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.
The Senate Commerce Committee has a staff briefing scheduled this week with Facebook to discuss the recent hack (see 1810020046), a committee aide said Friday. A House Commerce Committee aide said leadership will pursue follow-up briefings with Facebook after a preliminary phone conversation with staff Thursday. Questions remain about the impact on third-party apps from the breach, the House Commerce aide said. The House Judiciary Committee, which didn’t comment, also requested a briefing from the platform. Facebook didn’t comment.
The Senate Commerce Committee has a staff briefing scheduled this week with Facebook to discuss the recent hack (see 1810020046), a committee aide said Friday. A House Commerce Committee aide said leadership will pursue follow-up briefings with Facebook after a preliminary phone conversation with staff Thursday. Questions remain about the impact on third-party apps from the breach, the House Commerce aide said. The House Judiciary Committee, which didn’t comment, also requested a briefing from the platform. Facebook didn’t comment.
The Department of Homeland Security reduced the time it takes to patch a cyber vulnerability to within 30 days, Assistant Homeland Security Secretary for Cybersecurity and Communications Jeanette Manfra said in an interview for C-SPAN's The Communicators series, set to be televised later She conceded the agency struggled with patching vulnerabilities in an acceptable amount of time in the past. Shrinking the response had a ripple effect throughout the federal government, she said. The digital economy is so interconnected that cyber infections can spread quickly across the world, she said, calling cyberthreats a “constant, ever-present activity that everyone has to face.” She said the department had “limited visibility” of foreign influence campaigns in the 2016 election. DHS has worked hard in the past two years to deploy more “sensing capabilities,” particularly with state and local authorities, she said, and more than 1,500 jurisdictions participate in information sharing.
ThePirateBay.org, an illicit torrent indexing service, remains a prominent target for the music, film and video game industries, show comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative posted this week. USTR collected comments through Monday for its Special 301 report on countries and groups that infringe U.S. intellectual property.
ThePirateBay.org, an illicit torrent indexing service, remains a prominent target for the music, film and video game industries, show comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative posted this week. USTR collected comments through Monday for its Special 301 report on countries and groups that infringe U.S. intellectual property.
The Department of Homeland Security reduced the time it takes to patch a cyber vulnerability to within 30 days, Assistant Homeland Security Secretary for Cybersecurity and Communications Jeanette Manfra said in an interview for C-SPAN's The Communicators series, set to be televised later She conceded the agency struggled with patching vulnerabilities in an acceptable amount of time in the past. Shrinking the response had a ripple effect throughout the federal government, she said. The digital economy is so interconnected that cyber infections can spread quickly across the world, she said, calling cyberthreats a “constant, ever-present activity that everyone has to face.” She said the department had “limited visibility” of foreign influence campaigns in the 2016 election. DHS has worked hard in the past two years to deploy more “sensing capabilities,” particularly with state and local authorities, she said, and more than 1,500 jurisdictions participate in information sharing.
The Department of Homeland Security reduced the time it takes to patch a cyber vulnerability to within 30 days, Assistant Homeland Security Secretary for Cybersecurity and Communications Jeanette Manfra said in an interview for C-SPAN's The Communicators series, set to be televised later She conceded the agency struggled with patching vulnerabilities in an acceptable amount of time in the past. Shrinking the response had a ripple effect throughout the federal government, she said. The digital economy is so interconnected that cyber infections can spread quickly across the world, she said, calling cyberthreats a “constant, ever-present activity that everyone has to face.” She said the department had “limited visibility” of foreign influence campaigns in the 2016 election. DHS has worked hard in the past two years to deploy more “sensing capabilities,” particularly with state and local authorities, she said, and more than 1,500 jurisdictions participate in information sharing.
ThePirateBay.org, an illicit torrent indexing service, remains a prominent target for the music, film and video game industries, show comments to the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative posted this week. USTR collected comments through Monday for its Special 301 report on countries and groups that infringe U.S. intellectual property.
DOJ will soon conclude a criminal case against companies using search algorithms to effectuate price fixing, creating an anticompetitive effect, Assistant Attorney General Makan Delrahim told lawmakers Wednesday. Calling the case “the first of its kind,” he declined to name the companies involved, during a hearing on tech platform antitrust concerns. “We actually have a case, a criminal case, that’s going to be coming to a conclusion in the next two weeks,” he told the Senate Antitrust Subcommittee. Delrahim answered questions about various investigations of Google throughout the discussion.