Facebook CEO Zuckerberg faced a bunch of tough questions about Facebookâs data practices during his hour-long appearance before the European Parliament in Belgium. But he also got to cherry-pick the questions he answered, and issued broad talking points instead of direct answers. [European regulators werenât happy:]("In total, you apologized 15 or 16 times in the last decade," said Guy Verhofstadt, leader of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. âEvery year you have one or another wrongdoing with your company. ... Are you able to fix it?â You can watch Zuckerbergâs slightly contentious meeting [here](.
[[Kurt Wagner / Recode](]
Amazon is selling facial-recognition technology to police, allowing them to analyze âmillions of faces in real time.â Sold by the companyâs fast-growing Amazon Web Services unit, the facial-recognition technology, called Rekognition, has been used by police in Oregon over the past year and reduced the identification time of reported suspects from two to three days down to minutes. In a letter to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, the ACLU and other civil rights organizations called on Amazon to âstop powering a government surveillance infrastructure that poses a grave threat to customers and communities across the country.â
[[Jason Del Rey / Recode](]
Tesla isnât shipping that âaffordableâ $35,000 Model 3 electric vehicle â which is a problem if CEO Elon Musk wants the company to appeal to a mass market. Two years ago, Musk unveiled the entry-level Model 3, inspiring hundreds of thousands to deposit $1,000 to get on the waiting list. But over the weekend, he tweeted that Tesla will be shipping a more expensive version of its Model 3 â starting at $78,000 â and that the company would âlose money and dieâ if it stuck to the originally promised price.
[[Johana Bhuiyan / Recode](]
Starbucksâs mobile payments system has more U.S. users than Apple Pay or Google Pay, its closest competitors. By the end of this year, a quarter of U.S. smartphone users â 55 million people â will make an in-store mobile payment, and nearly 24 million of them will have done so through the Starbucks app, whose popularity could be credited to early adoption, ease of use and a loyal customer base that has been incentivized by a robust rewards program.
[[Rani Molla / Recode](]
Music industry legend Lyor Cohen used to complain about YouTube. Now he wants you to pay $10 a month for it. Cohen, who used to run big record labels, now works for YouTube, which just introduced a new ad-free subscription service in the hope of mollifying the labels. Cohen agreed to talk about YouTube Music â and Childish Gambino, and that famous/famous Kanye West photo â on an episode of the Recode Media podcast.
[[Peter Kafka / Recode](]
Does Trump write his own tweets? Sometimes. And when he doesnât, his ghostwriter aides make sure the presidentâs anything-but-random communications are as peppered with misspellings and grammatical glitches as the real-ish thing (!). Trump has also [gone rogue on phone security]( â he uses at least two iPhones â one for making calls and the other equipped only with the Twitter app and preloaded with a handful of news sites. But the phones arenât equipped with sophisticated security features designed to shield his communications.
[[Annie Linskey / The Boston Globe](]
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[A former âShark Tankâ contestant wants to use Amazonâs Alexa to make interactive childrenâs books.](
Novel Effect won funding from the TV show, but raised $3 million from Amazon and other investors instead.
[Slackâs new tool for developers lets people do more work without leaving Slack.](
The messaging company is allowing deeper integrations with tools like Asana, Zendesk and HubSpot.
[âLive Work Work Work Dieâ author Corey Pein shares the secrets of tech success â be lucky and ruthless.](
On the latest episode of Recode Decode, Pein says, âI want to take this industry down a couple notches.â
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[Whatâs inside a food truck?](
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