Sonos Files Another Patent Lawsuit Against Google Over Wireless Audio

Sonos has filed another patent lawsuit against Google, alleging that the search giant is infringing five wireless audio patents across the entire line of Nest and Chromecast products. Sonos filed its first patent lawsuits against Google in January in California federal court and with the International Trade Commission; the federal case has been put on hold while the ITC reaches a decision on whether to block Google’s allegedly infringing products from market.

Biden Campaign Calls Facebook 'Foremost Propagator of Disinformation'

Joe Biden is putting pressure on Facebook to take down President Trump’s posts containing voting misinformation as the two prepare to face each other in the first presidential debate. In a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the Biden campaign accused the social media giant of regressing in its mission to aggressively fight misinformation about the 2020 election by not barring posts from the president that misrepresent the voting process.

Court Dismisses Suit That Google Spied on Students in Violation of COPPA

A federal court dismissed a New Mexico lawsuit alleging that Alphabet Inc.’s Google knowingly spied on students and their families through its suite of cloud-based products for schools. U.S. District Judge Nancy D. Freudenthal ruled that the internet company didn’t violate the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA, in relying on schools to review or limit what data its education platform collects and uses on behalf of students’ parents.

Justice Department Wants State Attorneys General to Join Google Suit

The U.S. Justice Department is expected to sue Alphabet's Google as soon as next week, and is currently urging state attorneys general to sign onto the lawsuit, according to three sources familiar with the process. The lawsuit is expected to accuse Google, builder of the world’s dominant search engine, of looking to disadvantage rivals such as Microsoft’s Bing by depriving them of the data about users and user preferences that they need to improve and to advertise to people.

Hacker Publishes Private Student Info After School District Refuses Ransomware

A hacker published documents containing Social Security numbers, student grades and other private information stolen from a large public-school district in Las Vegas after officials refused a ransom demanded in return for unlocking district computer servers. The illegal release of sensitive information from the Clark County School District in Las Vegas, with about 320,000 students, demonstrates an escalation in tactics for hackers who have taken advantage of schools heavily reliant on online learning and technology to run operations during the coronavirus pandemic.

Hospital Chain Hit by One of Largest Medical Cyberattacks in United States

A major hospital chain has been hit by what appears to be one of the largest medical cyberattacks in United States history. Computer systems for Universal Health Services, which has more than 400 locations, primarily in the U.S., began to fail over the weekend, and some hospitals have had to resort to filing patient information with pen and paper, according to multiple people familiar with the situation.

  • Read the article: CNBC

Judge Hears Arguments from Apple, Epic Over App Store Ban on Fortnite

Apple and Epic Games, the maker of Fortnite, sparred in federal court over whether to reinstate the popular game in Apple’s App Store, raising antitrust arguments that may reshape a key part of the internet economy and the way people use smartphones. In a three-hour videoconference hearing in the Northern District of California, Epic laid out its allegations that Apple had abused its power.

Philippine President Attacks Facebook for Taking Down Fake Accounts

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said that Facebook could not stop him from promoting the objectives of his government, telling the social media giant that they should talk about its purpose in his country. His remarks follow Facebook’s move on Sept. 22 to dismantle a network of fake accounts that originated in China and the Philippines, including some that criticised the Communist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the New People’s Army (NPA).

Judge Grants Temporary Ban on Trump's Order Against TikTok

A federal judge granted a preliminary injunction against a Trump administration order to ban the viral video app TikTok from U.S. app stores, in a reprieve for the Chinese-owned service. The injunction halts only the element of the ban scheduled to take effect Sunday at midnight, which would have forced TikTok off app stores run by companies like Apple and Google.

Justice Department Asks Judge for Right to Ban WeChat Downloads

The Justice Department is asking a federal judge in San Francisco to allow the government to immediately bar downloads of WeChat in the US, saying the Chinese-owned messaging is a threat to national security. The request from the DOJ comes after U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler on Sunday temporarily blocked a Trump administration order requiring Apple and Google to remove WeChat from their app stores.

  • Read the article: CNET

Amazon Web Portal for Law Enforcement Provides Customer Data to Anyone

Anyone can access portions of a web portal, used by law enforcement to request customer data from Amazon, even though the portal is supposed to require a verified email address and password. Amazon’s law enforcement request portal allows police and federal agents to submit formal requests for customer data along with a legal order, like a subpoena, a search warrant, or a court order.

Google to Bar Election-Related Advertising After Polls Close

Google will bar election-related advertising after all polls close on Nov. 3, a spokesperson for the company confirmed. The move was prompted by the possibility that final election results might be delayed this year because of the high volume of mail-in voting driven by the coronavirus pandemic. The ban will be temporary but last at least one week.

Trump Administration Imposes New Restrictions on Tech Exports to China

The Trump administration has issued new restrictions on U.S. technology exports to China’s biggest semiconductor manufacturer, warning that the exports could benefit the Chinese military. The Commerce Department notified U.S. companies that they will now need a license to export certain technology to Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp., or SMIC, according to a copy of the agency’s letter reviewed by The Washington Post.

Civil Rights Activists Launch Independent Facebook Oversight Board

Warning of an urgent threat to democracy, civil rights activists say they've formed an independent Facebook oversight board to scrutinize the role the social media giant is playing in the 2020 election. The “Real Facebook Oversight Board” is an initiative from Citizens, a new nonprofit created to hold big tech accountable. It has start-up funding from Luminate which is backed by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar's foundation The Omidyar Group.

Putin Proposes 'Reboot' in Cybersecurity Relationship with U.S.

President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia on proposed a truce with the United States in cyberspace, without acknowledging that his country has repeatedly used cybertechniques to attack elections from the Ukraine to the United States, stolen emails from the Defense Department to the White House, and developed some of the world’s most sophisticated disinformation efforts. Mr. Putin issued an unusual written statement outlining a four-point plan for what he called a “reboot” in the relationship between the United States and Russia in the field of information security.

Facebook Shuts Down Two Russian Disinformation Networks

Facebook shut down two Russian disinformation networks operated by the nation’s intelligence services and a third by people affiliated with a notorious troll farm that interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, the company announced. The networks focused their efforts in numerous nations in Europe and Asia, with relatively little reach among U.S. audiences, Facebook concluded.

Senate Committee Planning Subpoenas for Tech CEOs in Section 230 Hearing

The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee chaired by Republican Senator Roger Wicker will issue subpoenas to the chief executives of Twitter Inc., Alphabet Inc's Google and Facebook Inc. if they do not agree to testify at a hearing on Oct. 1. The hearing will discuss a legal immunity known as Section 230 that technology companies have when it comes to liability over content posted by users.

Four Former eBay Employees to Plead Guilty in Cyberstalking Case

Four former eBay Inc. employees have agreed to plead guilty to their roles in a campaign of intimidation that included sending live spiders and cockroaches to the home of a Massachusetts couple who ran an online newsletter critical of the auction site, federal prosecutors said. They are among seven former eBay employees charged in the case, in which the Massachusetts couple had other disturbing items sent to their home, including a funeral wreath and a bloody pig Halloween mask.

Large Companies Create 'Coalition for App Fairness' to Fight Apple

Thirteen companies have banded together to try to break Apple’s control over its App Store, a move that formalizes the growing opposition the tech giant is facing from developers on its platform who increasingly have been standing up to its power. Fortnite parent Epic Games, online dating group Match Group, Spotify and others, all of whom have butted heads with Apple in the past, formed the Coalition for App Fairness.