Trump Administration's Chinese Restrictions Would Cover Chip Equipment

The Trump administration is weighing new trade restrictions on China that would limit the use of American chip-making equipment, as it seeks to cut off Chinese access to key semiconductor technology, according to people familiar with the plan. The Commerce Department is drafting changes to the so-called foreign direct product rule, which restricts foreign companies’ use of U.S. technology for military or national-security products.

EU Industry Commissioner Says Facebook Must Adapt to Its Standards

EU industry commissioner Thierry Breton said it was for Facebook to adapt to Europe’s standards, not the other way round, as he criticized the U.S. social media giant’s proposed internet rules as insufficient. The blunt comments came after a short meeting with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg and two days before Breton is due to present the first of a raft of rules to rein in U.S. tech giants and state-aided Chinese companies.

Prosecutors to Drop Trade Secret Theft Charges Against Ex-FitBit Workers

Prosecutors in Northern California plan to drop charges against several former FitBit employees accused of receiving stolen trade secrets from their former employer, according to a person familiar with the matter, raising new questions about how fiercely law enforcement will continue to prosecute tech industry employees for alleged theft of trade secrets. Prosecutors charged six former Jawbone employees nearly two years ago for allegedly absconding with confidential documents when they left the company for rival Fitbit.

Facebook Allows Political Candidates to Run Branded Content

Facebook Inc. said it was allowing U.S.-based political candidates to run branded content on its social networking platforms, but the content would not be cataloged in its advertising library. Political campaigns and groups can now use the social media company’s branded content tool, which allows influencers to more clearly tag in an official sub-header that the post is a paid partnership.

Senator Proposes 'Data Protection Agency' for Internet Privacy

Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) wants to create an entirely new federal agency dedicated to protecting online privacy, she said in a proposal. In her first major policy proposal since dropping out of the 2020 presidential race, Gillibrand is calling for the creation of a "Data Protection Agency" tasked with creating new rules around how tech companies are allowed to collect and use personal information about their users.

U.S. Charges Huawei with Trying to Steal Intellectual Property

U.S. federal prosecutors have charged Chinese tech giant Huawei with racketeering and conspiracy to steal trade secrets, in an escalation of a case that began last year. The new charges accuse Huawei and its subsidiaries of a decades-long effort to steal intellectual property from U.S. tech companies, including by offering Huawei employees bonuses for obtaining confidential information, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York said.

Judge Halts Microsoft's Work on Pentagon Contract Against Amazon Challenge

A federal judge in Washington ordered Microsoft to halt all work on a $10 billion cloud-computing contract for the Pentagon, in a victory for Amazon, which had challenged the awarding of the contract. In a sealed opinion, the judge, Patricia E. Campbell-Smith of the Court of Federal Claims, ordered work to stop on the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure project, known as JEDI, until Amazon’s legal challenge was resolved.

Senate Hearing on DMCA Expected to Lead to New Copyright Bill

By the end of the year, Senator Thom Tillis (R-NC) — who chairs the Senate’s intellectual property subcommittee — plans to draft changes to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) — one of the most influential and controversial laws governing the internet. He and co-chair Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) kicked off the process with an introductory hearing, speaking to eight legal experts and former congressional staffers.

Lawsuit Accuses Juul of Advertising E-Cigarettes on Children's Websites

Juul, one of the country's leading e-cigarette companies, is accused of illegally targeting young people online in advertising campaigns that featured youthful looking models holding Juul devices, the Massachusetts Attorney General's Office alleges in a lawsuit. The lawsuit also alleges that Juul bought advertising space on websites such as Nickelodeon, Nick Jr. and The Cartoon Network, whose primary audiences are underage consumers, some of whom attend elementary school.

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Amount of Malware on Macs Said to Outpace PCs for First Time

According to cybersecurity software company Malwarebytes’ latest State of Malware report, the amount of malware on Macs is outpacing PCs for the first time ever, and your complacency could be your worst enemy. “People need to understand that they’re not safe just because they’re using a Mac,” Thomas Reed, Malwarebytes’ director of Mac and mobile and contributor to the report, told Recode.

UK Agency Gains Power to Fine Companies for 'Internet Harms'

The United Kingdom's Office of Communications will be empowered to levy fines against social media companies that do not take steps to remove harmful content from their platforms. An announcement from the Digital and Home secretaries stated that the agency will be granted the power to "hold companies to account if they do not tackle internet harms such as child sexual exploitation and abuse and terrorism."

FBI's Internet Crime Report Estimates Losses at More Than $3.5 Billion

The FBI received 467,361 Internet and cyber-crime complaints in 2019, which the agency estimates have caused losses of more than $3.5 billion, the bureau wrote in its yearly Internet crime report. The FBI said that almost half of the reported losses -- an estimated $1.77 billion -- came from reports of BEC (Business Email Compromise), also known as EAC (Email Account Compromise) crimes.

Facebook Removes Foreign Accounts Suspected of Manipulating Users

Facebook said it had taken action against malicious actors in Russia, Iran and Myanmar that had deployed fake accounts and other efforts to manipulate social media users, illustrating anew its vast, global challenge to police the platform for an ever-widening array of disinformation. A small network of accounts with ties in Iran targeted U.S. users, particularly on religious and geopolitical issues, Facebook said in a blog post, while an operation with links to the Russian military focused its efforts on Ukraine and other neighboring countries.

FTC Requires Top Five Tech Companies to Provide Info on Past Mergers

U.S. regulators said they would probe past mergers by Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Microsoft, seeking to study the ways tech giants gobbled up their rivals — and if their acquisitions may have skirted federal antitrust laws. The new effort by the Federal Trade Commission will require the five companies to provide information about the smaller players they’ve purchased over the past 10 years, including documents for deals that may not have been large enough to warrant deep, closer inspection by government watchdogs at the time.