PD Reporter curates a weekly selection of exclusive interviews with early-stage founders and VC firms. Read by start-up founders, VCs, early-stage employees, and tech PR professionals. Sign up today. Read 📕 Last week, I shared an article from Politico that highlighted the very real possibility of increased oversight for tech companies in 2019, especially with a redistribution of power in the midterm elections. If large tech companies begin to feel that oversight is imminent, one possible move is that they start cracking on bad actors that are currently violating their terms and conditions in a demonstration that they can self-regulate. Here’s one bad actor for them to consider:
#24: Stringr, June.ai and more📍
#24: Stringr, June.ai and more📍
#24: Stringr, June.ai and more📍
PD Reporter curates a weekly selection of exclusive interviews with early-stage founders and VC firms. Read by start-up founders, VCs, early-stage employees, and tech PR professionals. Sign up today. Read 📕 Last week, I shared an article from Politico that highlighted the very real possibility of increased oversight for tech companies in 2019, especially with a redistribution of power in the midterm elections. If large tech companies begin to feel that oversight is imminent, one possible move is that they start cracking on bad actors that are currently violating their terms and conditions in a demonstration that they can self-regulate. Here’s one bad actor for them to consider: