Germany's financial regulator BaFin warned of a "very big and very present" risk of cyberattacks in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. BaFin has long warned about cyber risks, but the statements mark a harsher tone.
Read the article: Reuters
Germany's financial regulator BaFin warned of a "very big and very present" risk of cyberattacks in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. BaFin has long warned about cyber risks, but the statements mark a harsher tone.
Read the article: Reuters
The precise movements of millions of users of the gay-dating app Grindr were collected from a digital advertising network and made available for sale, according to people familiar with the matter. The information was available for sale since at least 2017, and historical data may still be obtainable, the people said.
Read the article: The Wall Street Journal
Technology startup Rivos Inc allegedly stole Apple Inc's computer-chip trade secrets after poaching its engineers, Apple said in a lawsuit filed in California federal court. Apple's lawsuit said Mountain View, California-based Rivos has hired over 40 of its former employees in the past year to work on competing "system-on-chip" (SoC) technology, and that at least two former Apple engineers took gigabytes of confidential information with them to Rivos.
Read the article: Reuters
PayPal Holdings Inc. helped spur a formal antitrust complaint against Apple Inc. and its iPhone payments system by raising concerns with the European Commission, according to people with knowledge of the matter. European regulators hit Apple with a so-called statement of objections, arguing that the iPhone maker abuses its control over mobile payments. The complaint centers on the company reserving the iPhone’s tap-to-pay abilities for its own Apple Pay service, rather than letting rival payment platforms use the feature.
Read the article: Bloomberg
Twitter has banned the accounts of two conservative figures — MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell and Dr. Vladimir “Zev” Zelenko — shortly after both rejoined the platform. According to the company, the accounts were suspended for violating platform rules against evading bans.
Read the article: The Verge
Chipmakers are divided over how aggressively to oppose a legislative proposal that would give the U.S. government sweeping new powers to block billions in U.S. investment into China, according to documents seen by Reuters. The measure is part of the House version of a bill that would also grant $52 billion to chipmakers to expand operations, a boon to the industry that has made some companies loath to forcefully oppose the package's China investment controls.
Read the article: Reuters
The third month of war in Ukraine finds Russia, not the United States, struggling under an unprecedented hacking wave that entwines government activity, political voluntarism and criminal action. Digital assailants have plundered the country’s personal financial data, defaced websites and handed decades of government emails to anti-secrecy activists abroad. One recent survey showed more passwords and other sensitive data from Russia were dumped onto the open Web in March than information from any other country.
Read the article: The Washington Post
A Russian law firm said it had filed a lawsuit against U.S. tech giant Apple seeking 90 million rubles ($1.28 million) in damages for consumers affected by Apple withdrawing its payment service from Russia. Law firm Chernyshov, Lukoyanov & Partners said Apple had violated Russian consumers' rights after the company restricted the use of its built-in Apple Pay service on March 1 in response to Moscow sending troops into Ukraine.
Read the article: Reuters
When former President Obama gave an hourlong speech on disinformation, it wasn’t just a one-off, sources around him say. Those close to Obama said the speech was a particularly important one for him and explained why he devoted so much time to the topic.
Read the article: The Hill
A federal judge in New York denied a request by Elon Musk to end a 2018 agreement he signed with securities regulators, which requires him to run his social media posts by a company lawyer if the statements contained material information about his electric car company, Tesla. Mr. Musk had argued that the agreement to settle accusations of securities violations infringed on his right to freedom of speech and that the Securities and Exchange Commission had used the agreement as an excuse to “launch endless, boundless” investigations of his public statements.
Read the article: The Washington Post
Elon Musk's criticism of Twitter Inc. sparked a barrage of abusive tweets against the company's top lawyer, raising questions about his compliance with a non-disparagement agreement and the tone that the social media platform's incoming owner will set for its users. Musk tweeted he disagreed with a decision Twitter made in 2020 to restrict the distribution of a New York Post article about U.S. President Joe Biden's son, Hunter.
Read the article: Reuters
Microsoft released a report detailing how Russian-backed hackers unleashed a series of cyber operations against Ukraine as early as March 2021. According to the report, at least six separate Russian-backed hacking groups have launched more than 200 cyber operations against Ukraine, including destructive attacks that have threatened civilian welfare.
Read the article: The Hill
A hacker got into the Instagram account for the popular BFT brand Bored Ape Yacht Club and posted a link to a supposed airdrop, which would give existing Bored Ape holders a free allotment of land in the upcoming Otherside metaverse. But the link included in the post was a phising scam. People who opened it and connected their crypto wallet had their Bored Ape Yacht Club NFTs stolen.
Read the article: CNET
Congressional leaders are negotiating in earnest on long-stalled consumer-privacy legislation, raising the prospect that a bipartisan bill could become reality after years of false starts. Congress is under pressure to act following recent disclosures of content potentially harmful to young people on social-media sites including Facebook, Instagram and TikTok.
Read the article: The Wall Street Journal
Major technology companies have been duped into providing sensitive personal information about their customers in response to fraudulent legal requests, and the data has been used to harass and even sexually extort minors, according to four federal law enforcement officials and two industry investigators. The companies that have complied with the bogus requests include Meta Platforms Inc., Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Snap Inc., Twitter Inc. and Discord Inc., according to three of the people. All of the people requested anonymity to speak frankly about the devious new brand of online crime that involves underage victims.
Read the article: Bloomberg
When former eBay executive James Baugh of San Jose first launched the harassment campaign against a couple publishing a newsletter with content critical of the e-commerce giant, Baugh suggested to his operatives that they send the pair “scary masks, live insects, or embarrassing items, such as pornography and strippers,” according to an FBI affidavit. Minus the strippers, that’s what they sent — and more. Baugh, 47, pleaded guilty to five counts of stalking, two counts of witness tampering and two counts of destruction, alteration and falsification of records in a federal investigation.
Read the article: SiliconValley.com
A top European Union regulator cautioned that social-media giant Twitter Inc. will need to follow the bloc’s new rules for tackling illegal and harmful content online if it wants to keep operating there, marking a possible challenge to Elon Musk’s plans to take a more hands-off approach to content moderation. Thierry Breton, EU internal market commissioner, said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal that it’s his job to make sure companies, including Twitter, understand their obligations in Europe.
Read the article: The Wall Street Journal
Elon Musk said that he is against “censorship that goes far beyond the law” as speculation grows about how the Tesla CEO will run Twitter, which he is set to acquire for $44 billion. “The extreme antibody reaction from those who fear free speech says it all,” Musk tweeted, without specifying to whom he was referring.
Read the article: The Hill
Intuit Inc. was sued for failing to secure its email marketing service, which allegedly allowed hackers to steal cryptocurrencies from Trezor users. Using a sophisticated phishing attack, hackers were earlier this month able to access cryptocurrency wallets sold by the Czech company Trezor, according to the lawsuit, filed in federal court in San Jose.
Read the article: Bloomberg
The U.S. Court of Appeals that ruled in favor of California's net neutrality law said that it won't reconsider its decision, dealing another blow to the broadband industry trade groups that attempted to block California from enforcing its law. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected a petition to rehear the case that the three judge panel decided in January, upholding a previous ruling that said states have a right to adopt their own net neutrality protections.
Read the article: CNET
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The GigaLaw Firm helps companies of all sizes protect their brands online, using domain name dispute policies – such as the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) – and other legal tools available to copyright and trademark owners on the Internet.