Category: UNCATEGORIZED

11 Apr 2019

Instagram bug showed Stories to the wrong people

Today in “Facebook apps are too big to manage”, a glitch caused some users’ Instagram Stories tray to show Stories from people they don’t follow.

TechCrunch first received word of the problem from Twitter user InternetRyan who was confused about seeing strangers in his Stories Tray and tagged me in to investigate. The screenshots below show people in his Stories tray who he doesn’t follow, as proven by the active Follow buttons on their profiles. TechCrunch inquired about the issue, and 22 hours later Instagram confirmed that a bug was responsible and it had been fixed.

Instagram is still looking into the cause of the bug but says it was solved within hours of being brought to its attention. Luckily, if users clicked on the profile pic of someone they didn’t follow in Stories, Instagram’s privacy controls kicked it and wouldn’t display the content. Facebook Stories wasn’t impacted. But the whole situation shakes faith in the Facebook corporation’s ability to properly route and safeguard our data, including that of the 500 million people using Instagram Stories each day.

An Instagram spokesperson provided this statement: “We’re aware of an issue that caused a small number of people’s Instagram Stories trays to show accounts they don’t follow. If your account is private, your Stories were not seen by people who don’t follow you. This was caused by a bug that we have resolved.”

The problem comes after a rough year for Facebook’s privacy and security teams. Outside of all its scrambling to fight false news and election interference, Facebook and Instagram have experienced an onslaught of technical troubles. A Facebook bug changed the status update composer privacy setting of 14 million users, while another exposed up to 6.8 million users unposted photos. Instagram bugs have screwed up follower accounts, and made the feed scroll horizontally. And Facebook was struck by its largest outage ever last month, after its largest data breach ever late last year exposed tons of info on 50 million users.

Facebook and Instagram’s unprecedented scale make them extremely capital efficient and profitable. But that size also leaves tons of surfaces susceptible to problems that can instantly impact huge swaths of the population. Once Facebook has a handle on misinformation, its technical systems could use an audit.

11 Apr 2019

Daily Crunch: WikiLeaks founder arrested

The Daily Crunch is TechCrunch’s roundup of our biggest and most important stories. If you’d like to get this delivered to your inbox every day at around 9am Pacific, you can subscribe here.

1. WikiLeaks founder charged with hacking, now faces US extradition

Following Julian Assange’s arrest inside the Ecuadorian embassy earlier today for breaching U.K. bail conditions, the WikiLeaks founder has also been rearrested on behalf of the U.S. — confirming that he will face extradition proceedings.

The existence of a sealed charge against Assange in the U.S. was revealed inadvertently last year after an unrelated court filing was found to contain information on a sealed charge against him.

2. The creation of the algorithm that made the first black hole image possible was led by MIT grad student Katie Bouman

The algorithm was needed to combine data from the eight radio telescopes around the world and turn it into a cohesive image.

3. Lemonade picks up $300 million Series D led by SoftBank Group

Lemonade uses an AI-powered bot to digitize the insurance-buying experience for renters and home owners. Users simply download the app and answer a few questions before getting a quote.

4. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos challenges rival retailers to raise their minimum wages, too

In November, Amazon raised its own minimum wage to $15 per hour, in response to the ongoing criticism around pay disparity and poor working conditions. Bezos suggested other retailers should follow Amazon’s lead, or push it to do even better.

5. Coinbase launches debit card in the UK

When you buy cryptocurrencies on Coinbase, many users simply don’t know what to do with them. Customers in the U.K. can now get a good old plastic card and spend cryptocurrencies in-store and on any online website.

6. AKQA says it used AI to invent a new sport called Speedgate

The digital agency fed data about 400 sports to an AI, which then generated sports concepts and rules — everything from underwater parkour to exploding Frisbees.

7. How to stop robocalls spamming your phone

No matter what your politics, beliefs or even your sports team, we can all agree on one thing: robocalls are the scourge of modern times.

11 Apr 2019

Will you make the cut? Apply to Startup Battlefield & TC Top Picks @ Disrupt SF 2019

Exposure. That’s a key ingredient for early-stage startup success. If you’re hungry for massive exposure — to a global audience, to the media and to tech investors — then be sure to apply to Startup Battlefield at Disrupt San Francisco 2019, which takes place October 2-4.

