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In a memo yesterday detailing relief efforts for small businesses during the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control has temporarily allowed retailers to sell alcoholic beverages for takeout. This lifts a ban previously imposed on restaurants and bars to only sell alcohol in-house.
Bars can sell manufactured pre-packaged containers of liquid, such as pre-mixed drinks, cocktails, beer or wine, to customers to go when the beverage is purchased with a meal. If you sell an alcoholic beverage to go, you have to pack it in a container with a lid or cap without a sipping hole or opening for a straw.
While the notice temporarily lifted a ban on the sale of alcoholic beverages, it did not impact the open-carry laws imposed by the state. If you pick up a beverage and want to drive home to enjoy it at a socially safe distance, you have to put the drink in the trunk. Not the utility compartment or glove compartment. You also can&t consume alcohol in public or in any area where open containers are prohibited, the memo notes.
Other relief efforts include allowing retailers to sell alcohol through drive-through windows or slide-out trays. This is in effect until further notice.
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Read more: Californians can now get alcohols to go
Write comment (100 Comments)The restaurant industry might look a lot different once we come out of this pandemic. As social distancing and lockdowns ripple across the nation in an attempt to fight COVID-19, some restaurants won&t be able to handle the lack of income and might tip into bankruptcy. Some might never reopen again. Earlier today, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo implemented a 90-day moratorium, or temporary prohibition, on evictions for residents and businesses such as restaurants.
Ayr Muir, the owner of Clover, a chain of veggie-friendly fast food joints, filed for unemployment recently. Clover is on hiatus but is working to connect its farmers and suppliers directly to customers to help them stay afloat.
&Iteasy to say ‘thereunemployment benefits& or ‘there are SBA loans,& but when you get down to the details ita lot more nuanced,& Muir said. &I have staff who are scared to apply for government benefits, some fear it will impact their legal status, like if you&re here on a student visa. And the process can be really confusing.&
He says he filled out his own unemployment application the other day but isn&t sure he did it correctly. &This just adds to the feeling of uncertainty and stress.&
Entrepreneurs from all over the country are trying to unlock different ways to help vulnerable local restaurants buy themselves some time. Itoften in the form of purchasing gift cards from your favorite neighborhood spots.
The trend, much like other ways big tech is helping others out during this pandemic through free promos or access to services, can be looked at in two ways. First, ita way to make this transition less stressful. Second, and perhaps more cynically thanks to capitalism, offering free services is a way to pipeline eventual customers down the road.
Letfocus on the former, because it is Friday, I miss writing about good news and these efforts deserve a fist bump for being a net positive for local shops.
SaveOurFaves
Started by Kaitlyn Krieger and her husband, Mike Krieger, the co-founder of Instagram, SaveOurFaves wants to help Bay Area residents buy gift cards for nearby restaurants. You can divide by neighborhood and region, like San Francisco, East Bay, Marin or South Bay, and pick a local business.
For what itworth, some San Francisco restaurants have already temporarily closed, even though they could stay open and sell take out. La Taqueria, one of the citymost famous burrito spots, is one high-profile example.
On the site, the duo notes that restaurants have tons of fixed costs, like rent, labor, loan repayments, insurance, supplies, repairs — the list goes on. Even &successful restaurants have razor thin margins of 3-5%, and a third have struggled to pay employees at least once.&
Help Main Street
Lunchbox, Eniac Ventures and a group of volunteers started Help Main Street so residents around the country could buy gift cards for their favorite businesses. The goal is to help local businesses recover lost revenue, and businesses range from Abettor Brewing Company in Winchester, Ky. to 45 Surfside in Nantucket, Mass. We wrote about it when it launched a couple days ago, and EniacNihal Mehta said there will be a Patreon-of-sorts option coming soon. It has roughly 14,000 listings on the website so far.
Open Table
Open Table, a company that lets you book reservations at restaurants, has a feature that lets users buy gift cards from restaurants.
Rally for Restaurants
Boston-based unicorn Toast created Rally for Restaurants to help people buy gift cards for businesses and challenge their friends to do the same. This covers restaurants across the nation.
Support Local
USA TodaySupport Local does the same as the sites above, with more pickings from San Francisco and Austin than other cities.
Help Your Hood
Help Your Hood is another marketplace for people to buy gift cards. On the website, it notes that if you don&t already have a gift card system set up in your business, the Gift Up App has agreed to waive its fees for the first $5,000 in vouchers for each business that comes through Help Your Hood.
List your restaurant
Arteen Arabshahi, an investor at WndrCo, created a Google Form so restaurants could sign up to be featured on these services in one fell swoop.
I worked at a local coffee shop during my last year of college right down the street from a Starbucks, Dunkin& Donuts and a Caffe Nero. The owners lived a five-minute walk, one-minute sprint away. The cook, Brandon, came in at 4 a.m. to make fresh cranberry scones. If you brought a crying baby in, Ali, the previous owner, couldn&t resist giving you kind eyes and a fresh espresso brownie for free. And one customer came in every morning to grab four coffees to go, and came back every afternoon to return the tray so we could reuse it the next day.
