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DROP IT: A bipartisan group of 45 attorneys general are urging Facebook to abandon plans to launch an Instagram for kids platform, citing concerns about children's mental health and data privacy risks. "It appears that Facebook is not responding to a need, but instead creating one, as this platform appeals primarily to children who otherwise do not or would not have an Instagram account. In short, an Instagram platform for young children is harmful for myriad reasons. The attorneys general urge Facebook to abandon its plans to launch this new platform," the National Association of Attorneys General wrote in a letter Monday to Facebook. Facebook's plans about creating a version of Instagram for children under the age of 13 were first reported by BuzzFeed News in March, and the company has faced pushback from advocacy groups and lawmakers since. Read more about the letter. SENATE IN SESSION: The Senate will vote on legislation aimed at countering China's economic influence this month, Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) announced Monday. The Senate Commerce Committee will mark up the bill Wednesday, a vote that was delayed after senators filed hundreds of potential amendments to the bill. "The Senate Commerce Committee will begin to mark up the Endless Frontiers Act ... a number of other Senate committees are working on bipartisan legislation to improve our competitiveness and make the United States a world leader in advanced manufacturing, innovation and supply chains," Schumer said from the Senate floor. "It is my intention to have the full Senate consider comprehensive competitive legislation during this work period," he added. Read more here. BLOCKED: Amazon blocked more than 10 billion listings as part of its push toward driving out counterfeit products, the e-commerce giant said Monday. Amazon said in its brand protection report that it invested more than $700 million and more than 10,000 employees as part of the effort to protect the online store from fraud and abuse. The company also said its verification processes prevented more than 6 million attempts to create selling accounts, stopping bad actors before they published any products for sale. Just 6 percent of attempted account registrations passed Amazon's verification processes and listed products for sale, according to Amazon. Read more here. BYE BYE JEDI?: The Defense Department is considering scrapping a multibillion-dollar cloud-computing project that's been bogged down by lawsuits and lawmaker scrutiny, The Wall Street Journal reported Monday. Amazon for more than a year has contested the $10 billion Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure (JEDI) contract awarded to Microsoft in 2019. The Pentagon is in the process of reviewing the project after the U.S. Court of Federal Claims on April 28 decided not to dismiss a protest lawsuit filed by Amazon. Read more here. Lighter click: Sounds like some sweet folks An op-ed to chew on: What should NASA do about the Chinese space station? NOTABLE LINKS FROM AROUND THE WEB: How to wage an antitrust war (Protocol / Ben Brody) Blind people, advocates slam company claiming to make websites ADA compliant (NBC News / April Glaser) A county-by-county look at the broadband gap (The Verge / Russell Brandom and William Joel) |
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