WebProNews

Tag: Privacy

  • Ireland’s Data Protection Commission Fines WhatsApp $267 Million

    Ireland’s Data Protection Commission Fines WhatsApp $267 Million

    WhatsApp has been fined €225 million ($267 million) for violations of the EU’s GDPR.

    The GDPR is one of the most comprehensive pieces of privacy legislation in the world, and strictly regulates how companies may process and use customer data. WhatsApp ran afoul of the law as a result of how data is processed between WhatsApp and Facebook’s other companies.

    Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC) made the announcement:

    On 28 July 2021, the European Data Protection Board (EDPB) adopted a binding decision and this decision was notified to the DPC. This decision contained a clear instruction that required the DPC to reassess and increase its proposed fine on the basis of a number of factors contained in the EDPB’s decision and following this reassessment the DPC has imposed a fine of €225 million on WhatsApp.

    Although this investigation began in December 2018, data-sharing between WhatsApp and Facebook’s other companies has been an ongoing issues. Most recently, Facebook ignited a firestorm of controversy when it announced it would expand WhatsApp’s data-sharing.

  • Apple’s Privacy Hypocrisy: The $15 Billion Google Deal

    Apple’s Privacy Hypocrisy: The $15 Billion Google Deal

    Google is continuing to pay Apple to remain the default search engine in iOS, a deal that benefits Apple to the tune billions of dollars.

    Google is the dominant search engine by far, but it’s hard to know whether that is the result of true technological superiority or through the sheer power of its market dominance. A key element to that dominance is paying smartphone makers to make Google the default search engine in the browsers they ship with their devices.

    Such an arrangement is extremely profitable for smartphone makers, bringing in a steady stream of income for essentially no work. At the same time, however, it poses a signifiant privacy and moral dilemma for Apple. The Cupertino company has built a reputation around protecting user privacy, often more so than its rivals, including Google. Because the iPhone maker is primarily in the business of selling hardware, it doesn’t rely on monetizing user data the way Google does.

    Despite that stance, however, Apple is projected to reap $15 billion in 2021 for keeping Google the default search engine in iOS Safari, and as much as $20 billion 2022, according to Bernstein analysts, via long-time Apple reporter Philip Elmer-DeWitt.

    While Apple no doubt sees it as a way to give customers what it thinks they want, in terms of the search engine they’re probably most familiar with, it’s still a strange compromise for a company that puts so much value in protecting privacy. It would be far better, and more in line with the company’s overall stance, to refuse Google’s money and offer users a choice when they first set up their iPhones.

    The more time passes, the harder it will be to defend this deal.

  • UK Looks to Revamp Privacy Policy Post-Brexit

    UK Looks to Revamp Privacy Policy Post-Brexit

    The United Kingdom is looking to revamp its privacy policy in the wake of Brexit, making a break from the EU’s GDPR.

    The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is one of the most comprehensive privacy legislation to ever be passed into law. As long as the UK was part of the EU, it was subject to the GDPR, the same as any other European country. With Brexit, however, UK regulators are looking to chart their own path.

    Oliver Dowden, the Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, spoke of the work John Edwards, New Zealand’s Privacy Commissioner and the likely next Information Commissioner, would undertake.

    “Now that we have left the EU I’m determined to seize the opportunity by developing a world-leading data policy that will deliver a Brexit dividend for individuals and businesses across the UK,” said Dowden, according to The Guardian.

    “It means reforming our own data laws so that they’re based on common sense, not box-ticking. And it means having the leadership in place at the Information Commissioner’s Office to pursue a new era of data-driven growth and innovation. John Edwards’ vast experience makes him the ideal candidate to ensure data is used responsibly to achieve those goals.”

    Edwards will have his work cut out for him, as any legislation will need to maintain the same level of protection as the GDPR. If it doesn’t, the EU would e forced to stop data-sharing with the UK, a move that would impact companies on both sides of the Channel.

  • Brave Search Enters Public Beta

    Brave Search Enters Public Beta

    Brave has opened its search engine beta to the world, following an invite-only early access.

