Antitrust action against Microsoft in the late 1990s enabled an explosion of innovation, allowing platforms like Google, Facebook and Amazon to solidify dominant positions, academics said Tuesday at FTC hearings (see 1810150052). Microsoft let companies use the internet as a development platform and expand using HTML protocol, said Columbia University Law School professor Tim Wu.
The FTC needs a better understanding of “mass data surveillance” to decide whether current rules distort the competitive process, Commissioner Rohit Chopra said Monday during the agency’s third policy hearing (see 1810020061). Differing views were heard on the state of competitive tech markets.
The FTC needs a better understanding of “mass data surveillance” to decide whether current rules distort the competitive process, Commissioner Rohit Chopra said Monday during the agency’s third policy hearing (see 1810020061). Differing views were heard on the state of competitive tech markets.
Administrator David Redl said Friday he's hopeful comments on NTIA’s privacy principles (see 1810100057) will show privacy and innovation can be maximized under a new federal privacy framework. NTIA met with more than 60 companies, groups and individuals before the comment solicitation, he said. One message the agency heard from the tech industry is that privacy and innovation are “not mutually exclusive goals,” Redl told the Brookings Institution.
Administrator David Redl said Friday he's hopeful comments on NTIA’s privacy principles (see 1810100057) will show privacy and innovation can be maximized under a new federal privacy framework. NTIA met with more than 60 companies, groups and individuals before the comment solicitation, he said. One message the agency heard from the tech industry is that privacy and innovation are “not mutually exclusive goals,” Redl told the Brookings Institution.
The thrust of a forthcoming privacy bill from Sen. Ron Wyden will be a “different brand” of tech sector transparency with “consequences” for transgressing companies, the Oregon Democrat told us. Also Thursday, Senate Commerce Committee leadership hammered Google for not disclosing sooner its recent Google+ vulnerability (see 1810100066), given the company’s chief privacy officer testified months after the issue reportedly was discovered (see 1809260050).
The thrust of a forthcoming privacy bill from Sen. Ron Wyden will be a “different brand” of tech sector transparency with “consequences” for transgressing companies, the Oregon Democrat told us. Also Thursday, Senate Commerce Committee leadership hammered Google for not disclosing sooner its recent Google+ vulnerability (see 1810100066), given the company’s chief privacy officer testified months after the issue reportedly was discovered (see 1809260050).
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told us Tuesday he would call for a full FTC investigation of Google’s recently disclosed Google+ privacy vulnerability (see 1810090056). He repeated that demand Wednesday during a Senate Commerce Committee hearing in which lawmakers discussed policy and FTC authority with privacy experts.
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., told us Tuesday he would call for a full FTC investigation of Google’s recently disclosed Google+ privacy vulnerability (see 1810090056). He repeated that demand Wednesday during a Senate Commerce Committee hearing in which lawmakers discussed policy and FTC authority with privacy experts.
A point of contention between industry and consumer groups will be how lawmakers define FTC rulemaking authority when crafting privacy legislation, experts and witnesses told us. The Senate Commerce Committee holds a hearing Wednesday (see 1810040040) on legislation (see 1809260050), this time with privacy witnesses, after questioning an all-industry panel in the first round.