Apple Foe Offers $5,000 Grants to Research Scanning Software

One of Apple’s legal foes has offered to help independent researchers analyze the tech giant’s controversial new scanning software for detecting child sexual abuse material on iPhones. Corellium’s new “Open Security Initative” will offer $5,000 grants to security researchers to support “independent public research into the security and privacy of mobile applications,” according to the company’s announcement.

Twitter Unblocks Account of India's Main Opposition Party Congress

Twitter unblocked the accounts of India's main opposition party Congress, its leader Rahul Gandhi and other party officials, days after suspending the accounts over a tweet on the alleged rape and murder of a nine-year-old girl. Gandhi's account was locked after he posted a photograph of himself with the parents of a girl who was allegedly raped and killed in New Delhi on Aug. 1, saying the family deserved justice.

Jury Orders Apple to Pay $300 Million in Optis Wireless Patent Trial

A U.S. jury awarded Optis Wireless Technology LLC and several related companies $300 million in damages after a second patent trial against iPhone maker Apple Inc. A jury had previously found that Apple had infringed five Optis wireless standard essential patents and awarded $506 million in damages, but U.S. District Judge Rodney Gilstrap in Marshall, Texas, vacated that award in April and ordered a new trial to determine the amount of damages.

Google Infringed Sonos Patents, ITC Says in Preliminary Finding

Google infringed on speaker-technology patents held by Sonos and should not be allowed to import products that violate Sonos’s intellectual property, a judge said in a preliminary finding by the United States International Trade Commission. In January 2020, Sonos sued Google in federal court and in front of the United States International Trade Commission, a quasi-judicial body that decides trade cases and can block the import of goods that violate patents.

Cyberspace Commission Cites U.S. Progress Against Cyber Threats

The federal government has made “significant” progress on strengthening the United States against cyber threats over the past year, but more work remains, a congressionally established bipartisan committee concluded in a report. The Cyberspace Solarium Commission (CSC) – a group composed of members of Congress, federal officials, and industry leaders – found in its 2021 implementation report that around three-quarters of its recommendations for defending the U.S. against cyber threats have been implemented since March 2020.

Apple Employees Speaking Out Against Plan to Scan Customers' iPhones

A backlash over Apple's move to scan U.S. customer phones and computers for child sex abuse images has grown to include employees speaking out internally, a notable turn in a company famed for its secretive culture, as well as provoking intensified protests from leading technology policy groups. Apple employees have flooded an Apple internal Slack channel with more than 800 messages on the plan announced a week ago, workers who asked not to be identified told Reuters.

Banks Taking Steps to Reduce Risks from Greater User of Cloud Computing

Banks are taking steps to mitigate risks from their increasing use of external cloud computing services, a survey by Harris Poll and Google Cloud said. The Bank of England and the Bank of France have expressed concerns about a lack of transparency in how banks rely on a "concentrated" number of outside cloud computing providers like Google, Microsoft and Amazon which are beyond the arm of the regulators.

Companies Pushing to Narrow Legislation on Reporting Cyberattacks

Companies are pushing to narrow legislation that would require them to report cyberattacks to the U.S. government, as a series of hacks has added momentum to a nearly decadelong effort in Congress to approve such a law. Emerging proposals in the House and Senate offer competing visions for how businesses operating most U.S. critical infrastructure would feed information to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which could then share it across the public and private sectors.

84,000 Illicit Entertainment Sites Generate $1.3 Billion in Revenue, Study Says

Websites and apps featuring pirated movies and TV shows make about $1.3 billion from advertising each year, including from major companies like Amazon.com Inc., according to a study. The piracy operations are also a key source of malware, and some ads placed on the sites contain links that hackers use to steal personal information or conduct ransomware attacks, according to the online safety nonprofit Digital Citizens Alliance and the anti-piracy firm White Bullet Solutions Ltd.

Hackers Return $260 Million of Funds in $613 Million Cryptocurrency Heist

Hackers behind one of the biggest ever cryptocurrency heists have returned more than a third of $613 million in digital coins they stole, the company at the center of the hack said. Poly Network, a decentralized finance platform that facilitates peer-to-peer transactions, said on Twitter that $260 million of the stolen funds had been returned but that $353 million was outstanding.

Ransomware Gang Threatens to Publish Accenture's Encrypted Files

Accenture, the global consulting firm, has been hit by the LockBit ransomware gang, according to the cybercriminal group’s website. Accenture’s encrypted files will be published by the group on the dark web unless the company pays the ransom, LockBit claimed, according to screenshots of the website reviewed by CNN Business and Emsisoft, a cybersecurity firm.

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Bipartisan Senate Legislation Would Regulate Google's, Apple's App Stores

A bipartisan group of senators introduced legislation to regulate Google and Apple’s app stores, in the latest signal of the growing political will to loosen large tech companies’ grip on smaller developers. The Open App Markets Act would fundamentally alter the way smartphone apps function by requiring companies running large app stores, like Apple and Google, to allow people to download apps out side of stores and grant users the ability to install alternative app stores.

YouTube Suspends Rand Paul for Video Disputing Effectiveness of Masks

YouTube removed a video by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky for the second time and suspended him from publishing for a week after he posted a video that disputed the effectiveness of wearing masks to limit the spread of the coronavirus. A YouTube representative said the Republican senator’s claims in the three-minute video had violated the company’s policy on Covid-19 medical misinformation.

Facebook Removes Accounts from Russia Pushing Anti-Vaccine Content

Facebook said it had removed a network of accounts from Russia that it linked to a marketing firm which aimed to enlist influencers to push anti-vaccine content about the COVID-19 jabs. The social media company said it had banned accounts connected to Fazze, a subsidiary of UK-registered marketing firm AdNow, which primarily conducted its operations from Russia, for violating its policy against foreign interference.