    Brave made headlines in March when the company announced it was working on its own search engine. Brave has made a name for itself as a privacy-focused company, with its namesake browser consistently winning rave reviews for protecting user privacy.

    Needless to say, the company entering the search market could result in a major shakeup of the industry, especially with Brave’s clout and reputation. What makes its entry into the market so interesting is that it purchased Tailcat, an open search engine, to serve as the basis of Brave Search. Most competitors compile results from the top, existing search engines. DuckDuckGo uses this strategy, compiling results from hundreds of sources, in addition to results from its own web crawler.

    By using its own web index, Brave Search’s results are independent of the other, Big Tech companies. This puts Brave in the unique position of having one of the only truly independent search engines on the market.

    The search engine, while still in beta, is now available to anyone who wants to use it. The company sent an email to early testers today, informing them the beta was now open to the public.

    Brave Search Email
    Brave Search Email

    As one of the early beta testers, I have been using Brave for weeks now and the results have been impressive. Compared to Bing or Google, Brave’s results are easily as comprehensive, although it sometimes offers even better prioritization of those results, in terms of relevance.

    Add in a focus on privacy that is second to none, and I plan to continue using the search engine on a regular basis, and probably as my default — and you should too if you value your privacy.

    Give Brave Search at search.brave.com.

  • TikTok Unveils New Protections for Teens

    TikTok Unveils New Protections for Teens

    TikTok has unveiled new protections for teens, including limiting notifications at night.

    TikTok is one of the most popular social media platforms, but has been mired in controversy. The company has been accused time and again of not respecting user privacy, and has taken heat for abusing the privacy of its youngest users.

    The company is taking action to address those concerns, rolling out a number of additional protections, including to Direct Messaging, public videos and nighttime notifications.

    TikTok will turn the Direct Messaging setting for teens 16-17 who join the platform, or existing accounts that have never used DMs, to ‘No One.’

    When uploading new videos, teens under 16 will be prompted to select who can view their video when they upload their first one. A similar prompt will display when teens choose to allow their videos to be downloaded.

    Another major step TikTok is taking is limiting nighttime notifications in an effort to help teens develop healthier digital habits.

    We want to help our younger teens in particular develop positive digital habits early on, and we regularly consult with leading paediatric experts and youth well-being advocates to develop our Youth Portal, bullying prevention guide, and other features that support youth-well being. Now, we’ll be drawing upon this research to make changes that reduce the time period during which our younger teens can receive push notifications. Accounts aged 13-15 will not receive push notifications from 9pm, and accounts aged 16-17 will have push notifications disabled starting at 10pm.

    TikTok still has a long way to go before it establishes a strong track record of respecting and protecting user privacy, but these measures are certainly headed in the right direction.

  • Mozilla Releases Firefox 91 With Enhanced Cookie Clearing

    Mozilla Releases Firefox 91 With Enhanced Cookie Clearing

    Mozilla has taken the wraps off of the latest version of Firefox, version 91, and it includes significant privacy improvements.

    Firefox is already one of the most secure, private browsers on the market today. The browser’s Total Cookie Protection is one of the features contributing to that, preventing companies from tracking you as you browse across websites.

    Version 91’s Enhanced Cookie Clearing builds on that even more, making it much easier to clear cookies for a given site, as well as any third-party cookies that may have been embedded in that site.

    Let’s say you have visited facebook.com, comfypants.com and mealkit.com. All of these sites store data in Firefox and leave traces on your computer. This data includes typical storage like cookies and localStorage, but also site settings and cached data, such as the HTTP cache. Additionally, comfypants.com and mealkit.com embed a like button from facebook.com.

    Embedded third-party resources complicate data clearing. Before Enhanced Cookie Clearing, Firefox cleared data only for the domain that was specified by the user. That meant that if you were to clear storage for comfypants.com, Firefox deleted the storage of comfypants.com and left the storage of any sites embedded on it (facebook.com) behind. Keeping the embedded storage of facebook.com meant that it could identify and track you again the next time you visited comfypants.com.

    With Enhanced Cookie Clearing, Firefox will now display a “cookie jar” for each website you’ve visited, collecting the cookies and data from that website, as well as any third-party cookies and data that may have been embedded in it.