Startup Battlefield at Disrupt SF is a global phenomenon — a high-stakes pitch competition where roughly 20 of the best early-stage startups compete head-to-head for a $100,000 equity-free cash prize. That’s one heck of an adrenaline shot to your bottom line. But regardless of who wins the money, every participating team shares the bright, potentially life-changing spotlight that is Startup Battlefield. They also become part of the Startup Battlefield alumni community.

Since it debuted in 2007, Startup Battlefield has helped launch 857 companies. This community has gone on to collectively raise $8.8 billion in funding and produce 109 exits. Familiar names like Vurb, Dropbox, Mint, Yammer, TripIt — and many others — launched on a Startup Battlefield stage. You won’t find a better opportunity to showcase your early-stage startup in front of the influential people who can make your startup dreams come true.

Need more convincing? Check out these five reasons to apply for Startup Battlefield, and then go do it.

Both the Battlefield and our TC Top Picks always draw intense interest, media coverage and investor love. Both programs are highly competitive, and TechCrunch editors with a knack for spotting exceptional startups will closely vet each application. And talk about a fabulous ROI — it won’t cost you a thing to apply or to participate in either program. Apply once to be considered for both programs.

Our TC Top Picks program represents the outstanding pre-Series A startups in their respective categories. TechCrunch editors will select up to five startups in each of the following tracks: Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning, Biotech/Healthtech, Blockchain, Fintech, Mobility, Privacy/Security, Retail/E-commerce, Robotics/IoT/Hardware, SaaS and Social Impact/Education.

Top Pick designees receive a free Startup Alley Exhibitor Package and a prime location in Startup Alley, our exhibition floor featuring hundreds of early-stage startups. They also get a three-minute interview with a TechCrunch editor on the Showcase Stage, and we’ll shoot, edit and promote that interview across our social media platforms. Did we mention invitations to VIP events? Talk about exposure. More than 10,000 attendees — including tech media and investors — will explore Startup Alley, and the spotlight shines brightly on TC Top Picks.

Exposure, media coverage and funding — you’ll find all three ingredients at Disrupt San Francisco 2019 on October 2-4. Can you hit the trifecta? Improve your odds for success and apply to Startup Battlefield and TC Top Picks today.

11 Apr 2019

Google loses its chief diversity officer

Google’s chief diversity officer, Danielle Brown, has left the company. Brown, who became Google’s CDO in June 2017 after serving in a similar role at Intel, announced today that she’s joined payroll and benefits startup Gusto to lead its chief people operations.

In Brown’s LinkedIn post announcing the job change, she noted that she will have the opportunity to “engage and support an internal team” as well as “influence how we build our product to drive positive change around critical issues like diversity, compliance, and employee engagement for millions of workers in the U.S.”

For Google, this means Melonie Parker will step into the role of CDO, following a nine-month stint as Google’s head of diversity. In a statement to TechCrunch, Google VP of People Operations Eileen Naughton said:

We’re grateful to Danielle for her excellent work over the past two years to improve representation in Google’s workforce and ensure an inclusive culture for everyone. We wish her all the best in her new role at Gusto. We’re fortunate to have a deep bench of experienced leaders and are delighted that Melonie Parker, who has been our Head of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, will step up to become Google’s Chief Diversity Officer and Director, Employee Engagement. Melonie has 20 years of HR experience, and a passion for improving workforce representation and inclusion. We’re deeply committed to this work and have made progress, but there’s more we need to do.

Perhaps it’s no surprise that, following one diversity-related issue after another (anti-diversity manifesto, sexual harassment allegations, employee-led walkouts, etc), Google’s chief diversity officer has decided to seek out potential greener pastures.

It’s also worth noting that Google has been through its fair share of diversity leads. In 2016, then-Google head of diversity Nancy Lee left the company, saying she was retiring. However, Lee has since joined electric scooter startup Lime as its chief human resources officer.

Google is currently 68.4 percent male, 54.4 percent white, 39.8 percent Asian, 3.3 percent black, 5.7 percent Latinx and 0/8 percent Native American, according to its most recent diversity report.

11 Apr 2019

Google Cloud makes some strong moves to differentiate itself from AWS and Microsoft

Google Cloud held its annual customer conference, Google Cloud Next, this week in San Francisco. It had a couple of purposes. For starters it could introduce customers to new CEO Thomas Kurian for the first time since his hiring at the end of last year. And secondly, and perhaps more importantly, it could demonstrate that it could offer a value proposition that is distinct from AWS and Microsoft.