That coffee shop is closed indefinitely, and like many restaurants, it is donating its inventory to people who might need it. The charm can&t be remanufactured, and I hope it opens again soon.
I&ll end with a note from CloverMuir. He said that gift cards are a &nice expression of good will but they&re not going to halt the giant wave that threatens to wipe out restaurants everywhere.&
So, letstart small and give back. And then lethope that we see more government officials show up to help restaurants on a larger scale.
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Read more: Here’s how to help restaurants while socially distancing yourself
Write comment (90 Comments)Efforts to get at-home test kits for the COVID-19 coronavirus are ramping up quickly, and two more health industry startups are bringing their own products to market, with both Carbon Health and Nurx starting to ship their own in-home sample collection kits.
Both of these new offerings are the same in terms of approach to testing: They deliver swab-based sample collection hardware that people can use at home to collect a mucus sample, which they then ship back using included, safety approved, projective packaging to be tested by one of the existing FDA-approved commercial labs across the country.
These tests follow the PCR-based method, which tests for the genetic presence of the COVID-19 virus in a patient. These have a high degree of accuracy, at least when performed in a controlled setting and administered by a medical professional, and are the same tests that are available via drive-through testing stations being set up by state agencies.
At-home use is relatively new to market, and could introduce some potential for error in the collection part of the process, but both Carbon Health and Nurx are offering consultation with medical professionals to help ensure that samples are collected properly, and that results, when available, are correctly interpreted and provided with guidance on next steps for those taking the tests.
None of these tests are free — the Carbon Health test costs $167.50, and the Nurx test costs $181, including shipping and assessment. These are in line with other offerings, including the one from Everlywell we covered earlier this week, which retails for $135. These are described as essentially at-cost prices, and all parties say they are subject to coverage by FSA or HSA money, or potentially by insurers depending on a personplan.
One big question around these types of tests is how much supply will be available. Nasopharyngeal swabs used for the in-person type of testing are already reportedly in short supply in some regions, and testing needs are only growing. Carbon is using different swabs to collect a simple saliva sample, which it notes are not in as short supply as the nasopharyngeal version. Other types of tests, including a &serological& one being developed by startup Scanwell, instead work by analyzing a patientblood, and could provide some relief for the swab-based tests, especially now that the FDA has expanded its emergency guidance to include their use.
Nurx, which also offers at-home HPV screening, says that it will have 10,000 kits available to patients &over the coming weeks,& and hopes to expand to cover &over 100,000 patients& in the &near future.& Carbon Health CEO and co-founder Eren Bali tells me that it should ramp to around &10,000 per day capacity in about two weeks,& through its medical device partner Curative Inc., and that it can do 50 per day today, with an estimated increase to 150 per day by Monday and 1,000 per day by end of week.
All of these tests are gated by a screening and assessment questionnaire, and the round-trip time is likely to take a few days even with round-trip shipping due to testing times. It may seem like a lot of these are popping up, but these startups at least have proven track records in healthcare services, and there will be a need for very widespread testing in order for any broad attempt to flatten the curve of the virus to prove successful, so expect more of these providers to come on line.
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Read more: Healthcare startups Nurx and Carbon Health ship at-home COVID-19 test sample kits
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In response to the COVID-10 outbreak, Hulu is adding a free, live news stream to its app for customers who only subscribe to its on-demand service, not its live TV add-on. The news coverage is provided in partnership with ABC News Live, and brings live news 24/7 to Hulu on-demand subscribers as part of their existing subscription.
This includes those who pay for Hulu alone as well as those who pay for the newer Disney+/Hulu/ESPN+ bundle subscription, the company noted. And it will be available to both tiers of Huluon-demand service, including the ad-supported and HuluNo Ads plan.
The live stream will also be featured in the &Hulu Picks& section for easy access and will be available across living room and mobile devices, as well as popular game consoles.
Hulu Live TV customers, meanwhile, already have a number of live TV news channels they can watch as a part of their subscription. But Huluon-demand service is far larger, with 27.2 million paid subscribers, compared with just 3.2 million for Live TV.
Health organizations and political leaders have urged Americans to get their news from trusted sources during the COVID-19 crisis — not from social media, where misinformation spreads more quickly than tech companies can moderate or remove. (When and if they try to do so.)
Meanwhile, the uncertainty around the coronavirus outbreak has led to a significant number of online rumors, hoaxes, conspiracy theories, and snake oil cures. Earlier this week, for example, a fake news report of a national quarantine spread so quickly that the National Security Council had to post a statement to assure Americans the news was untrue.
The addition of live news for Hulu arrives at a time when a growing number of U.S. consumers have cut the cord with traditional pay TV or chose to never sign up in the first place. In Hulucase, the company says close to half its customers fall into one of those two buckets.
