A Bitcoin ATM, the largest cryptocurrency by market cap that operates free of any central control and that relies on a peer-to-peer software and cryptography, on the BitBase stand during the Mobile World Congress 2023 on March 10, 2023, in Barcelona, Spain.
Joan Cros | Nurphoto | Getty Images
The price of bitcoin climbed on Monday as financial institutions continued to give their bitcoin blessing.
Bitcoin rose more than 5% to $28,002.18, its highest level since early May, according to Coin Metrics. Ether added 3.5% to trade at $1,782.99.
Sentiment has been high in crypto since late last week, when BlackRock, the largest asset manager in the world filed an application for what would be the first ever spot bitcoin ETF in the U.S. The application came a week after the Securities and Exchange Commission sued two of the biggest crypto exchanges, Binance and Coinbase. Many have speculated about the timing of BlackRock’s move, particularly with Coinbase as its crypto custody partner.
Fidelity has been actively following along with crypto developments since 2014. In more recent years, the firm has opened the Fidelity Digital Assets division, created a commission-free retail investing app called Fidelity Crypto, and began offering 401(k) investors access to cryptocurrencies (an option that needs to be made available by employers).
Many financial incumbents are keen to show enthusiasm for blockchain technology and the ways it can advance old financial infrastructure. Most are quieter, however, about their views on crypto investing.
With big names like BlackRock and Fidelity putting their crypto commitments on display, investors were optimistic Tuesday that some of the reputational risk of conducting any kind of crypto business – which for some investors has been a mental barrier to buying bitcoin – could start to fade.
Bitcoin has struggled to break out of a narrow trading range this quarter but has yet to fall meaningfully under $25,000. Tuesday’s big move pushed its monthly gains into the green. It’s now up 69% this year.
Parade goers hold Pride flags during the annual Pride Parade in San Francisco on Sunday, June 29, 2024.
Minh Connors | San Francisco Chronicle | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg is staying mum these days when it comes to the LGBTQ+ community. It wasn’t always that way.
San Francisco Pride Executive Director Suzanne Ford told CNBC she remembers when Zuckerberg personally called the nonprofit to ensure that the company then known as Facebook had a spot at the annual event. As the world’s largest LGBTQ+ parade, the SF Pride event has become a symbol representing advocacy and social justice for members of the community.
In 2015, SF Pride was prohibiting Facebook from marching at the event because of the company’s policies that required people to use their legal names on the social network, Ford said. Members of the LGBTQ+ community were worried that bad actors were exploiting the company’s account policy by reporting transgender Facebook users and others who no longer identify by their legal names.
After Facebook updated the policy, Zuckerberg called SF Pride’s then-executive director George Ridgelyto ask him that Facebook be included in the parade, Ford said.
The relationship between SF Pride and Meta has since splintered.
SF Pride formally cut ties with Meta in March after the company enacted a number of new policies, including a scaling back of internal programs designed to increase hiring of diverse candidates, which CNBC reported in January.
Meta also eased content-moderation guidelines as part of its policy changes, which multiple current and former employees told CNBC could instigate more online abuse toward marginalized communities, including members of the LGBTQ+ community. Zuckerberg has also made an effort to curry favor with President Donald Trump, who signed an executive order in January calling for investigations into companies that support diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, initiatives.
Since the organization’s decision to end its relationship with Meta, Ford said that she hasn’t heard from Zuckerberg or anybody that SF Pride used to have a relationship with at the company.
Meta will not be taking part in this year’s SF Pride festival, set to take place this weekend at San Francisco’s Civic Center. The annual parade will be held on Sunday, according to the event’s website. The theme for 2025 is “Queer Joy is Resistance.”
“Why was it so important for Mark back then, and why is it so important for Mark now not to be associated with San Francisco Pride?” Ford said.
Meta declined to comment.
FILE PHOTO: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg marched with 700 Facebook employees In San Francisco’s Gay Pride Parade on June 30, 2013.
Kobby Dagan | VWPics |AP
Meta isn’t the only company distancing itself from SF Pride. Other major companies like Anheuser-Busch, Comcast, Diageo and Nissan are also no longer sponsoring SF Pride after years of support, CNBC previously reported.
Given that SF Pride shares a geographic center with Meta and so much of the tech industry, the lack of support for the LGBTQ+ community after years of public trumpeting cuts especially deep, Ford said. Google-parent Alphabet has also stopped sponsoring SF Pride this year, she said.
San Francisco represents both the “home of innovation” for the tech industry and the “home and the birthplace of the LGBTQ community in the United States,” said Ford, adding that it’s no mistake why so much innovation comes from the region.
“Creative and wonderful people want to come to San Francisco — it’s not the drinking water — but they come here because you can be yourself here,” she said. “You can love who you love, you can be who you are and you don’t have to march to any certain drumbeat.”
Tech companies represent a little over 15% of SF Pride’s overall sponsorship funding for the event. The organization’s budget is down $180,000 from their target because of a drop of overall corporate sponsors, a spokesperson told CNBC on Wednesday.
There are still large tech sponsorships from the likes of Apple, Amazon and Salesforce, but otherwise, there’s a palpable silence from the tech industry this year about supporting LGBTQ+ causes, Ford said.
For instance, Ford said that in previous years, her time was often spent speaking to tech companies’ employee resource groups in the lead-up to SF Pride, but she has yet to receive any invitation of that kind this year.