Kurian’s predecessor, Diane Greene, was fond of saying that it was still early days for the cloud market, and she’s still right, but while the pie has continued to grow substantially, Google’s share of the market has stayed stubbornly in single digits. It needed to use this week’s conference as at least a springboard to showcase its strengths .

Its lack of commercial cloud market clout has always been a bit of a puzzler. This is Google after all. It runs Google Search and YouTube and Google Maps and Google Docs. These are massive services that rarely go down. You would think being able to run these massive services would translate into massive commercial success, but so far it hasn’t.

Missing ingredients

Even though Greene brought her own considerable enterprise cred to GCP, having been a co-founder at VMware, the company that really made the cloud possible by popularizing the virtual machine, she wasn’t able to significantly change the company’s commercial cloud fortunes.

In a conversation with TechCrunch’s Frederic Lardinois, Kurian talked about missing ingredients like having people to talk to (or maybe a throat to choke). “A number of customers told us ‘we just need more people from you to help us.’ So that’s what we’ll do,” Kurian told Lardinois.

But of course, it’s never one thing when it comes to a market as complex as cloud infrastructure. Sure, you can add more bodies in customer support or sales, or more aggressively pursue high value enterprise customers, or whatever Kurain has identified as holes in GCP’s approach up until now, but it still requires a compelling story and Google took a big step toward having the ingredients for a new story this week.

Changing position

Google is trying to position itself in the same way as any cloud vendor going after AWS. They are selling themselves as the hybrid cloud company that can help with your digital transformation. It’s a common strategy, but Google did more than throw out the usual talking points this week. It walked the walk too.

For starters, it introduced Anthos, a single tool to manage your workloads wherever they live, even in a rival cloud. This is a big deal, and if it works as described it does give that new beefed-up sales team at Google Cloud a stronger story to tell around integration. As my colleague, Frederic Lardinois described it:

So with Anthos, Google will offer a single managed service that will let you manage and deploy workloads across clouds, all without having to worry about the different environments and APIs. That’s a big deal and one that clearly delineates Google’s approach from its competitors’. This is Google, after all, managing your applications for you on AWS and Azure, he wrote

AWS hasn’t made made many friends in the open source community of late and Google reiterated that it was going to be the platform that is friendly to open source projects. To that end, it announced a number of major partnerships.

Finally, the company took a serious look at verticals, trying to put together packages of Google Cloud services designed specifically for a given vertical. As an example, it put together a package for retailers that included special services to help keep you up and running during peak demand, tools to suggest if you like this, you might be interested in these items, contact center AI and other tools specifically geared toward the retail market. You can expect the company will be doing more of this to make the platform more attractive to a given market space.

Photo: Michael Short/Bloomberg via Getty Images

All of this and more, way too much to summarize in one article, was exactly what Google Cloud needed to do this week. Now comes the hard part. They have come up with some good ideas and they have to go out and sell it.

Nobody has ever denied that Google lacked good technology. That has always been an inherently obvious strength, but it has struggled to translate that into substantial market share. That is Kurian’s challenge. As Greene used to say, in baseball terms, it’s still early innings. And it really still is, but the game is starting to move along, and Kurian needs to get the team moving in the right direction if it expects to be competitive.

11 Apr 2019

Verified Expert Brand Designer: Character

Character is celebrating its 20-year anniversary this year, and this SF-based branding and design agency has a lot to be proud of. Founded by Ben Pham, Tish Evangelista, and Rishi Shourie, Character has helped startups like Doordash, Glint, Molekule, and many others, launch their companies into the world. We interviewed co-founder Ben Pham about Character’s early days, their commitment to collaborating with mission-driven founders, and why relationships define who they are and what they do as a branding firm.


On working with entrepreneurs:

“When you have an opportunity to sit in the room, hear how passionate they are, how they left a cushy job, and this is their mission, it’s inspiring. Oftentimes, it’s not financially motivated for them. It’s not about their ego. You think about that, and you’re like, “Wow, I get to be in this room with someone that’s really passionate” and we start believing in it. We have to believe in what they’re creating, and we have to believe that they’re leaving a positive impact on our culture. We want to make sure founders are contributing in a positive way. We believe in the people that we’re working with and what they’re doing.”