&More than 45 percent of Hulu viewers have either cut the cord or never had cable, and may not have access to live, televised news to receive critical information during times of national crisis,& the company said, in an announcement. &With this live stream, we aim to keep our viewers informed during this unprecedented time when having access to information is vital to our communities,& Hulu said.
In addition, fewer U.S. consumers today subscribe to a daily newspaper than in generations prior. Instead, much of our &TV viewing& is now taking place in on-demand apps like Netflix and Hulu, and our news is gathered in bits and pieces online.
Hulu isn&t the first streaming provider to add free live news to its service as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak. This week, Sling TV launched free streaming that included live news from ABC News Live, as well.
Of course, you don&t need to be a Hulu subscriber to watch ABC News Live. The news service streams online and through the ABC News app for free. But integration into major streaming apps like Hulu will make the service more accessible and more visible, as it won&t require people to seek out a separate app just to watch.
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Read more: In response to COVID-19, Hulu adds a free live news stream to its on-demand app
Write comment (97 Comments)NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has been sharing regular updates about how his agency is approaching the rapidly changing global coronavirus pandemic situation. This week, NASA escalated its response multiple times due to changing circumstances, including changing the state of working conditions at all of its facilities across the country. On Friday the agency summarized the current status of each of its facilities and major projects in a comprehensive update.
Work continues on a few missions that are deemed critical, and on projects where remote and telework are possible. These include the Commercial Crew Program, which is set to return human spaceflight capabilities to American soil via private partners. Boeing and SpaceX are NASApartners for this program, and NASA says that this is going ahead despite the requirement of in-person operations because it represents &a critical element to maintaining safe operations on the International Space Station and a sustained U.S. presence on the orbiting laboratory.& SpaceX and NASA confirmed earlier this week that they still plan to launch the first crewed Dragon mission to the ISS in mid to late May.
For the purpose of keeping ISS crew &fully supplied and safe,& NASA says that it will continue to operate its commercial resupply missions, too, which ferry experiments, food, water and more to the space station using vehicles including SpaceXDragon cargo capsule. For similar reasons, it&ll keep open the Mission Control Center at Johnson Space Center, with flight control personnel in place, though itadding &additional measures& to ensure the safety of those present.
Meanwhile, work on the James Webb Telescope in California is temporarily suspended, which means the integration and testing that was happening in preparation for its planned launch next March. Preparations for NASAMars 2020 launch, which includes its Perseverance rover and Mars Helicopter exploration vehicles also continue: that mission is scheduled for July 2020.
Therealso virtual inspection work being done on the X-59 piloted supersonic test plane thatbeing developed in California, and Lockheed Martin, which is building the aircraft for the agency, is continuing in-person work on that project. NASA is keeping the lights on at Ames Research Center in California, too, in order to ensure that the agencyIT security and supercomputing operations can continue uninterrupted.
Existing spacecraft mission support will continue, as will astronaut training (which is generally subject to strict isolation protocols to prevent illness anyway). Earlier this week, the agency announced it would suspend work on the SLS spacecraft and the Orion capsule that will carry the fundamental components of its Artemis program, which aims to get humans back to the Moon, and eventually to Mars. Artemis has been sticking to a stated 2024 time frame for its mission of returning people to the surface of the Moon, but these setbacks in total represent the most sure sign yet that we&ll probably see that window slip, though many skeptical of the schedule have suggested it would actually be later than that anyway.
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In a career spanning several decades, artificial intelligence researcher and professor Stuart Russell has contributed extensive knowledge on the subject, including foundational textbooks. He joined us onstage at TC Sessions: Robotics + AI to discuss the threat he perceives from AI, and his book, which proposes a novel solution.
Russellthesis, which he develops in &Human Compatible: Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of Control,& is that the field of AI has been developed on the false premise that we can successfully define the goals toward which these systems work, and the result is that the more powerful they are, the worse they are capable of. No one really thinks a paperclip-making AI will consume the Earth to maximize production, but a crime-prevention algorithm could very easily take badly constructed data and objectives and turn them into recommendations that cause real harm.
The solution, Russell suggests, is to create systems that aren&t so sure of themselves — essentially, knowing what they don&t or can&t know and looking to humans to find out.
The interview has been lightly edited. My remarks, though largely irrelevant, are retained for context.
TechCrunch: Well, thanks for joining us here today. You&ve written a book. Congratulations on it. In fact, you&ve actually, you&ve been an AI researcher and author, teacher for a long time. You&ve seen this, the field of AI sort of graduated from a niche field that academics were working in to a global priority in private industry. But I was a little surprised by the thesis of your book; do you really think that the current approach to AI is sort of fundamentally mistaken?
Stuart Russell: So let me take you back a bit, to even before I started doing AI. So, Alan Turing, who, as you all know, is the father of computer science — thatwhy we&re here — he wrote a very famous paper in 1950 called &Computing Machinery and Mind,& thatwhere the Turing test comes from. He laid out a lot of different subfields of AI, he proposed that we would need to use machine learning to create sufficiently intelligent programs.
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Read more: Stuart Russell on how to make AI ‘human-compatible’
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