[The Morning After]( Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts [Apple Podcasts]( | [Spotify]( | [Google Play]( | [iHeart Radio]( It's Monday, January 31, 2022. The tech news cycle has been dominated this weekend by Spotify as it continues to deal with the fallout from its decision to back Joe Rogan. Last week, [Neil Young]( offered the streaming service an ultimatum, saying it either cracked down on COVID-19 misinformation, pumped out by Roganâs podcast and others, or heâd quit. Spotify decided to back Rogan, which prompted [Joni Mitchell]( to withdraw her music from the platform in solidarity. (Both Mitchell and Young were childhood survivors of polio, and both know the real danger of vaccine misinformation.) Subsequently, a number of high-profile figures have registered their unease, including the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Brené Brown. Yesterday, [Brown said that she would pause]( releasing new episodes of her two Spotify-exclusive podcasts âuntil further notice.â And Spotifyâs own COVID-19 guidelines were subsequently leaked, which [revealed the (very) wide latitude the company offers to podcasts on its service](. (Spotifyâs also apparently cool with climate denial, as evidenced by a very recent episode of The Joe Rogan Experience.) To try to address the issue, Spotify has announced that it will add a [content advisory]( to any podcast episodes discussing COVID-19. Rogan himself has released a video statement saying that he felt justified in inviting COVID-deniers onto his show, but was sorry for the trouble he had caused Spotify. He also promised to â[balance things out]( by booking guests with different opinions in future. -Dan Cooper The biggest news stories you might have missed - [Treasury reconsiders IRS use of ID.me facial recognition amid privacy concerns]( - ['Halo' TV series heads to Paramount+ on March 24th]( - [Apple's App Store now permits unlisted apps]( [T-Mobile will fire unvaccinated corporate employees starting April 2nd]( Workers with half a dose will be put on unpaid leave. T-Mobile has confirmed reports that its corporate employees will face termination [if they are not vaccinated for COVID-19](. The carrier, following in the footsteps of tech giants like Google, is mandating that workers get protected against the pandemic, or face termination. Employees who have had their first jab, meanwhile, will be placed on unpaid leave until they get their second dose. As always, a number of exemptions and caveats apply, but it looks like many companies are done tiptoeing around the issue. [Continue Reading.]( [Teen wants $50,000 to stop tracking Elon Muskâs private jet]( Thereâs a word for this, Iâm sure. Jack Sweeneyâs Twitter bots use public data to track the whereabouts of public figuresâ private jets. His most famous is ElonJet which, quelle surprise, tracks the takeoff and landing patterns of Elon Muskâs personal plane, and has more than 203,000 followers. Musk, naturally, wasnât thrilled at its existence, and [offered Sweeney $5,000 to take the bot down](. Sweeney, however, was looking for something closer to $50,000 to help him get through college. But you donât become a billionaire by handing out cash to people, and so Musk reportedly broke off comms with the 19-year-old. [Continue Reading.]( [NASA's JPL appoints its first female director]( Dr. Laurie Leshin already laid the groundwork for the Artemis program.
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Worcester Polytechnic Institute]( Dr. Laurie Leshin has accepted the role as head of [NASAâs Jet Propulsion Laboratory]( making her the first woman to lead the famous lab. Leshinâs background includes a tour of duty at the Goddard Space Flight Center, and a stint as deputy associate administrator at NASAâs Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. Her work helped lay the groundwork for the Artemis and commercial spaceflight programs, and she helped craft the Mars sample return missions. [Continue Reading.]( [New US stock exchange will use the blockchain to track trading activity]( The (supposed) benefit? Faster trade settlements. The Securities and Exchange Commission has given a thumbs up to the [Boston Security Token Exchange]( (BSTX), a blockchain-based stock exchange. When it launches later next year, you wonât immediately be able to trade crypto stocks with the BSTX, but its backers are hoping to broaden its toolset in future. BSTX says that the benefit of blockchain is to speed up trade settlements between parties, a process that can currently take up to two days at a time. [Continue Reading.]( The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't [subscribe](. Now available on your smart speaker and wherever you get your podcasts:
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