| IN OTHER NEWS: REVERSE THAT: Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus on Tuesday urged Facebook to reverse plans for a required update to its messaging platform subsidiary WhatsApp over concerns about data privacy. WhatsApp is issuing an update to its terms and services as it allows users to talk to businesses on the platform. WhatsApp has said that the update will not change its policies around keeping personal conversations encrypted, meaning Facebook and WhatsApp cannot read the messages. But the Democrats wrote in a letter Tuesday that WhatsApp's failure to commit to the same privacy policy for the messages with businesses is a "potential misuse of data," and could lead to the use of that information for targeted advertising. Read more about the letter. ON THE HOUSE: President Biden on Tuesday announced a partnership with ride-sharing companies Lyft and Uber to provide free rides for Americans to get vaccinated. The partnership is part of a host of actions to achieve the administration's goal of having 70 percent of adult Americans receive at least one coronavirus vaccine dose by the Fourth of July. The announcement comes as Biden is meeting with governors to discuss vaccine strategy and innovative ways to get more people vaccinated against COVID-19. Lyft and Uber will provide rides to and from tens of thousands of vaccination sites through their apps, which will allow customers to select a vaccination site near them, follow directions to redeem their ride and get a free ride to and from the site. Read more about the announcement. REJECTED: Apple rejected 1 million new apps seeking to join its App Store last year, according to a blog post released Tuesday. The announcement providing some details about why Apple rejected certain apps and updates was released as the Silicon Valley giant fends off a legal challenge from Epic Games in the second week of a trial in California federal court. The trial is centered around allegations from Epic Games accusing Apple of anticompetitive behavior for kicking Epic's Fortnite game out of the App Store after an update to the game offered a separate payment system that circumvented Apple's 30 percent commission fees. Apple's defense is largely based around an argument that its App Store rules protect customers, and Tuesday's blog post further promoted the claim. Read more here. TWITTER VS. TEXAS: A federal judge in California on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit brought by Twitter that had sought to block Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's (R) office from allegedly retaliating against the company for its decision to ban former President Trump from the platform. In a 7-page ruling, the judge said Twitter's lawsuit was premature because Paxton has not sought to enforce his January records request related to the company's content moderation policies. "The court finds Twitter's lawsuit is premature, and, as such, is subject to dismissal," wrote U.S. District Judge Maxine Chesney, a Clinton appointee. Read more here. MR (PAY) WORLDWIDE: Google Pay announced Tuesday that it is partnering with remittance companies Wise and Western Union to offer options for users in the U.S. to transfer funds abroad. American users will now be able to transfer money to app users in India and Singapore, and Google Pay plans to expand to 80 countries through Wise and 200 via Western Union by the end of the year. Users will be able to make unlimited free transfer with Western Union until June 16 and Wise is waiving fees on the first transfer up to $500. Read the rest.
Lighter click: This family has it all An op-ed to chew on: Biden needs to counter Russia and China to secure our digital future NOTABLE LINKS FROM AROUND THE WEB: Meet DarkSide, the ransomware gang blamed for the Colonial Pipeline attack (CyberScoop / Sean Lyngaas) In Biden's broadband plan, cable is in for the fight of its life (Protocol / Issie Lapowsky) The pipeline hack is causing major mass gasoline panic buying (Vice Motherboard / Aaron Gordon) Semiconductor makers and users form a group to push for chip funding (The New York Times / Thomas Kaplan) |
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