Apple, Google Unveil Tools to Let Smartphone Owners Track Coronavirus

Apple and Google unveiled an ambitious effort to help combat the novel coronavirus, introducing new tools that could soon allow owners of smartphones to know if they have crossed paths with someone infected with the disease. The changes the two companies announced targeting iPhone and Android devices could inject valuable new technological support into contact tracing, a strategy public health officials say is essential to allowing people to return to work and normal life while containing the spread of the pandemic.

Bill Would Add $2 Billion for Telehealth Services Amid Coronavirus Pandemic

Reps. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) and Don Young (R-Alaska) introduced legislation to boost telehealth services amid the coronavirus pandemic. The Healthcare Broadband Expansion During COVID-19 Act would infuse $2 billion into the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rural health care program to expand remote treatment options and ensure high quality internet connection at health care facilities.

Facebook Files Suit Over Deceptive Ads for Investing, Coronavirus

Facebook Inc. sued the founder of a software company for running deceptive advertisements on its social-media platforms, including links to investment scams and bogus information about the coronavirus pandemic. Basant Gajjar’s “LeadCloak” software, designed to circumvent automated review systems in Facebook and Instagram, baits users into clicking on links that are unrelated to the ad, according to the lawsuit filed in California.

Trump Administration Seeks to Revoke Licenses Used by China Telecom

Trump administration officials sought to revoke federal licenses used by China Telecom Corp. to do business in the U.S. as part of a broader campaign to curb global Chinese technology interests on national security grounds. A collection of federal agencies led by the U.S. Department of Justice and including the departments of Defense and Homeland Security asked the Federal Communications Commission to permanently revoke licenses the Chinese internet service provider’s U.S. subsidiary has used since 2007 to act as a “common carrier” connecting domestic and overseas networks.

Appeals Court Revives Class-Action Privacy Suit Against Facebook

A federal appeals court revived nationwide litigation accusing Facebook Inc. of violating users’ privacy rights by tracking their internet activity even after they logged out of the social media website. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said Facebook users could pursue several claims under federal and California privacy and wiretapping laws.

German Foreign Ministry Limits Use of Zoom, Citing Security Concerns

The German foreign ministry has restricted use of the video conferencing service Zoom to fixed-connection desktop computers because of “critical” security and data protection weaknesses, the newspaper Handelsblatt reported. A memo to employees cited by the paper said that, “based on media reports and our own findings, we have concluded that Zoom’s software has critical weaknesses and serious security and data protection problems.”

Senator Questions White House Plans for Coronavirus Surveillance System

Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) pressed the White House on reports that it is in talks to create a national coronavirus surveillance system. "The Trump administration has not given me or the American people any confidence that it is capable of creating or maintaining a massive health data network in a manner that doesn’t undermine our fundamental right to privacy," the Massachusetts Democrat said in a statement.

U.S., U.K. Cybersecurity Officials Warn of Coronavirus-Related Hackers

American and British cybersecurity officials are warning that state-backed hackers and online criminals are taking advantage of the coronavirus outbreak to further their operations, echoing concerns from digital safety experts. A joint advisory published by the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency and Britain’s National Cyber Security Centre said that while the overall volume of malicious activity does not appear to have changed, hackers of all varieties were leveraging anxiety around the disease outbreak to push people into clicking links and downloading attachments.

Microsoft Buys 'corp.com' Domain Name to Protect Internal Networks

Security researcher Brian Krebs reported that Microsoft has purchased the dangerous domain corp.com to keep it out of the hands of the bad guys. The reason the domain has become problematic is it could provide the owner with passwords, email and other sensitive data from Windows PCs in companies where admins used a generic domain name (corp.com) to represent the idea of any domain when setting up Active Directory.

DHS Cybersecurity Agency Says Zoom Responsive to Security Concerns

Video conferencing company Zoom has been responsive to concerns over its software, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said in a memo recently distributed to top government cybersecurity officials and seen by Reuters. The memo — drafted by DHS’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program, which screens software used by government bodies — sounded a positive note about the teleworking solution, which has been beset by security worries since the coronavirus outbreak drew in a flood of new stay-at-home users.

China Filed Most International Patent Applications in 2019, WIPO Says

China was the biggest source of applications for international patents in the world last year, pushing the United States out of the top spot it has held since the global system was set up more than 40 years ago, the U.N. patent agency said. The World Intellectual Property Organization, which oversees a system for countries to share recognition of patents, said 58,990 applications were filed from China last year, beating out the United States which filed 57,840.

Coronavirus Prompts Increase in Misleading Domain Names

Scammers are focusing more attention on people looking to stream content from Netflix during what has quickly become the stay-at-home era. Researchers at the cybersecurity security firm Check Point recently released a study noting a substantial rise in the number of cyberattacks performed by websites posing as the streaming giant in the wake of the ongoing coronavirus crisis.

YouTube to Reduce Spread of Videos Linking Coronavirus to 5G Technology

YouTube will take steps to reduce the spread of videos falsely tying the spread of the novel coronavirus to fifth-generation wireless technologies (5G), a conspiracy theory that has gained traction in recent weeks in some parts of the internet. An official for the video streaming giant told The Hill that it has started reducing how often such videos, or what they define as "borderline content," show up in user recommendations.

Facebook to Survey Users About Coronavirus to Create 'Heat Maps'

Facebook Inc. said it would start surveying some U.S. users about their health as part of a Carnegie Mellon University research project aimed at generating “heat maps” of self-reported coronavirus infections. The social media giant will display a link at the top of users’ News Feeds directing them to the survey, which the researchers say will help them predict where medical resources are needed.

Thousands of Recorded Zoom Videos Left Exposed Online

Thousands of personal Zoom videos have been left viewable on the open Web, highlighting the privacy risks to millions of Americans as they shift many of their personal interactions to video calls in an age of social distancing. Videos viewed by The Washington Post included one-on-one therapy sessions; a training orientation for workers doing telehealth calls that included people’s names and phone numbers; small-business meetings that included private company financial statements; and elementary school classes, in which children’s faces, voices and personal details were exposed.

Twitter Removes 20,000 Fake Accounts Tied to Governments Including Saudi Arabia

Twitter removed 20,000 fake accounts tied to the governments of several countries, including Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Serbia, for violating company policy. Government-linked accounts of Honduras and Indonesia were also removed after Twitter determined the posts from all five governments were an "attempt to undermine the public conversation," according to The Guardian.