Zoom's privacy concerns, Apple buys Dark Sky, and Sprint is dead

Published: April 3, 2020, 8 a.m.

b'Nilay, Dieter, and Paul talk to Tom Warren about Zoom\'s privacy and security concerns.\\nThe crew also looks back at the history of Sprint after it finally merged with T-Mobile.\\nPaul\'s weekly segment "If I were a rich man" updates the keyboard-in-the-front club.\\nThe show ends with some chat about Apple buying the weather app Dark Sky and allowing in-app rentals on their mobile devices.\\nStories discussed in this episode:\\n\\nAfter walkouts, Amazon pledges temperature checks and masks in all warehouses\\n\\nJeff Bezos\\u2019 space company is pressuring employees to launch a tourist rocket during the pandemic\\n\\nZoom is leaking some user information because of an issue with how the app groups contacts\\n\\nZoom faces a privacy and security backlash as it surges in ...\\n\\nZoom announces 90-day feature freeze to fix privacy and ...\\n\\nZoom isn\'t actually end-to-end encrypted\\xa0\\n\\nZoom quickly fixes \'malware-like\' macOS installer with new ...\\n\\nMicrosoft aims to win back consumers with new Microsoft 365 subscriptions\\n\\nT-Mobile completes merger with Sprint, John Legere steps down as CEO\\n\\nSprint is dead. Long live Sprint\\n\\nWhat\\u2019s next for Sprint customers now that the T-Mobile merger has gone through?\\n\\n\\ufeffAsus ROG Zephyrus G14 review: AMD has rewritten the rules\\n\\nApple now lets some video streaming apps bypass the App Store cut\\n\\nAmazon Prime Video now allows in-app rentals and purchases on the iPhone, iPad, and Apple TV\\n\\nApple acquires popular weather app Dark Sky and will shut down the Android version\\n\\n\\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices'