USA Today
States will get at least $3 million each to improve election security under spending deal (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 03/22/2018 - 14:17Obama 2012 team: We didn't break Facebook rules in our campaign (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 03/20/2018 - 19:39Amazon overtakes Google parent Alphabet, only Apple bigger (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 03/20/2018 - 19:39Want a 5G wireless box in front of your house?
[Commentary] The Federal Communications Commission is expected to vote on a measure which would exempt 5G infrastructure from environmental and historic reviews. And more than a dozen states have passed laws stripping their local governments of any meaningful say on issues relating to where to put the 5G boxes. A smarter approach would bar localities from turning the permitting process into a cash cow, but would give them input on where 5G boxes go and what they should look like. This kind of buy-in might seem burdensome.
Sen. Chuck Schumer mocked for Netflix and chill tweet on net neutrality (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 02/28/2018 - 06:35Facebook says Kremlin-linked ads ready for public view, but House hasn't released them (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 02/21/2018 - 06:30President Trump blocks release of Dem memo rebutting GOP claims of FBI surveillance abuse
President Donald Trump refused to authorize the release of a Democratic rebuttal to a Republican intelligence committee memo alleging that FBI and Justice Department officials abused their power to spy on former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. The White House said it could not release the Democrats' memo because the Justice Department "has identified portions...which it believes would create especially significant concerns for the national security and law enforcement interests." That explanation stands in stark contrast to his release of the GOP memo.
What if you want an iPhone app Apple rejects? Consider the case of one net neutrality app
Apple’s mobile-app marketplace has boundaries that Apple alone sets. A free network-diagnostic tool called Wehe is supposed to tell if your Internet provider is interfering with certain video apps' traffic, say on YouTube or Netflix, a question on the minds of people who argued for keeping the recently repealed net neutrality regulations designed to prevent providers from slowing or blocking legal content. Northeastern University computer-science professor David Choffnes had shipped a version of this net-neutrality monitoring tool for Android app months ago without incident.