$500M FOR CYBER: A group of bipartisan House lawmakers on Wednesday rolled out legislation that would provide state and local governments with $500 million annually to defend against cyberattacks, which have escalated over the past year during the COVID-19 pandemic. The State and Local Cybersecurity Improvement Act, led by House Homeland Security Committee cybersecurity subcommittee Chairwoman Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.), would create a grant program to provide $500 million annually to state and local governments over the next five years for cybersecurity needs. The legislation, provided to The Hill to review Wednesday, would also require state and local governments to submit plans for securing their systems against cyber threats in order to obtain the funding, and establish committees to implement the plans. Read more about the bill. GIG DRIVER PRECEDENT: Food delivery companies operating in Spain will have to reclassify their drivers as employees within three months under a new law passed by decree this week. Delivery drivers in the country will be guaranteed sick leave and paid vacation time and will no longer have to pay social security contributions themselves. The legislation clarifies that ruling to make clear that the tens of thousands of food delivery drivers in Spain should be salaried employees. It does not extend that classification to other gig economy workers, like rideshare drivers, but could set precedent for future rulemaking. The Rider Law is a first in Europe and comes as the European Union and the United States are both considering rules that could govern the gig economy. Read more.
WYDEN DRILLS GSA: Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) on Wednesday drilled the General Services Administration (GSA) over its ongoing approval of video conferencing app Zoom for government use, despite security vulnerabilities discovered by researchers. In a letter to acting GSA Administrator Katy Kale shared with The Hill, Wyden requested that the agency provide a copy of its "security package" detailing the decision by the GSA to approve Zoom for use by federal agencies through the Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP). "It is extremely concerning that after Zoom was cleared for government use by the General Services Administration in April 2019, security researchers discovered multiple serious vulnerabilities in the year that followed," Wyden wrote. Read more here. OFF THE LIST: The Pentagon on Tuesday officially said Chinese tech giant Xiaomi Corp. will be taken off of a Trump-era blacklist that had prevented U.S. investment in the company. Lawyers for the Defense Department and Xiaomi on Tuesday said in a joint filing in D.C. federal court that it had agreed on the removal of the smartphone maker from the blacklist after a U.S. court in March granted a preliminary injunction against former President Trump's January designation of Xiaomi as one of several Communist Chinese military companies, or CCMCs. U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras ruled in March that the restriction could cause Xiaomi, which has denied claims of ties to China's military, to "suffer irreparable harm in the form of serious reputational and unrecoverable economic injuries." Read more here. AV SETBACK: House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Peter DeFazio (D-Ore.) on Wednesday sharply criticized the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for relocating spectrum in a way that critics have said could hurt the development of autonomous vehicles. "We've got problems with the Federal Communications Commission, and they are impinging upon the bandwidth that we need for vehicle to vehicle communication," DeFazio told The Hill's Steve Clemons during a virtual event. DeFazio's comments came after the FCC last year split the 5.9 GHz band, previously reserved for vehicle safety communications, between unlicensed spectrum operations, such as WiFi for internet connected devices, and an advanced automobile safety technology. Read more about his comments. WE'RE NOT PAYING FOR THAT: Colonial Pipeline has no plans to pay the ransom after a cyberattack on their operations, two people familiar with the matter told The Washington Post on Wednesday. The hacking group behind the attack is thought to be based in Russia. The group appeared to have stolen data from Colonial, which it was purportedly preparing to use in a blackmail scheme. But Mandiant was able to trace the stolen data to a server owned by a New York-based firm, which quickly shut it down. Read more here. DOUBLE IT: Amazon is doubling its workforce in Arlington, Va., by hiring close to 2,000 employees for their second headquarters. "Hiring across Amazon's Arlington Headquarters is ramping up. Amazon is seeking 1,900 new employees for a variety of technical and non-tech jobs—a record high for the location," an Amazon blog post states. The office currently has around 1,600 employees with plans to add thousands of more jobs to the second headquarters in the next decade. Read more about the announcement. Lighter click: not bezos or gates An op-ed to chew on: Is the sky falling? China's rocket is part of a growing space junk problem NOTABLE LINKS FROM AROUND THE WEB: Credit Agencies Can't Tell My Sister And Me Apart (The Verge / Mitchell Clark) Instagram Labeled One Of Islam's Holiest Mosques A Terrorist Organization (BuzzFeed News / Ryan Mac) The Blue Check Mark's Evil Cousin (The Atlantic / Will Oremus) |
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