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Berlin’s Gorillas lays off 300, explores ‘strategic options’ in 4 countries as funds dry up for its $3B instant grocery play

TechCrunch

The cuts will be mainly of staff in its Berlin HQ and represent about half of Gorillas’ employees, many of whom would have only joined in the last six months (and therefore still on ‘probation’ and so easier to made redundant under German labor laws).

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The best VPNs for staying anonymous and secure on the web

Mashable Tech

Along those same lines, using a VPN to unblock streaming services like Netflix from a country where it's not available isn't technically against the law, but it is a violation of the company's terms of use — i.e., you may get slapped with a warning or error message if caught. Let's not get too brazen, here. Choosing a VPN can be tricky.

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Usha Vance Posted a Video and People Spotted Something Absolutely Wild on a Shelf in the Background

Futurism

In an Instagram video discussing an upcoming trip to Greenland, second lady Usha Vance was spotted sitting in front of a shelf that featured a decidedly non-conservative book about climate change. In short, Greenland is the canary in the coal mine of our planet's climate.

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Twitter isn?t a government, but it?s the best one we?ve got

The Verge

Marco Rubio (R-FL), Ted Cruz (R-TX), and Josh Hawley (R-MO), scurried to stroke the president’s ego with deceitful interpretations of law and threats to sue Twitter. The group includes several political aristocrats, including the former prime minister of Denmark. The president was above the law on Twitter, until now.

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What’s in a name? How America’s place-renaming moment impacts people

Fast Company Tech

Four years later, the local school board reinstated the original Confederate names after conservatives took control of the board. The names were changed to Fort Liberty and Fort Moore in 2023 after Congress passed a law banning the use of Confederate names for federal installations.

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