Britain's Competition Regulator Considers Google Competition Probe

Britain’s competition regulator said it was assessing whether a complaint about Google related to digital advertising warranted a formal competition law investigation. The complaint from Marketers for an Open Web (MOW), a coalition of technology and publishing companies, said it wanted the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) to delay the launch of Google’s Privacy Sandbox technology.

GoDaddy Employees Fall for Cryptocurrency Social Engineering Scam

Fraudsters redirected email and web traffic destined for several cryptocurrency trading platforms, facilitated by scams targeting employees at GoDaddy, the world’s largest domain name registrar, KrebsOnSecurity has learned. The incident is the latest incursion at GoDaddy that relied on tricking employees into transferring ownership and/or control over targeted domains to fraudsters.

Advocacy Group Calls Parler 'Dangerous for Minors' Because It Lacks Moderation

The advocacy group Parents Together Action issued a public warning about the alternative social media app Parler, arguing it doesn’t moderate content, which is “dangerous for minors." “Parents should know that due to Parler’s dangerous combination of an extremist user base and almost non-existent moderation of content, hate speech, incitements to violence and disinformation about the election results are pervasive on the platform,” the group wrote.

Twitter to Transfer White House Account to Biden on Inauguration Day

The presidential @POTUS Twitter handle will automatically transfer to President-elect Joe Biden the moment he’s sworn in at noon on Inauguration Day — whether or not President Donald Trump has conceded, the company confirmed to Politico. Same goes for @whitehouse, @VP, @FLOTUS, and a handful other official accounts associated with the presidency.

Biden to Seek Massive Increase in Federal Broadband Spending

President-elect Joe Biden and top congressional Democrats are laying the groundwork to seek a massive increase in federal broadband spending next year, hoping they can secure billions of dollars in new government aid to improve Internet access and affordability — and help people stay online during the pandemic. Party leaders are mulling a wide array of proposals that would extend the availability of broadband in hard-to-reach rural areas, raise Internet speeds for American households, assist families who are struggling to pay their Internet bills and provide more funding to schools for computers and other equipment.

Biden's Top Technology Adviser Could Lead Push for Federal Privacy Law

President-elect Joe Biden’s top technology adviser helped craft California’s landmark online privacy law and recently condemned a controversial federal statute that protects internet companies from liability, indicators of how the Biden administration may come down on two key tech policy issues. Bruce Reed, a former Biden chief of staff who is expected to take a major role in the new administration, helped negotiate with the tech industry and legislators on behalf of backers of a ballot initiative that led to the 2018 California Consumer Privacy Act.

Biden's Transition Operation Lacks Government Cybersecurity Support

The federal government, which has some of the most sophisticated antihacking technologies in the world, is offering limited assistance to President-elect Joe Biden’s transition operation in securing its email and other communications, despite concerns that the team is likely a top espionage target for Russia, China, and other adversaries, according to people familiar with the transition. The lack of government cybersecurity support is among the obstacles the Biden transition team has faced as a result of the Trump administration’s refusal to acknowledge Mr. Biden’s election victory and make available the resources of the federal government ahead of his inauguration in two months.

Apple Criticizes Facebook in Defending Delay of Privacy Feature

Apple Inc. slammed Facebook Inc. and other Internet giants for their ad targeting practices in response to a letter questioning a decision by the iPhone maker to delay a new privacy feature. The Cupertino, California-based technology company criticized Facebook’s approach to advertising and user tracking, according to a written reply sent to several human rights and privacy organizations, including the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Human Rights Watch.

FTC, States In Final Stages of Antitrust Complaints Against Facebook

The Federal Trade Commission and a bipartisan group of dozens of state attorneys general are in the final stages of filing one or more major antitrust complaints against Facebook Inc. in early December, according to four sources familiar with the situation. FTC staff undertaking a probe of the company has recommended to commissioners that they sue the social media company in federal court, which would allow the group of states, led by New York, to join the lawsuit, according to one source.

CEO of Conservative App Parler Defends Right to 'Say Crazy Things'

The CEO of conservative-boosted social media app Parler responded to criticism that the platform could spread extreme opinions and misinformation, saying that “people say crazy things all the time” and “it's not against the law to have those opinions.” While appearing on Fox News’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight,” John Matze responded to questions from Carlson on why “corporate media is so afraid of what you’re doing.”

After Cybersecurity Director's Firing, Twitter Labels Trump's Tweet 'Disputed'

Twitter appended a label to fact-check President Donald Trump’s tweet about his firing of the nation’s top election security official Chris Krebs. Krebs’ recent statement that the Nov. 3 election “the most secure in American history” was “highly inaccurate,” the president wrote. “This claim about election fraud is disputed,” the label read.

Apple to Pay $113 Million Settlement for Slowing Down Older iPhones

Apple will pay $113 million to settle an investigation by nearly three dozen states into the tech giant’s past practice of slowing customers’ old iPhones in an attempt to preserve their batteries. The company’s much maligned throttling efforts drew nationwide scorn when they came to light in 2017, stunning consumers who at the time saw it as an attempt to nudge them into buying newer, more expensive devices.

Apple Reduces App Store Fees for Small Developers Amid Antitrust Scrutiny

Apple, facing growing antitrust scrutiny over what it charges other companies for access to its App Store, said that it would cut in half the fee it took from the smallest app developers. Developers that brought in $1 million or less from their apps in the previous year will pay a 15 percent commission on those app sales starting next year, down from 30 percent, the company said.

Groups Urge Congress to Act on Tech Reforms in Judiciary Report

A wide-ranging group of national organizations is urging congressional leaders on both sides of the aisle to embrace and prioritize recommendations to overhaul big tech companies as laid out in a House Judiciary Committee report last month. Fifty groups signed onto a letter sent to top House and Senate leaders on calling for them to “quickly act to enshrine the recommendations included in the report into law,” according to a copy.

Draft EU Guidelines Would Change How Tech Companies Share Data

Some companies likely will have to significantly change how they secure data to continue working with European companies, under draft guidelines issued by the European Union that require increased privacy safeguards for information transferred outside the bloc. Businesses could be forced to adopt strict encryption practices and ensure the personal data of Europeans can’t be decrypted if companies move that information to the U.S. and other countries outside the EU, the draft rules said.

TikTok Giving Parents More Options to Control How Children Use App

Video-sharing app TikTok said it is giving parents more control options, including the ability to monitor what their teenagers can view on the platform. Owned by Chinese company ByteDance, Tiktok said parents will now be able to decide what content, users, hashtags, or sounds their children can search for as well as decide if the account should be public or remain private.

GitHub Restores YouTube Download Tool Despite Recording Industry's Complaint

The source code for YouTube-dl, a tool you can use to download videos from YouTube, is back up on GitHub after the code repository took it down in October following a DMCA complaint from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). Citing a letter from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (the EFF), GitHub says it ultimately found that the RIAA’s complaint didn’t have any merit.