Amazon's Removal of Nazi-Related Titles Concerns Booksellers

Over the past 18 months, Amazon has removed two books by David Duke, a former leader of the Ku Klux Klan, as well as several titles by George Lincoln Rockwell, the founder of the American Nazi Party.While few may lament the disappearance of these hate-filled books, the increasing number of banished titles has set off concern among some of the third-party booksellers who stock Amazon’s vast virtual shelves.

Senator Wants to 'Overhaul' FTC to Address Big Tech Companies

Republican Sen. Josh Hawley wants to overhaul the Federal Trade Commission in an effort to deal with the power wielded by big tech companies like Google and Facebook. He introduced a proposal that would dismantle the current structure of the agency, tasked with protecting U.S. consumers, and put it under the jurisdiction of the Department of Justice.

  • Read the article: CNET

Court Refuses Apple's Appeal in $503 Million VirnetX Patent Case

A U.S. appeals court denied a request by Apple Inc. that it reconsider a decision upholding a finding Apple iPhones infringed VirnetX Holding Corp patents relating to secure communications technology. In the previous ruling, a three-judge panel of the court voided a jury’s calculation that Apple should pay $503 million for infringing VirnetX patents.

U.S. Grand Jury Charges Four from Chinese Military with Hacking Equifax

A federal grand jury has charged four members of the Chinese People's Liberation Army with hacking Equifax and stealing personal data and trade secrets in one of the largest hacks on record. Attorney General William Barr said that the scale of the theft in 2017 was "staggering" and the suspects obtained information for nearly 150 million Americans.

  • Read the article: CNN

Netflix Says It Has Removed Nine Titles Following Government Demands

Netflix has taken down just nine pieces of content around the world in response to written government demands since it was founded 23 years ago, the company revealed for the first time. In its first-ever report on what it calls Environmental Social Governance, Netflix says it has already received one takedown request this year from the government of Singapore to remove "The Last Hangover," a Brazilian comedy.

$9 Billion at Stake as Facebook, IRS Head to Trial Over Tax Structure

Facebook Inc. and the Internal Revenue Service will square off in a U.S. Tax Court case that could cost the social-media giant more than $9 billion and shape the government’s ability to crack down on companies’ efforts to shift profits to low-tax countries. The trial caps a nine-year dispute over how Facebook structured its international operations.

Reports of Child Sex Abuse Content Online Increase by 50 Percent

The number of reported photos, videos and other materials related to online child sexual abuse grew by more than 50 percent last year, an indication that many of the world’s biggest technology platforms remain infested with the illegal content. Nearly 70 million images and videos were reported to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a federally designated clearinghouse for the imagery that works with law enforcement agencies.

Facebook, Twitter Refuse to Take Down Edited Video of Pelosi

Facebook and Twitter have rejected a request by Speaker Nancy Pelosi to remove a video posted by President Trump that was edited to make it appear as though she were ripping a copy of his State of the Union address as he honored a Tuskegee airman and other guests. The decision highlighted the tension between critics who want social media platforms to crack down on the spread of misinformation and others who argue that political speech should be given wide latitude, even if it’s deceptive or false.

Barr Says U.S. Should Take Control of Nokia or Ericsson to Fight Huawei

The United States and its allies should take controlling stakes in Nokia, Ericsson or both to battle Chinese telecoms giant Huawei's dominance of the 5G market, U.S. Attorney general Bill Barr said. "There are only two companies that can compete with Huawei right now: Nokia and Ericsson," Barr said in a speech on the Chinese economic threat.

EU Antitrust Officials Deepen Probe of Facebook's Software Interfaces

European Union antitrust investigators have sought internal documents related to Facebook Inc.’s alleged efforts to identify and squash potential rivals, deepening authorities’ preliminary probe into the social-media company, according to people familiar with the matter. The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, has in recent weeks ramped up its pursuit of documents related to allegations by rival companies and politicians that Facebook leveraged access to its users’ data to stifle competition, rewarding partners and cutting off rivals, those people said.

ITC Discloses Google Investigation After Patent Complaint from Sonos

The U.S. International Trade Commission disclosed an investigation into Google and its parent company Alphabet, after a complaint from Sonos that Google imported patent-infringing products. The investigation will cover “certain audio players and controllers, components thereof, and products containing the same,” according to a press release.

  • Read the article: CNBC

SEC Commissioner Suggests Allowing Initial Coin Offerings

Technology trading startups may be exempted from current securities law restrictions to raise capital using digital currencies or “tokens,” a top U.S. financial regulator proposed, but a transition plan would be required after three years. The plan must show whether those products can continue to be traded as securities, or if they change characteristics over time and no longer meet that definition, said Hester Peirce, a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commissioner, at an industry conference in Chicago.

Security Researchers Find Ways to Hack Into Home Networks Via Smart Lights

Security researchers from Check Point tested the Philips Hue models of popular smart lights brand, and says it successfully hacked into a home's computer network. It went to Philips to show its findings and says Philips has now fixed the issue, but Yaniv Balmas, Head of Cyber Research at Check Point Research, says consumers of off-brand lights may not be as lucky.

Facebook Issues Security Advisory for Flaw in WhatsApp Desktop

Facebook has issued a security advisory for a flaw in WhatsApp Desktop that could allow an attacker to use cross-site scripting attacks and read the files on MacOS or Windows PCs by using a specially crafted text message. The attacker could retrieve the contents of files on the computer on the other end of a WhatsApp text message and potentially do other illicit things.

Justice Department Expands Probe of Google's Advertising Tools

The Justice Department has reached out to more than a dozen companies in its antitrust probe of Google, including publishers, advertising technology firms and advertising agencies, as the company’s online ad tools become a major focus of the investigation, according to people familiar with the matter. In recent months, the department has been posing increasingly detailed questions — to Google’s rivals and executives inside the company itself — about how Google’s third-party advertising business interacts with publishers and advertisers, the people say.

Federal Reserve Considers Benefits of Issuing Its Own Digital Currency

The Federal Reserve is looking at a broad range of issues around regulations and protections for digital payments and currencies, including the costs and potential benefits of issuing its own digital currency, Governor Lael Brainard said. “By transforming payments, digitalization has the potential to deliver greater value and convenience at lower cost,” Brainard said in remarks prepared for delivery at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Apple Update Patches Bug That Could Allow Reading Encrypted Emails

Apple released macOS Catalina 10.15.3 last week, and the update apparently patched a bug that could let you read some text from encrypted emails as if they were unencrypted, according to IT specialist Bob Gendler. A longtime Mac fan, Gendler originally found the bug in July and privately disclosed it to Apple months before publicly writing about it last November, only after the company failed to fix the issue.