NSA Warns Chinese Government Hackers Targeting National Defense

The National Security Agency warned that Chinese government hackers were taking aim at U.S. computer networks involved in national defense, characterizing the threat posed by Beijing as a critical priority in need of urgent attention. The vulnerabilities described in NSA’s new alert were already publicly known, but the nation’s premier electronic spy agency for the first time linked them to Chinese state-sponsored hacking activity.

Justice Department Files Antitrust Lawsuit Against Google

The Justice Department accused Google of maintaining an illegal monopoly over search and search advertising in a lawsuit, the government’s most significant legal challenge to a tech company’s market power in a generation. In its suit, filed in a federal court in Washington, D.C., the agency accused Google, a unit of Alphabet, of illegally maintaining its monopoly over search through several exclusive business contracts and agreements that lock out competition.

U.S. Charges Six Russian Military Officers in Hacking Scheme

Six Russian military officers have been charged in what the Justice Department says was a hacking scheme to attack several major foreign powers, former Soviet republics and subvert investigations into nefarious activities by the Kremlin. The alleged cyberattackers hacked into software using destructive malware to black out thousands of computers and cause nearly $1 billion in losses, and were intended to support Russian government efforts to undermine, retaliate against, or otherwise destabilize worldwide computer networks, the Justice Department said.

  • Read the article: CNN

Japan to Join US, EU in Antitrust Cases Against Large Tech Companies

Japan will join forces with the United States and Europe to take on any market abuses by the four Big Tech companies, the new head of its antitrust watchdog said, a sign Tokyo will join global efforts to regulate digital platform operators. Kazuyuki Furuya, chairman of Japan's Fair Trade Commission (FTC), also said Tokyo could open a probe into any merger or business tie-up involving fitness tracker maker Fitbit if the size of such deals are big enough.

Pakistan Reverses Decision to Ban TikTok After Getting Assurances

Just 10 days after introducing a ban on TikTok, the Pakistani authorities said that they were reversing the decision after receiving assurance from the Chinese-owned social media platform that it would moderate content according to local laws. “TikTok is being unlocked after assurance from management that they will block all accounts repeatedly involved in spreading obscenity and immorality,” the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority, the national regulator, said in a statement.

TikTok Broadens Its Ban Against QAnon Conspiracy Theory

TikTok is toughening its stance against the QAnon conspiracy theory, expanding its ban to all content or accounts that promote videos advancing baseless ideas from the far-right online movement. The action hardens the video-sharing app's previous enforcement against QAnon that targeted specific hashtags on the app that QAnon supporters have used to spread unfounded theories.

  • Read the article: NPR

Trickbot Botnet Still Operating Despite Microsoft's Court Order

Cyber security researchers questioned the effectiveness of Microsoft’s effort to disrupt a botnet it feared could snarl state and local computer systems to sow distrust of the upcoming presidential election. The software giant said that a court order it won from a federal judge in the Eastern District of Virginia to seize control of U.S.-based servers controlling the Trickbot botnet, a network of computers secretly infected by malware that can be controlled remotely.

FCC Effort on Section 230 Threatens Protections for Internet Companies

A new effort by the Federal Communications Commission to rethink the legal shield that applies to social media sites drew widespread rebukes, as critics faulted the agency for reversing its past positions in the face of mounting public pressure from the White House. The agency’s move threatens to strike at the heart of a critical federal law known as Section 230, which for decades has spared tech giants from being held accountable for the ways they police their platforms.

Google Says China-Backed Hackers Impersonating McAfee Antivirus

Google said in a new blog post that hackers linked to the Chinese government have been impersonating antivirus software McAfee to try to infect victims’ machines with malware. And, Google says, the hackers appear to be the same group that unsuccessfully targeted the presidential campaign of former Vice President Joe Biden with a phishing attack earlier this year.

Judge Questions Whether Public Can Rely on Trump's Tweets

A federal judge rebuked the Justice Department and the White House Counsel’s Office for dismissing without explanation President Trump’s “emphatic and unambiguous” tweets ordering the declassification of all documents in the government’s probe of Russia’s interference in the 2016 U.S. election. “I have fully authorized the total Declassification of any & all documents pertaining to the single greatest political CRIME in American History, the Russia Hoax,” the president tweeted Oct. 6. “Likewise, the Hillary Clinton Email Scandal. No redactions!”

Digital Ad Auction Tactics Violate European Union Privacy Law, Memo Says

Tactics Google and other large online-ad players use in digital ad auctions violate European Union privacy law, investigators for Belgium’s privacy regulator wrote in an internal report, a preliminary finding with implications across the continent. European privacy regulators are homing in on the electronic auctions that happen in milliseconds to determine which ads show up when you load a webpage.

Twitter Reverses Ban on Tweets About Controversial Hunter Biden Article

With just a few weeks to go before the Nov. 3 vote, the social media companies are continuing to shift their policies and, in some cases, are entirely reversing what they will and won’t allow on their sites. Twitter underlined just how fluid its policies were when it began letting users share links to an unsubstantiated New York Post article about Hunter Biden that it had previously blocked from its service.

FCC Chairman to Unveil Rules to Clarify Section 230 Internet Protection

Federal Communications Commission chairman Ajit Pai said the agency will move forward to set new rules to clarify the meaning of a key legal protection for social media companies. U.S. President Donald Trump in May directed the U.S. Commerce Department to file a petition with the FCC seeking to curb legal protections for social media companies over a provision known as “Section 230.”

YouTube Crackdown Targets QAnon for Spreading Conspiracy Theories

YouTube, the video service of Google parent Alphabet Inc, said it was banning content that targets an individual or a group using conspiracy theories such as QAnon or pizzagate that have “been used to justify real-world violence.” The company claims in a blog post it would begin enforcing these expanded hate and harassment policies immediately and would “ramp up” in the weeks to come.

State Attorneys General Plan to Pursue Google Even if U.S. Files Suit

A group of powerful Democratic and Republican state attorneys general plan to forge ahead with their own antitrust investigation into Google even after the Department of Justice files its imminent lawsuit against the search-and-advertising giant. With a federal lawsuit expected in a matter of days, states including Colorado, Iowa, Nebraska and New York are preparing to issue a joint public statement indicating they are still scrutinizing a wide array of Google’s business practices and may instead opt to join any federal case later, according to four people familiar with their thinking, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a law-enforcement matter.

Republicans Criticize Social Media Services for Limitations

Simmering discontent among Republicans over the power that Facebook and Twitter wield over public discourse erupted into open acrimony. Republicans slammed the companies and baited them a day after the sites limited or blocked the distribution of an unsubstantiated New York Post article about Hunter Biden, the son of the Democratic presidential nominee, Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Twitter Briefly Restricts Trump's Re-Election Campaign Account

U.S. President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign’s Twitter account was briefly restricted from tweeting, spurring an outcry from Republican lawmakers who accused social media companies of acting like “speech police” and vowing to hold Twitter responsible. Twitter temporarily blocked the @TeamTrump account from sending tweets after it posted a video about Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s son that it said violated its rules.