TechCrunch Newsletter [TechCrunch AM logo]( By [Alex Wilhelm]( Monday, March 18, 2024 Welcome to TechCrunch AM! Today we have good news for the open-source AI community, a potential tie-up between Apple and Google, the future of Box and online content management, a startup turning algae into protein, and why gaming is coming to LinkedIn. Happy Monday! â [Alex](twitter.com/alex) [Disrupt: Innovation For Every Stage]( Sponsored by [TechCrunch]( [TechCrunch Disrupt 2024: Uniting 10K+ tech leaders, founders, and investors for insights, connections, and innovation. Learn from industry titans, fuel creativity, and scale your startup journey with tailored guidance for every stage.]( [Register Now]( TechCrunch Top 3 - [X mostly open-sources Grok](: As promised, the source code for X’s AI model, Grok, was made available for free over the weekend, with a few caveats. TechCrunch notes a dearth of training code, and also a lack of the connections that Grok has to X itself. Still, this is another step forward for open-source AI development, which some consider critical for the speed at which we develop new, and better artificial intelligence models.
- [India backtracks on AI regulation](: After saying AI companies would need to get government approval before launching their AI models in the country, Indiaâs Ministry of Electronics and IT has backstepped. AI companies are now expected to âlabel under-tested and unreliable AI models to inform users of their potential fallibility or unreliability,â TechCrunch reports. Thatâs a far lighter approach to regulation, and likely to be good news for Indiaâs AI startups.
- [Apple could tap Googleâs Gemini for iPhone AI](: Despite some public flubs, Googleâs Gemini AI model could find purchase in Appleâs kingdom, forging another link between the mega-cap tech giants. Bloomberg [also notes that Apple has spoken to OpenAI](, so donât consider this goose fully cooked. Instead, I wonder why Apple is considering licensing another companyâs AI models at all? [TechCrunch Top 3 image] Image Credits: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto / Getty Images Morning must-reads [Zone raises $8.5M for blockchain-enabled payment infrastructure](: Nigerian fintech company AppZone, known for its banking software, in 2022 split into two parts to focus separately on new blockchain tech and its traditional SaaS products. Now, its blockchain-focused arm, Zone, has landed fresh capital to build interoperable payment infrastructure. You could call this a more serious crypto round, though I think the fintech tag fits better than anything related to web3. [How GitHub is handling the AI era](: Microsoftâs code repository and developer tool GitHub is no stranger to legal tussles. After all, access to GitHub is [not guaranteed around the world](, something that it has to both advocate for and defend. But with the AI wave crashing onto techâs shores lately, how is GitHub handling the various thorny legal issues cropping up? We spoke with the companyâs chief legal officer, Shelley McKinley, to learn more. [Aaron Levieâs Box fights for its third era](: Box was once a startup darling, but ever since it went public, the ECM giant has had quite the tumultuous journey. But thanks to its endless perseverance, a willingness to shake up its product offering, and tactical acquisitions, Box is today clocking over $1 billion in annual recurring revenue. The company is now planning its third major iteration, which, of course, involves AI. [Starbucks bids adieu to its blockchain experiment](: U.S.-based coffee giant Starbucks is dropping its NFT program. TechCrunch recently interviewed the team behind the effort, so we have excellent recent context. The decision is a blow to those hopeful that crypto would cross over to the mainstream, as Starbucksâ validation of web3 was a big deal for the space. However, it seems that brew and blockchain arenât a match made in heaven. [Morning must-reads image] Image Credits: Zone Don't miss these - [Gumroad pulls back on NSFW art](, potentially forcing some of its creators to take their custom to a rival platform.
- [Tribe Capital spin-out Termina wants to remake investing](, and is making some big claims about the power of its data service.
- [Poseidona, a Spanish startup, wants to yank irksome algae from the sea]( and turn it into consumable protein. Before you go [LinkedIn is working to bring gaming to its platform](: Because every online platform eventually grows to resemble every other platform, right? Best known for its job portal, recruiting tools, and people spouting endless advice, LinkedIn is now working on several gaming titles. Everyone wants to be the New York Times, it turns out. Remember when every online platform wanted to add âstoriesâ? Gaming could be the next thing you cannot avoid online. [Before you go image] Image Credits: LinkedIn China via Weibo [Read more stories on TechCrunch.com]( Newest Jobs from Crunchboard - [Senior Policy Analyst / Senior Economist at Center for AI Policy (Washington D.C., DC, USA)](
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