Bloomberg
EU’s Ambitious New Tech Rules to Be Delayed Further Into 2022
European Union countries will delay a key target of finalizing new rules hitting tech platforms by the spring of 2022, now saying they aim to reach a deal “as soon as possible” ahead of a leaders’ summit on October 21. The EU’s Digital Markets Act and Digital Services Act are two heavily debated pieces of legislation unveiled in 2020 by the European Commission that seek to curb the power of Big Tech. The Digital Markets Act seeks to curb anti-competitive behavior, while the Digital Services Act would regulate online content.
Google Quietly Tweaks Image Search for Racially Diverse Results (Bloomberg)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Tue, 10/19/2021 - 16:45Startup Takes on Big Telecom, Starting in Colorado Springs
Startup internet company Underline, which focuses on community infrastructure, is now hoping to disrupt the telecommunications industry by building open access fiber networks across 2,500 underserved communities. The company says its first full-scale deployment will break ground October 19 in Colorado Springs (CO) — where 10 percent of all households have no internet access. In an open access model, a city or a private company like Underline builds and maintains the physical infrastructure, and invites multiple independent providers to run services on the network.
Amazon Challenges Record $865 Million EU Data-Protection Fine (Bloomberg)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Fri, 10/15/2021 - 11:55Microsoft Agrees to Human Rights Review in Deals With Law Enforcement, Government (Bloomberg)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Wed, 10/13/2021 - 15:15Facebook Changes the Way It Measures Accounts for Advertisers (Bloomberg)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 10/12/2021 - 06:32Billionaires Musk, Ergen and Dell Brawling Over Spectrum at FCC
Satellite entrepreneur Charlie Ergen and computer whiz Michael Dell have a plan to open up little-used wireless frequencies to millions of customers with a new 5G service. The proposal has sparked a ruckus among billionaires. Elon Musk’s SpaceX filed an objection with the Federal Communications Commission saying the “scheme” would wreck his broadband-from-orbit service. Ergen’s Dish Network responded with an FCC filing that accused SpaceX of “flimsy” and “far-fetched” criticism.