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Meet the quiet VCs who just racked up $4 billion in deals | Recode Daily: August 12, 2016

Kirsten Green’s Forerunner Ventures bet on Dollar Shave Club and Jet.com.

Kirsten Green
Kirsten Green
Kirsten Green

.You probably don't know VC Kirsten Green and her all-women team at Forerunner Ventures, but maybe you should: They were the only firm to back both Dollar Shave Club and Jet.com, which sold for a collective $4 billion in recent weeks.
[Jason Del Rey | Recode]

.Twitter and ex-CEO Dick Costolo fired back at a BuzzFeed report contending that internal dithering has kept Twitter from effectively dealing with user-abuse issues. Both said the report was inaccurate, but neither elaborated on any specific points.
[Kurt Wagner | Recode]

.Arianna Huffington says she left the Huffington Post because she recently realized she couldn't run it and focus on her new health startup, Thrive Global. Behind the scenes, there's another reason: With Yahoo joining HuffPo owner AOL under the Verizon umbrella, she would likely see her clout diluted.
[Peter Kafka | Recode]

.Forget the Olympics — the fiercest competitive rivalry right now is between the coding teams of Facebook and Adblock Plus. First Facebook blocked ad-blockers from blocking ads. Two days later, Adblock ginned up a workaround. Late Thursday, Facebook reportedly started rolling out an update to neuter the workaround. To be continued.
[Jacob Kastrenakes | The Verge]

.In the latest episode of Too Embarrassed to Ask, Kara Swisher and Lauren Goode talk to Melanie Perkins about Canva, her company's drag-and-drop design app, and related tools aimed at non-professionals. If you're inspired, take on their design challenge.
[Eric Johnson | Recode]

Self-Driving Cars
By Ina Fried
Facebook, Amazon or Microsoft — all customers of Here Maps — are possibilities.
Google
By Mark Bergen
It comes three days after authorities there opened a case against Apple.
Square
By Jason Del Rey
The company’s first lawyer, Dana Wagner, is departing after five years.
Podcasts
By Eric Johnson
"People care about Yahoo, even if they don’t use it."
The latest dangerous toy from the mind of crazed British inventor Colin Furze is a two-story tall, 360-degree swing that he built in his backyard. Zoning laws must be a little loose in Lincolnshire.

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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