“The Character team was extremely creative and easy to work with, always open to exploring new ideas.” Howard Nuk, SF, Co-founder at Palm

Character’s branding philosophy:

Great brands, for us, is about relationships. It’s a long-lasting relationship, and those relationships are earned. We think of brands like a character within a story. They have a unique characteristic about them. When you have dinner parties, you’re inviting people into your home who you’re going to enjoy the next three hours drinking wine, eating food, and just talking to them. You always know who you’re going to invite and the dynamic of the room. We think about brands in the same way.

Below, you’ll find the rest of the founder reviews, the full interview, and more details like pricing and fee structures. This profile is part of our ongoing series covering startup brand designers and agencies with whom founders love to work, based on this survey and our own research. The survey is open indefinitely, so please fill it out if you haven’t already.


Interview with Character’s Creative Director & Co-Founder Ben Pham

Yvonne Leow: What’s Character’s origin story? How did it get started?

Ben Pham: We started in 1999, and the reason why we started our agency was, in 1999 if you were in San Francisco, and practicing graphic design during that time, a lot of our work was coming from biotech, and technology companies. Those companies did not look like the life science, biotech companies that we see today, because they were not lifestyle companies. Tech companies, during that time, did not look like lifestyle companies. We’re like, “Well, that’s not an area that we’re really interested in.” We felt like, you know, in southern California to LA, and New York, a lot of branding agencies were focusing on consumer lifestyle brands. Fashion, apparel, interior, and nobody was really doing that in San Francisco, and that was something that we were interested in. So we were like, “Let’s do that.”

As a result, we landed our first project, which is branding for Pottery Barn Kids. That really was a very different way of thinking about branding for kids, because most time, people think of bright primary colors, jumbled type. We realized that kids are not our target audience, it’s really parents, so we made a smooth and sophisticated system. And that got a lot of attention for Character, and then we went on to work with Gary Friedman, the CEO of Restoration Hardware.

11 Apr 2019

LinkedIn adds a range of reactions to spur more engagement in conversations

Sometimes a “like” in social media doesn’t give the full picture, or you’re just not inspired enough to write a fuller response. Today LinkedIn addressed that issue on its own platform, with the introduction of four new reactions people can use in response to posts in their timelines. In addition to “like”, you can now react in four other ways to posts with icons that indicate “celebrate,” “love,” “insightful” and “curious.”

The reactions are rolling out globally to the company’s nearly 600 million users starting today to both the desktop and mobile apps.

LinkedIn’s rollout comes in the wake of similar moves on other social platforms, perhaps most noticeably on Facebook, which launched an expanded set of reaction buttons more than three years ago. LinkedIn has never been one for jumping quickly to new trends, but this nevertheless shows that it’s listening and understands that it has to provide more to users to make its platform more dynamic and to help spur more engagement (and in turn more people posting to the platform).

LinkedIn product manager Cissy Chen notes that the company based its selection of reactions on the kinds of conversations that people are already having on LinkedIn (and probably the kinds of conversations that LinkedIn would like to continue to encourage), and also what people were writing most commonly when providing 1-2 word terse responses.

Typically, posts range from people announcing new professional roles, or milestones, or sharing learnings from somewhere else — hence the leaning to two reactions giving encouragement, and two more contemplative reactions.

LinkedIn’s wider goals in providing tools like this are to continue to get more users engaged on its platform. In the years since Microsoft acquired the company, I’d argue that some of the iterations the company has made to different aspects of its service have slowed down, which makes it more open to other companies coming in and creating more useful and modern replacements.

On the other hand, platforms like Facebook have been quick to add ever more features and functionality — its own efforts in recruitment services and mentoring being direct competitors to LinkedIn’s social tools for the working world — and so for LinkedIn to continue to keep people around, and to attract new users looking for alternatives, even incremental additions like this one make a difference.

11 Apr 2019

ReachFive manages logins and accounts for e-commerce platforms

French startup ReachFive wants to become Stripe for account management. The company just raised a $10 million Series A funding round led by CapHorn Invest, with Dawn Capital and Ventech also participating — investment bank Avolta Partners handled the fundraising process.

When you buy something on an e-commerce website or app, chances are those companies asked you to create an account before entering your address and payment information. ReachFive creates the login module for dozens of e-commerce and transactional companies.

This isn’t just about storing an email and password. ReachFive lets you do interesting things with your customer database. For instance, ReachFive works across different channels.

If you shop on L’Occitane’s website and then purchase cosmetics in a store, they can find your account. This way, you get accurate information about your customers. ReachFive complies with GDPR.

