Politico
President Biden’s antitrust adviser Tim Wu is leaving the White House
Tim Wu, the White House adviser helping to drive the administration’s push to rein in corporate giants with tougher antitrust enforcement is planning to leave his position in the coming months. Wu is expected to return to teaching at Columbia Law School after a roughly year-and-a-half as special assistant to President Biden for technology and competition policy. Wu was part of a trio of antitrust hawks President Joe Biden installed in 2021 as part of a push to curb the power of sprawling companies — a fight that has focused in particular on tech titans like Amazon and Google.
Secret Service may disable iMessages to avoid repeat of Jan. 6 controversy (Politico)
Submitted by benton on Sun, 07/31/2022 - 17:04Why suspected Chinese spy gear remains in America’s telecom networks
The US is still struggling to complete the break up with Chinese telecom companies that Donald Trump started four years ago. The problem: Small communications networks, largely in rural areas, are saddled with old Chinese equipment they can’t afford to remove and which they can’t repair if it breaks. The companies say they want to ditch the Chinese tech, but promised funds from Congress aren’t coming quickly enough and aren’t enough to cover the cost.
Homeland Security records show 'shocking' use of phone data, ACLU says (Politico)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Mon, 07/18/2022 - 11:00How Silicon Valley's congressman, Rep. Ro Khanna, sees the future (Politico)
Submitted by benton on Fri, 07/15/2022 - 17:02Former House Energy and Commerce Chair Greg Walden will lobby for Fox and Disney on privacy bill (Politico)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Thu, 07/14/2022 - 12:25Amazon gave Ring videos to police without owners’ permission (Politico)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 07/13/2022 - 13:19The spy war in your pocket (Politico)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 07/07/2022 - 15:47How many satellites are too many?
Broadband internet satellites are set to sweep the skies over the next decade at a scale never before seen. Just don’t ask policymakers today how exactly we’re going to manage the fallout. The story is a familiar one to longtime watchers of technology. Companies hooked up homes with electricity, with phone lines, TV signals and the internet — miracles of modern connectivity — but not without communities inheriting a cityscape loaded with hanging wires and accompanying fire hazards.