TikTok is now labeling state-affiliated media in 40 new markets, the social media company said. It's an extension of a pilot program run in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine in 2022.
Read the article: CNET
TikTok is now labeling state-affiliated media in 40 new markets, the social media company said. It's an extension of a pilot program run in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine in 2022.
Read the article: CNET
Donald Trump has petitioned Meta Platforms to unblock his Facebook and Instagram accounts that were locked after the Capitol attacks two years ago. A continued ban would constitute "a deliberate effort by a private company to silence Mr. Trump’s political voice," Trump’s campaign wrote to Meta, according to a copy reviewed by USA Today.
Read the article: USA Today
Brazil’s antitrust watchdog Cade has started an investigation into Apple Inc. for alleged abuse of a dominant position. Cade opened the probe on Jan. 12 following a complaint filed by Latin America’s e-commerce and fintech giant MercadoLibre Inc, the agency said in a statement. The complaint adds to a series of antitrust cases around the world, including in the US, EU, UK, South Korea, Japan, India and Indonesia, Cade added.
Read the article: Bloomberg
The University of Texas at Austin, a sprawling campus with more than 52,000 students, said it has blocked the social media app TikTok from its networks and is in the process of removing the app from university-issued devices because of digital security concerns. Jeff Neyland, adviser to the university’s president for technology strategy, said in an email to students Tuesday that the university was taking the steps to comply with Republican Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s directive last month banning the use of TikTok, which is owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance, on any government-issued devices.
Read the article: The Washington Post
Email marketing and newsletter giant Mailchimp says it was hacked and that dozens of customers’ data was exposed. It’s the second time the company was hacked in the past six months. Worse, this breach appears to be almost identical to a previous incident.
Read the article: TechCrunch
Elon Musk’s overhaul of Twitter has been accompanied by an increase in digital harassment of religious and ethnic minorities in some of its largest markets outside the United States — and it’s beginning to wreak havoc in the physical world as well, according to current and former employees and experts studying the issue. Musk has fired or accepted resignations from about three-fourths of Twitter’s employees since his $44 billion takeover at the end of October.
Read the article: The Washington Post
The U.S. Supreme Court asked for the Biden administration's views on Apple Inc. and Broadcom Inc'.s bid to revive their challenges to patents owned by the California Institute of Technology, in a dispute in which Caltech previously won $1.1 billion in damages from the companies. The justices asked for the U.S. solicitor general's input on a lower court decision that prevented Apple and Broadcom from arguing the patents were invalid at trial.
Read the article: Reuters
Meta’s independent Oversight Board overturned the social media giant’s decision to remove bare chest photos of transgender and non-binary people on Instagram, and urged the company to redefine its rules around nudity in a way that is clear and does not discriminate based on gender. The board’s decision overturned Instagram’s original decision in 2021 and 2022 to remove two photos posted by the same U.S.-based couple who identify as transgender and non-binary.
Read the article: The Hill
A case before the Supreme Court challenging the liability shield protecting websites such as YouTube and Facebook could “upend the internet,” resulting in both widespread censorship and a proliferation of offensive content, Google said in a court filing. In a new brief filed with the high court, Google said that scaling back liability protections could lead internet giants to block more potentially offensive content — including controversial political speech — while also leading smaller websites to drop their filters to avoid liability that can arise from efforts to screen content.
Read the article: The Wall Street Journal
New Jersey and Ohio said they were joining other states in banning use of the popular video app TikTok on government-owned and managed devices. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy, a Democrat, said in addition to banning the short-video app owned by Chinese technology conglomerate ByteDance from state devices he also was banning software vendors, products, and services from more than a dozen vendors including Huawei, Hikvision, Tencent Holdings, ZTE Corporation and Kaspersky Lab.
Read the article: Reuters
One of Ukraine's top cyber officials said some cyberattacks on Ukrainian critical and civilian infrastructure could amount to war crimes. Victor Zhora, chief digital transformation officer at the State Service of Special Communication and Information Protection (SSSCIP) of Ukraine, said Russia has launched cyberattacks in coordination with kinetic military attacks as part of its invasion of Ukraine, arguing the digital warfare is part of what Kyiv considers war crimes committed against its citizens.
Read the article: Politico
Hackers have disrupted access to the websites of Denmark's central bank and seven private banks in the country this week, according to the central bank and an IT firm that serves the industry. The websites of the central bank and Bankdata, a company that develops IT solutions for the financial industry, were hit by so-called distributed denials of service (DDoS), which direct traffic towards targeted servers in a bid to knock them offline.
Read the article: Reuters
Twitter suspended the account of the D.C. area’s largest bus transit system for unknown reasons but restored it over six hours later. Metro officials said they weren’t told why the social media company suspended the account.
Read the article: The Washington Post
Germany's cartel office regulator said it had issued objections against Google's data processing terms and that it expected the company to make changes accordingly. The cartel office sent parent company Alphabet, Google Ireland Ltd and Google Germany GmbH a preliminary legal assessment on December 23, the regulator said in a statement.
Read the article: Reuters
Advertisers won’t be able to target teen users on Facebook and Instagram based on their engagement on the apps starting next month, Meta announced. The change is part of a series of updates Meta is making in the next couple of months for teen users on its social media apps.
Read the article: The Hill
Pennsylvania-based nonprofit health provider Maternal & Family Health Services has confirmed cybercriminals accessed the sensitive data of close to half a million people. MFHS revealed that it had been hit by ransomware that exposed the personal data of current and former patients, employees and vendors.
Read the article: TechCrunch
Criminal hackers have posted an enormous trove of sensitive files to the internet from a San Francisco Bay Area transit system’s police department, including specific allegations of child abuse. The breach comes from the Bay Area Rapid Transit System (BART) Police Department.
Read the article: NBC News
Under new owner Elon Musk, falsehoods about the warming planet are whipping around the social media platform at a sizzling pace, according to a study of climate-related conversations shared exclusively with USA Today. The new report echoes recent research showing a surge in climate misinformation since Musk bought the company in October.
Read the article: USA Today
TikTok Chief Executive Shou Zi Chew on a visit to Brussels sought to reassure the European Union the app would respect the bloc's increasingly stringent tech rules and commitments to privacy and child safety. The short-video app, which is owned by Chinese technology conglomerate ByteDance, has for the last three years worked to counter U.S. concerns over whether the personal data of its citizens can be accessed and its content manipulated by China's Communist Party or any other entity under Beijing's influence.
Read the article: Reuters
Certain models of the Apple Watch infringe one of five Masimo Corp. patents related to using light sensors to measure the amount of oxygen in the blood, a US International Trade Commission judge found in the first round of Masimo’s bid to block imports of Apple Inc.'s popular smartwatch. The ITC had postponed the decision three times before Judge Monica Bhattacharyya issued her initial determination, announced in a notice.
Read the article: Bloomberg Law
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