ReachFive also supports social logins, such as Facebook Connect or “Sign in with Google”. The company also supports two-factor authentication. And of course, you can integrate ReachFive with other services, such as a CRM, a CMS, a recommendation engine, etc.

If you’re creating a brand from scratch, you might rely heavily on newsletters and content. You can let people sign up to the newsletter without creating a full-fledged account. They can create an account when they make their first purchase later down the road — ReachFive will reconcile profiles.

40 companies are using ReachFive, including Boulanger, Etam Group, L’Occitane, Hachette Group, Engie and La Redoute. The startup manages 40 million user accounts overall. The company uses a software-as-a-service pricing model, and you can be sure that each contract must be quite valuable.

ReachFive proves that an omnichannel strategy doesn’t just mean that you should merge your inventories and catalogs across your online and offline platforms. It also means that you should be able to provide a unified customer experience by understanding a customer from start to finish.

Big retail companies have already unified their user accounts — when you buy an Apple product in an Apple store, you can see the receipt in your online account. But ReachFive could become an essential widget for all midtier e-commerce platforms.

11 Apr 2019

Triplebyte raises $35M for its online coding test and credentialing service for hiring engineers

LinkedIn, with nearly 600 million users, dominates the market today for recruiters headhunting suitable candidates for knowledge worker roles. But with minimal controls for guaranteeing that people are what they say they are, it opens up a gap in the market for startups to give recruiters a better steer with more verified information. Today, a startup that aims to do this for the engineering world raised a big round of funding to do that.

Triplebyte — which offers personalised online coding tests (the tests ask you questions based on how well you have answered previous problems) and subsequent technical interviews to help screen candidates for prospective employers — is announcing that it has raised a Series B of $35 million, underscoring the demand it has seen for its services and the opportunity to grow the business further.

“More companies than ever before are hiring engineers, but we thought the default for sourcing those who are already in jobs — using LinkedIn — was not good enough,” said CEO Harj Taggar, who co-founded Triplebyte with Guillaume Luccisano (CTO) and Ammon Bartram (COO), in an interview this week.

The funding is being co-led by Ali Rowghani from YC Continuity and Brian Singerman from Founders Fund. Previous investors Caffeinated Capital and Initialized Capital are also in this round. Taggar said Triplebyte is not disclosing its valuation with this round — it’s raised $50 million to date — but he hinted that it is in the “hundred million multiples towards being a unicorn.”

In addition to going though the YC program, Taggar was one of the first two outside partners that the storied accelerator ever hired, before jumping back into founding his own startup (he was also previously a co-founder of Auctomatic, acquired by LiveCurrent Media, along with Stripe’s Patrick Collison and Kulveer Taggar).

With its roots firmly in Y Combinator, Triplebyte first tested the waters for the service by offering it to YC companies looking to hire and engineers at YC companies looking for their next role after observing how resumes never really told the full story, and how the resulting process of screening people took too long. Luccisano and Bartram had an even more direct connection, both struggling at different times to find work, and then eventually to find suitable candidates at companies where they did work, like Socialcam and Twitch.

“What would it mean if you could get hired without a resume, instead using a company like ours with an online coding quiz and technical interview?” he said he asked himself. “If you have the skills, we could get you the interview.”

The 50 YC companies that first tried this out saw some success, with 1-2 hires per month, enough to encourage Triplebyte to scale its service.

Today, there are testing results from some 150,000 engineers on its platform, which Triplebyte uses to help compare newer candidate performance, as well as to feed its testing algorithms that personalise tests to each candidate. Customers, meanwhile, now include Adobe, Apple, financial services companies like American Express, Union Bank and Black Rock, and more “organic inbound” from more than just startups.

(And with that the pricing model has also changed, from a per-use rate to time-based subscriptions that match how often an organization uses Triplebyte.)

There are a lot of online credential and coding schools these days, and to be clear, Triplebyte is not trying to replace these. (In fact, Taggar notes that they partner with some of them, including the Lambda School, another YC startup.)

What it is trying to do is, in an industry like technology, where speed is of the essence, speed up some of the processes that have to happen before you hire a technical person, by taking out a few stages on behalf of the employer and candidate.

There are some twists to Triplebyte that speak to some of the automation of dating services that provide you with sorted profiles that it think best match you. In the case of Triplebyte, it matches candidates to jobs that it determines are most suitable, which might not be the companies a candidate has set out to target for work.