Ford said she also hopes that OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, who married his partner Oliver Mulherin in 2024, will be more vocal about supporting the LGBTQ+ community and SF Pride. Ford said she briefly met Altman a few months ago to discuss SF Pride, but she has not heard from him since.
“One would think that OpenAI here in San Francisco, that they would think that they should be supporting the fabric of the community,” said Ford, adding that the lack of support from OpenAI and Altman is “painful because Sam is a member of our community, and he certainly has resources.”
OpenAI declined to comment.
A parade float during the annual Pride Parade in San Francisco on Sunday, June 29, 2024.
Minh Connors | San Francisco Chronicle | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images
Prominent tech companies like Meta, Amazon and Uber have posted rainbow-coated messages on their websites and social media accounts in years past to show support for Pride Month, which is observed in June, but this year, tech companies’ online presence are noticeably less colorful.
The threat of a lawsuit coupled with the possibility of a public tongue-lashing by Trump, other politicians and social media has caused many tech leaders and corporate executives to stay quiet on LGBTQ+ issues, said Amy Dufrane, CEO of human resource certification organization HRCI.
“Anything that touches the space of DEI, we’re seeing companies pull back from that out of fear,” she said.
Executives who support LGBTQ+ and related DEI issues are doing so under the radar to avoid drawing attention, Dufrane said. For example, a spokesperson for SF Pridesaid that two tech companies have recently donated to the organization but want to remain anonymous. Ford declined to name the tech companies.
“Sometimes people in our community assume there’s no good, there’s no one at these corporations that cares about us,” Ford said. “Sometimes they do, and they don’t want the consequences of caring about us.”
Ford said that the door is still open for Zuckerberg to contact SF Pride, but ultimately, it would be up to the nonprofit’s board to decide the next steps. Ford said that Zuckerberg would likely have to make a “commitment to some things that I don’t think that he would be willing to do.”
“We have got to leave space for people to change, we got to leave space like if at Meta there’s a leadership change or they come to the realization that this is just bad, the track they’re going down is wrong,” Ford said. “I want to leave space for them to come and have a discussion with us and to show us that they are in line with our values.”
Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC.
Waymo partners with Uber to bring robotaxi service to Atlanta and Austin.
Uber Technologies Inc.
Uber and Alphabet‘s Waymo are now offering robotaxi rides to the public in Atlanta, as the companies continue expansion of their partnership.
The Waymo robotaxis available through the Uber app will cover approximately 65 square miles around Atlanta, but will not yet travel on highways or to the airport. The vehicles feature Waymo’s driverless technology, known as the Waymo Driver, integrated into battery electric Jaguar I-PACE SUVs.
The companies said in September that they would be jointly bringing Waymo One to Austin, Texas, and to Atlanta. Rides became available in Austin in March, launching in the Texas capital before Elon Musk’s Tesla got its robotaxi service off the ground.
Tesla, which is now headquartered in Austin, debuted a pilot robotaxi service there over the weekend for invitees only. Tesla’s robotaxis are Model Y SUVs equipped with the company’s latest driverless technology. The Tesla robotaxis operate in daytime hours only in a geofenced area of Austin, and include a human valet who rides in the front passenger seat to ensure safety.
Waymo robotaxis in Austin, Atlanta and elsewhere operate without any human supervisor on board. They also employ sophisticated lidar and radar sensors that are not used in Tesla’s vehicles today.
Once viewed as a driverless pioneer, Tesla is now fighting to catch up with Waymo, as well as competitors in China including Baidu’s Apollo Go, and WeRide, which also partners with Uber.
In Atlanta and Austin, Waymo rides are only available through Uber’s app, while in San Francisco and Los Angeles, passengers book through the Waymo One app. The Waymo-Uber partnership only covers passenger rides, not Uber Eats deliveries.
Google could face changes to its online search services in the U.K. after regulators raised concerns over the tech giant’s dominance.
The Competition and Markets Authority on Tuesday said it is consulting on a proposal to give Google “strategic market status,” a designation under new competition rules for tech firms that hold entrenched power in a certain market.
The watchdog was granted expanded competition and merger control powers this year as the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act came into force.
Similar to a European Union law known as the Digital Markets Act, the legislation gives the CMA the ability to directly enforce consumer protections on tech giants and take action — including fines of up to 10% of global annual revenues for breaches.
The CMA laid out a roadmap of measures for Google if its strategic market status designation is successful, including:
Choice screens to help people easily select and switch between search services
Fair and non-discriminatory search rankings
Control over how publishers’ content is used — including for artificial intelligence-generated responses
Portability of consumer search data to support product innovation
In response to the CMA’s decision, Google on Tuesday said the outcome of such changes “could have significant implications for businesses and consumers” in the U.K.
“The CMA has today reiterated that ‘strategic market status’ does not imply that anti-competitive behaviour has taken place — yet this announcement presents clear challenges to critical areas of our business in the UK,” Oliver Bethell, Google’s senior director for competition, said in a statement.
“We’re concerned that the scope of the CMA’s considerations remains broad and unfocused, with a range of interventions being considered before any evidence has been provided.”
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Bethell added that Google plans to “continue working constructively with the CMA” to avoid such measures from being imposed.
It comes as regulators around the world have increasingly been looking to rein in Big Tech players over their significant market power.
In April, a U.S. judge ruled that Google holds illegal monopolies in two markets for online advertising technology, paving the way for antitrust prosecutors to seek a breakup of its ad products.
Meanwhile, an advisor to the European Union’s top court last week recommended it dismiss Google’s appeal against a record 4.1-billion-euro ($4.8 billion) antitrust fine.