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Didi Chuxing, China’s largest ride-hailing company, is facing public outrage as the death of a 21-year-old passenger sparked safety concerns.

The company’s night mode facial recognition failed to detect the culprit, who abused his father’s license as a Didi Chuxing driver.

According to a Chinese news service, Didi drivers could view information about passengers, including previous comments by Didi Drivers regarding passengers’ appearance.

Since May 12, Didi Chuxing has suspended its hitch service for a week.

Here are some stories and ideas from last week that you shouldn’t miss.

CHINA

Didi apologizes for passenger killing, the dark side of sharing economy

China’s burgeoning food delivery drives growth of lifestyle ecommerce sector

Luckin Coffee to further eat into Starbucks’ dominance in China

Is JD.com bleeding too fast in its new retail war with Alibaba?

Alibaba Pictures burning cash to build up China’s largest movie ticketing platform

Toutiao’s Tik Tok takes off, outperforming Facebook and YouTube to become the world’s most downloaded app 

Tencent-backed WeDoctor raised a $500 million pre-IPO round, looking to shake up China’s online healthcare market

Southeast Asia

Grab reportedly adding $1 billion to its war chest, expecting competition with local and foreign rivals

Flash Express announces fresh funding and investment plan in SE Asia expansion

‘Travelio’ dubbed as Indonesia’s Airbnb, where users can negotiate rates, successfully raised US$4 million in series A financing

Co-working space battle: A tale of two cities

Entrepreneur First is recruiting for its fourth cohort, Singapore

Noteworthy Startups

Big Data Company CEWELL Switches from Customer Service and Quality Testing to Application of Corporate Data

Deal book: Ant Financial invests in car-sharing startup Like; VR startup Aurovis aims to provide affordable VR and 360-degree cameras