“Candidates don’t get to explicitly say, I want X company,” Taggar said, “and we’re not showing them to every company on Triplebyte. Our machine learning models predict where they are most likely to get an offer. Those companies can then reach out to talk and learn more.” That in itself can be instructive to the candidate anyway, who can go away and figure out what he or she needs to learn next to get to the stage they are targeting.

Engineering is an obvious category for Triplebyte to target: there’s a lot of competition from a lot of people who all claim to be able to do the same thing, and there is already a strong culture of testing candidates at many of the top companies before they ever get to any interview stage. Taggar said that for now and for the foreseeable future, the company thinks this is enough for it to chew.

“I am a 100 percent believer in the model of skills based hiring done better by a third party at the top of hiring funnel, but I think the key to getting it right is going deep into the details into how to do the assessments in a fair way, and that requires a lot of expertise,” Taggar said. “I believe there will be Triplebytes for many verticals.”

There is indeed a lot more do to here, and “fair” is the operative word. Right now, there isn’t a clear way for employers or prospective candidates to match in situations where, for example, the organization in question is looking to hire a more diverse range of employees, something that can help a company not just with its work culture but also influence how a product is developed for a more diverse audience (the two really do go hand in hand).

Triplebyte already has gone some way towards “solving” this by moving away from resumes and their emphasis on fancy schools and work histories. But Taggar said in the company’s interviews with engineering directors and hiring managers, diversity has been the “top priority” in how they are hiring.

So that’s leading Triplebyte both to work harder to bring more of these candidates to its platform, directly and through third-party organizations, as well as continue to work on ways of making assessments that will cut across the field in an even way. Along with expanding its own business development, I’m guessing this will be a key area the company will continue to work on in the weeks and months to come.

11 Apr 2019

AKQA says it used AI to invent a new sport called Speedgate

At TechCrunch, we write about AI all the time, whether the technology is being used to write books, make films or create a better McDonald’s drive-thru. But we here’s one we haven’t heard before: Using an AI to invent a new sport.

The sport in question is Speedgate, and it was developed by AKQA. Creative Director Whitney Jenkins explained that the digital agency wanted to do something “really ambitious” for Portland Design Week, and given the team’s work with Nike (and its general “love of sports or athleticism”), it made sense to ask: “What if we invented the next basketball, the next football?”

To do that, AKQA says it used an existing recurrent neural network architecture, feeding it data about 400 sports, which were then used to generate sports concepts and rules.

Many of those ideas, Jenkins said, were simply not feasible. The AI was good at coming up with descriptions for sports like “underwater parkour,” an exploding frisbee game and one where players pass a ball back-and-forth while in hot air balloons and on a tightrope. But it took a back-and-forth process with the human team at AKQA to narrow the list down to then final three for playtesting, and then to refine the rules into something people might actually want to play.

“We know we can’t dangle 30 feet in the air, we understand the confines of what makes sense as a sport,” Jenkins said. Still, he insisted that Speedgate could never have been created by humans alone: “Using AI as a member of a creative team takes us to a new place, that we never could have gotten to without it.”

Speedgate logo

Speedgate logo

In addition to generating ideas and rules, AKQA also used AI to generate different logos for the sport. The agency’s AI Lead Kathryn Webb said they fed more than 10,400 sports logos into a deep convolutional generative adversarial network, getting back 6,400 possible logos as a result.

“A team looked through those and took a lot of inspiration from them in terms of the shape of the logo and the color scheme,” Webb said. “It’s a nice example of going beyond the very text-focused stuff that you see quite a lot of.”

And going back to text, AI was even responsible for the sport’s motto, which has apparently been embraced by the initial players: “Face the ball to be the ball to be above the ball.”

The result of all that work is a sport where teams of six play on a field with large gates, kicking and passing the ball through the gates (but avoiding the center gate) to score. Jenkins said that while Speedgate isn’t meant to be derivative of any particular sport, “If I was talking to my buddy walking down the street, I would say that we used AI to create a new sport that pulls the best of rugby, soccer, ultimate frisbee and croquet.”

AKQA will be demonstrating and discussing Speedgate at an event in Portland at 6pm tonight. Jenkins said the team has hopes for Speedgate beyond Design Week, including discussions with the Oregon Sports Authority and a possible intramural league this summer.