    Firefox 91 Enhanced Cookie Clearing - Credit Mozilla
    Firefox 91 Enhanced Cookie Clearing – Credit Mozilla

    Mozilla says that, in order for Enhanced Cookie Clearing to work, users must have Strict Tracking Protection enabled.

  • FTC Official Blasts Facebook’s Actions Against Researchers

    FTC Official Blasts Facebook’s Actions Against Researchers

    The FTC’s Acting Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection, Samuel Levine, has written an open letter blasting Facebook’s recent actions.

    Facebook banned researchers from New York University that were studying political ad spending and disinformation on the social media platform. The company used its Terms of Service, which prohibit scraping personal data, to justify its actions. As critics have pointed out, however, the only data NYU researchers were collecting was regarding ads that are, by their very nature, public.

    Director Levine has written an open letter to Facebook criticizing the company’s actions, and making it clear the company’s initial claim of ‘protecting privacy’ doesn’t hold water in these circumstances.

    Below is a copy of his letter:

    Dear Mr. Zuckerberg:

    I write concerning Facebook’s recent insinuation that its actions against an academic research project conducted by NYU’s Ad Observatory were required by the company’s consent decree with the Federal Trade Commission. As the company has since acknowledged, this is inaccurate. The FTC is committed to protecting the privacy of people, and efforts to shield targeted advertising practices from scrutiny run counter to that mission.

    While I appreciate that Facebook has now corrected the record, I am disappointed by how your company has conducted itself in this matter. Only last week, Facebook’s General Counsel, Jennifer Newstead, committed the company to “timely, transparent communication to BCP staff about significant developments.” Yet the FTC received no notice that Facebook would be publicly invoking our consent decree to justify terminating academic research earlier this week.

    Had you honored your commitment to contact us in advance, we would have pointed out that the consent decree does not bar Facebook from creating exceptions for good-faith research in the public interest. Indeed, the FTC supports efforts to shed light on opaque business practices, especially around surveillance-based advertising. While it is not our role to resolve individual disputes between Facebook and third parties, we hope that the company is not invoking privacy – much less the FTC consent order – as a pretext to advance other aims.

    Sincerely,

    /s/ Samuel Levine

    Acting Director

    Bureau of Consumer Protection

  • Apple Will Check Photo Uploads for Child Sex Abuse Images

    Apple Will Check Photo Uploads for Child Sex Abuse Images

    Apple will begin checking photos being uploaded to its iCloud service against a database of Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM), in an effort to protect children.

    In the battle over encryption — known as the Crypto Wars — governments have often used protecting children as justification for promoting backdoors in encryption and security. Unfortunately, not matter how well-intentioned, as we have highlighted before, there is no way to securely create a backdoor in encryption that will be safe from exploitation by others.

    Apple appears to be trying to offer a compromise solution, one that would preserve privacy, while still protecting children.

    Apple outlined how its CSAM system will work:

    Apple’s method of detecting known CSAM is designed with user privacy in mind. Instead of scanning images in the cloud, the system performs on-device matching using a database of known CSAM image hashes provided by NCMEC and other child safety organizations. Apple further transforms this database into an unreadable set of hashes that is securely stored on users’ devices.

    Before an image is stored in iCloud Photos, an on-device matching process is performed for that image against the known CSAM hashes. This matching process is powered by a cryptographic technology called private set intersection, which determines if there is a match without revealing the result. The device creates a cryptographic safety voucher that encodes the match result along with additional encrypted data about the image. This voucher is uploaded to iCloud Photos along with the image.

    Using another technology called threshold secret sharing, the system ensures the contents of the safety vouchers cannot be interpreted by Apple unless the iCloud Photos account crosses a threshold of known CSAM content. The threshold is set to provide an extremely high level of accuracy and ensures less than a one in one trillion chance per year of incorrectly flagging a given account.

    Needless to say, Apple’s announcement has been met with a variety of responses. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), in particular, has been highly critical of Apple’s decision, even accusing the company of going back on its former privacy stance and embracing backdoors.

