EditorialElizabeth Holmes, second from left, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, outside court with her partner Billy Evans, left, as the jury continues deliberation in her fraud trial in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialStephan Knauer, a chemist at Sanity Group on Dec. 21, 2021, a marijuana start-up that has built a testing and processing facility near Frankfurt, Germany in anticipation of legalization. (Laetitia Vancon/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes at the courthouse as the jury continues deliberation in her fraud trial in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, second from right, walks to court with her partner Billy Evans, right, her mother, and an unidentified person, left, as the jury continues deliberation in her fraud trial in San Jose, Calif., on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022.
EditorialElizabeth Holmes and her partner, Billy Evans, depart court in San Jose, Calif., Nov. 22, 2021, where she testified at her fraud trial. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialIsiah Miller shows his old football jersey outside of his apartment building in the University Heights neighborhood of the Bronx, Dec. 10, 2021. (Desiree Rios/The New York Times)
EditorialWhile capping carbon dioxide from being freely dumped into the atmosphere is turning into a very long deliberation among our world leaders, capturing and repurposing it is another option. And that alternative has proved promising by Air Company, a four-year-old start-up that uses carbon dioxide in all of the products it creates. Its latest creation is a perfume — Air Eau de Parfum — and the first fragrance made largely from air. (Jiayi Li/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes and her partner, Billy Evans, leave the courthouse at the end of the day in San Jose, Calif., Nov. 23, 2021. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, and her partner, Billy Evans, depart a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., after the first day of Holmes's trial on Sept. 8, 2021. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes walks into a courthouse in San Jose, Calif. on Monday, Nov. 22, 2021, where she testified at her fraud trial. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialRachelle Katchenago with her 16-year-old son, Jonathan Mentzel, at her home in Menasha, Wisc., on June 4, 2021. (Kevin Miyazaki for The New York Times)
EditorialRachelle Katchenago with her 16-year-old son, Jonathan Mentzel, at her home in Menasha, Wisc., on June 4, 2021. (Kevin Miyazaki for The New York Times)
EditorialVicky Brock, who split her Scotland-based start-up and operates half of it in Estonia, at Telliskivi Creative City in Tallinn, Estonia, Oct. 18, 2021. (Birgit Puve/The New York Times)
EditorialSteel igloos cover injection wells that the Icelandic start-up company Carbfix uses to inject carbon dioxide into the earth outside Reykjavik, Iceland, on Oct. 6, 2021. (Sigga Ella/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, and her husband, Billy Evans, depart a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., after the first day of Holmes's trial on Sept. 8, 2021. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, and her husband, Billy Evans, depart a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., after the first day of Holmes's trial on Sept. 8, 2021. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialIt’s a victory that WeWork has made it this far. This week, a shrunken version of the start-up that rents office space is set to go public about two years after investors saw through WeWork’s hype, the company nearly ran out of cash, and its founder walked away with a fortune. (David Szakaly/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, and her husband, Billy Evans, depart a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., after the first day of Holmes's trial on Sept. 8, 2021. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, and her husband, Billy Evans, depart a federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., after the first day of Holmes's trial on Sept. 8, 2021. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, center, the founder of the blood testing start-up Theranos, arrives at the federal courthouse in San Jose, Calif., for opening statements in one of Silicon Valley’s most anticipated trials. (Mike Kai Chen/The New York Times)
EditorialElizabeth Holmes, second from right, arrives at United States Federal Courthouse in San Jose, Calif. on Tuesday, Aug. 31, 2021. (Jim Wilson/The New York Times)
EditorialThrupthi Reddy, a marketing executive at a tech start-up, looks over Oakland and San Francisco from the balcony of her place in Oakland, Calif., Aug. 6, 2021. (Damien Maloney/The New York Times)
EditorialKarin Dillie, 33, an executive at an e-commerce company in New York, stands for a portrait in Brooklyn on Aug. 6, 2021. (Elianel Clinton/The New York Times)
EditorialDavid Hatfield runs Lacework, a cloud security start-up that closed a $525 million funding round in January. (Marissa Leshnov/The New York Times)
EditorialHanya Chang in the living room of her loft that she rents as a workspace through a start-up called Codi, in New York, July 12, 2021. (Sarah Blesener/The New York Times)
EditorialEmployees confer at the San Francisco headquarters of Envoy, a start-up whose latest product lets employees book desks for when they go into their company’s workplace, on June 30, 2021. (Lauren Segal/The New York Times)