you want to be like Zuck, hop on board (and don't forget to lather on the sunscreen).
  • Thus spoke Steak-umm: You know the world is in a bad place when Steak-umm, the maker of frozen, sliced sandwich meat, is the voice of reason. And yet there's something heartening in seeing the frozen aisle-fixture fulminate on the front lines of Twitter against the dangers of conspiracy theories and misinformation.

    To quote the packaged meat sage, it's imperative that we find "some semblance of mutually agreed upon information before we splinter into irreconcilable realities."

The Big Read

How Silicon Valley turned employment agreements into 'gag orders for life'

Anonymous woman with a NDA-labeled duct tape over her mouth with Google, Apple, Pinterest, and Riot Games logos behind her on a red to black gradient background
Apple; Google; Pinterest; Riot Games; Samantha Lee/Insider

If you work in tech, chances are you've signed a nondisclosure agreement. Maybe you've signed a non-disparagement agreement, as well. But do you know whether your agreement is likely legally enforceable? Or how it compares to your friends'?

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To understand how these agreements became the foundation of Silicon Valley's vaunted culture of secrecy, Insider reviewed 36 NDA's from tech workers, ranging from multi-billion dollar publicly traded firms that are household names to small startups. The result is the most comprehensive portrait yet of the scope and legality of NDAs, a subject of intense debate in the wake of the #MeToo movement and amid recent proposed legislative changes in employment law. 

Click here to read the full story

Quote of the week:

mark zuckerberg
Justin Sullivan/Getty

"Within the metaverse, you can build a hang out, play games with friends, work, create and more. You're basically going to be able to do everything that you can on the Internet today, as well as some things that don't make sense on the Internet today like dancing."

— Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, during Facebook's Q2 earnings call, discusses his plan for Facebook to evolve  from being a social media company to a "metaverse" company. 


Recommended readings:

Here's how Cisco decided that none of its 75,000 employees ever have to return to the office

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Exclusive: Amazon's companywide deal to use Workday's HR software ended after about 3 years. Workday shares slump.

This startup works with Facebook and Google to steer internet users away from misinformation. Get an exclusive look at the pitch deck it used to land $7 million from VCs.

Your Apple laptop is probably repaired at a facility workers say is a 'sweatshop'

How SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son's dog helped two brothers fetch $75 million for their pet DNA startup


Not necessarily in tech:

These 20 millennial Democratic campaign operatives are reshaping politics in the US


Thanks for reading, and if you like this newsletter, tell your friends and colleagues they can sign up here to receive it.

— Alexei

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On February 28, Axel Springer, Business Insider's parent company, joined 31 other media groups and filed a $2.3 billion suit against Google in Dutch court, alleging losses suffered due to the company's advertising practices.

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