Five Months After Failure, Senators Reintroduce Kids Online Safety Act

The Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA), a bill imposing sweeping obligations on tech platforms to protect children that use them, has been revived in the Senate after a failed sprint to become law late last year. The bill’s lead sponsors, Sens. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), reintroduced the bill roughly five months after it died in the House of Representatives after a 90+ vote to pass it in the Senate.

Report Says X Continues to Accept Payments from Terrorist Organizations

More than a year after researchers first warned X that it was potentially violating U.S. sanctions by accepting payments for subscription accounts from terrorist organizations and other groups barred from doing business in the country, Elon Musk’s social media platform continues to accept such payments, according to a new report. The report, by the Tech Transparency Project, a nonprofit focused on accountability for large technology companies, said X had continued to take payments from accounts that appeared to be affiliated with Hezbollah leaders, Houthi officials, and militia leaders in Syria and Iraq.

Bipartisan Bill Seeks to Limit Smuggling of AI Chips to China

A bipartisan group of eight U.S. lawmakers introduced a bill that would require makers of artificial intelligence chips such as Nvidia to include technology to verify the location of their chips before exporting them. The Chip Security Act introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives aims to address reports of U.S. export-controlled AI chips being smuggled into China.

EU Regulators Accuse TikTok of Breaching Digital Content Rules

European Union regulators accused TikTok of breaching digital content rules because it’s not being transparent enough about ads shown to users of the video sharing app. TikTok’s ad repository isn’t up to the standards required by the bloc’s Digital Services Act, known as the DSA, the 27-nation EU’s executive Commission said in preliminary findings from its investigation.

Italian Price Comparison Company Sues Google for $3.33 Billion

Italy’s price comparison site operator Moltiply Group is suing Alphabet’s Google for 2.97 billion euros ($3.33 billion) in damages over what it called anti-competitive behavior. The lawsuit, which leans on a key European Commission ruling, alleges that the tech giant abused its market dominance to suppress competition from Trovaprezzi.it, a comparison platform operated by Moltiply subsidiary 7Pixel.

Jury Orders NSO Group to Pay $167 Million for WhatsApp Hacking

A federal jury ordered the best-known maker of government spyware to pay a record-setting $167 million for hacking more than 1,000 people through WhatsApp messages in a stunning cap to six years of litigation. U.S. District Judge Phyllis J. Hamilton granted WhatsApp’s motion for summary judgment against Israel-based NSO Group in December, finding that it had violated the U.S. Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and a similar California law with its spying program known as Pegasus.

In Loss for Crypto Industry, Senate Fails to Approve GENIUS Act

Legislation to create a framework for payment stablecoins failed to clear a key hurdle on the Senate floor, after several Democrats voted against moving forward with consideration of the bill. Senators voted 48-49 to end debate on a motion to proceed on the GENIUS Act, short of the 60 votes required to move the measure further along the road to final passage.

OpenAI's CEO Reverses Course, Calls AI Regulation 'Disastrous'

Sam Altman, CEO of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, warned at a Senate hearing that requiring government approval to release powerful artificial intelligence software would be “disastrous” for the United States’ lead in the technology. It was a striking reversal after his comments at a Senate hearing two years ago, when he listed creating a new agency to license the technology as his “number one” recommendation for making sure AI was safe.

Hackers Attack Darkweb Site Used by Extortion Group Lockbit

The ransom-seeking cybercriminals behind the extortion group Lockbit appear to have suffered a breach of their own, according to a rogue post to one of the group's websites and security analysts who follow the gang. One of Lockbit's darkweb sites was replaced with a message saying, "Don't do crime CRIME IS BAD xoxo from Prague" and a link to an apparent cache of leaked data.

Version of Signal Used by Trump's Former NSA Adviser Reportedly Hacked

The unofficial version of Signal used by Donald Trump's former National Security Adviser Mike Waltz has been hacked, tech site 404 Media said, raising further concern over the security of the communications exchanged at the highest levels of the U.S. government. 404 Media said the hacker exploited a vulnerability in TeleMessage, a Signal-like application which a Reuters photograph appeared to show Waltz using at a cabinet meeting.

Irish Data Protection Commission Fines TikTok $600 Million

Ireland’s data-privacy watchdog fined TikTok about $600 million for failing to guarantee that user data sent to China was protected from government surveillance, a blow to the company’s efforts to convince Western countries that it is safe to use. The Irish Data Protection Commission said that TikTok had failed to demonstrate that any user data it sends to China would be protected from government access under Chinese laws covering things like espionage and cybersecurity.

Microsoft's President Promises 'Continuity of Access' in Europe

Microsoft’s top legal officer said the company would take the U.S. government to court if necessary to protect European customers’ access to its services, as it tries to reassure Europe that Donald Trump will not be able to cut off critical technology. Brad Smith, Microsoft’s president, commented come as the region grapples with uncertainty over the U.S. president’s long-term commitment to the transatlantic security alliance — and whether he could block access to American technology as leverage in wider negotiations with the bloc.

Conservative Activist Sues Meta for Linking Him to Capitol Riot

Robby Starbuck, the conservative activist, filed a defamation lawsuit against Meta, alleging its artificial intelligence tool smeared him by falsely asserting he participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol. Starbuck says he discovered the problem last summer when he was waging an online campaign to get Harley-Davidson to change its diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, policies.

France Accuses Russia of Cyber Attacks on Ministries, Defense Firms

France's foreign ministry explicitly accused Russia's GRU military intelligence agency of mounting cyber attacks on a dozen entities including ministries, defense firms and think tanks since 2021 in an attempt to destabilize France. The accusations, levelled at GRU unit APT28, which officials said was based in Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia, are not the first by a Western power, but it is the first time Paris has blamed the Russian state on the basis of its own intelligence.