Despite changes to patent, copyright and criminal law, China remains one of the top countries the U.S. is targeting for weak intellectual property protections, said the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative Friday in its annual special 301 report (see 2004290059). China needs to strengthen such protection and enforcement, fully implement IP measures, stop forcing technology transfers to Chinese companies, open its market to foreign investment, and “allow the market a decisive role in allocating resources,” USTR said. “Severe challenges persist because of excessive regulatory requirements and informal pressure and coercion to transfer technology to Chinese companies, continued gaps in the scope of IP protection, incomplete legal reforms, weak enforcement channels, and lack of administrative and judicial transparency and independence.”
Florida’s comprehensive privacy bill failed Friday amid disagreement over a private right of action. HB-969 sponsor Rep. Fiona McFarland (R) looks “forward to continuing the good work on this complicated issue in the next session,” she wrote. Legislators passed SB-7072 Thursday to make it unlawful for social media sites -- other than theme park owners -- to deplatform political candidates. It requires sites to be transparent about policing users.
Dish Chairman Charlie Ergen let loose Thursday at T-Mobile and CEO Mike Sievert for their defense of plans to shut down the legacy CDMA wireless network by year-end (see Ref:2104140036]). T-Mobile’s potential to disenfranchise millions of customers makes the carrier comparable with the Grinch who stole Christmas, said Ergen on a Q1 call.
Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Mark Warner, D-Va., and Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., will reintroduce legislation banning large online platforms from using deceptive designs “to trick consumers” into offering personal data, they told an FTC virtual workshop on dark patterns Thursday (see 2104090042).
The Senate Commerce Committee advanced four tech and telecom bills (see 2104230076) and NASA administrator nominee Bill Nelson Wednesday on voice votes. The committee also advanced deputy commerce secretary nominee Don Graves on a 25-3 vote. Senate Commerce earlier pulled from consideration the Endless Frontier Act (S-1260) after lawmakers filed more than 230 amendments to the measure (see 2104270045).
Representatives from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube denied their business models are based on maximizing user engagement, during a hearing Tuesday in which members of both parties raised concerns. The power of social media companies over people’s lives is “of great concern” to a wide number of legislators, Senate Privacy Subcommittee Chairman Chris Coons, D-Del., told us. “Exactly what statutory, regulatory or voluntary measures can best address it, I think it would be premature after the first hour of our first hearing to say I have an endgame in mind.”
Congress should clarify FTC Act Section 13(b) and “revive” the agency’s “ability to enjoin illegal conduct and return to consumers money they have lost,” all four commissioners wrote in a statement that acting Chairwoman Rebecca Kelly Slaughter delivered to the House Consumer Protection Subcommittee.
Washington state’s comprehensive privacy bill is dead for the third straight year. Unable again to overcome disagreement over enforcement and other issues, lawmakers ended the 2021 session Sunday without voting on the Senate-passed SB-5062. Washington legislators did pass municipal broadband and national 988 bills. Florida senators passed bills Monday to regulate social media and pole attachments.
The Senate Commerce Committee will “mark something up shortly” in response to the Supreme Court’s decision in AMG Capital Management v. FTC, Chair Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., told us Thursday (see 2104220068). House Commerce Committee Republicans said the high court’s unanimous decision shows the FTC exceeded its FTC Act Section 13(b) authority. They expressed frustration that Democrats “prevented” the full commission from testifying Tuesday, when acting Chair Rebecca Kelly Slaughter will appear before the House Consumer Protection Subcommittee.
Investors trying to push better lobbying disclosures at communications, media and tech companies through shareholder proxy proposals face a steep uphill climb. Annual reports detailing lobbying spending and strategy were put on the yearly shareholder meeting agendas for Amazon, Boeing, Charter and Disney. They were rejected at Boeing and Disney. Experts told us odds of approval generally are slim.