    The EFF is particularly concerned Apple’s new system could be broadened to include speech, or virtually anything, governments may not approve of. While there is certainly a concern the system could be abused that way, it’s also a far cry from using an on-device method for screening something as vile as CSAM vs using it to monitor speech.

    In many ways, Apple’s new approach to combatting CSAM is somewhat similar to its approach to combatting malware. There have been times in the past when Apple took the liberty of proactively removing particularly dangerous malware from devices. Critics could argue that Apple could extend that, at the behest of governments, to removing any programs deemed offense. But that hasn’t happened. Why? Because there’s a big difference between removing malware and censoring applications.

    The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children, admittedly a critic of end-to-end encryption, praised Apple’s decision.

    “With so many people using Apple products, these new safety measures have lifesaving potential for children who are being enticed online and whose horrific images are being circulated in child sexual abuse material,” John Clark, chief executive of the NCMEC, said in a statement, via Reuters. “The reality is that privacy and child protection can co-exist.”

    Ultimately, only time will tell if Apple has struck the right balance between privacy and child protection. It’s worth noting Microsoft, Google and Facebook already have similar systems in place, but Apple believes its system offers significant benefits in the realm of privacy.

    In addition to going a long way toward protecting children, it’s also possible Apple’s willingness to make this concession will disarm one of the biggest arguments against end-to-end encryption, preserving the technology against legislative action.

  • Facebook Bans Researchers Investigating It

    Facebook Bans Researchers Investigating It

    Facebook is taking action, that appears to be retaliatory, against researchers that are investigating it.

    Researchers from New York University have been investigating how political advertising money is spent on the social media platform and shed a light on disinformation. The researchers created a browser plug-in that allowed users to capture ads they saw and post the data to a public database.

    Facebook has since blocked the researchers, claiming they are breaking the company’s Terms of Service by scraping data, saying so in a blog post:

    Today, we disabled the accounts, apps, Pages and platform access associated with NYU’s Ad Observatory Project and its operators after our repeated attempts to bring their research into compliance with our Terms. NYU’s Ad Observatory project studied political ads using unauthorized means to access and collect data from Facebook, in violation of our Terms of Service. We took these actions to stop unauthorized scraping and protect people’s privacy in line with our privacy program under the FTC Order. 

    There’s only one problem with Facebook’s stance: The data NYU’s browser plug-in captures is not from private individuals, but from ad companies whose ads are already publicly available — they wouldn’t be very effective ads if they weren’t.

    Facebook’s actions are already drawing criticism, with its actions being seen as a poorly veiled attempt to silence its critics. The result has been calls for increased scrutiny, including from no less that Senator Ron Wyden, well-known for his staunch pro-privacy stance.

  • Zoom Settles Class Action Privacy Lawsuit for $85 Million

    Zoom Settles Class Action Privacy Lawsuit for $85 Million

    Zoom has agreed to settle a class action privacy suit for $85 million over missteps the company made early in the pandemic.

    Few companies have benefited as much or become so synonymous with pandemic-fueled remote work and learning as Zoom. Once a company that focused priorly on the enterprise, Zoom has become a household name, used across industries and demographics.

    Unfortunately, its meteoric growth came with some major growing pains. The company overstated the level of encryption it provided; it used an SDK that sent data to Facebook without users’ permission; and it failed to provide the necessary security to prevent Zoom-bombing. The missteps were severe enough to prompt the company to enact a 90-day moratorium on new features until security issues could be addressed.

    The company was the target of a number of lawsuits over the missteps, lawsuits which were consolidated into a single class action suit. Zoom has now agreed to settle and make changes to improve its security even more, according to ZDNet.

    Among the changes the company will make is improved notifications to better inform users when a host uses a third-party application, as well as inform users who can access user information and content.

    The plaintiffs are also requesting their legal fees be paid, which would add an additional $21.25 million to the settlement.

  • Invisibly Launches Platform to Help People Control and Monetize Their Data

    Invisibly Launches Platform to Help People Control and Monetize Their Data

    Invisibly is looking to disrupt the advertising industry, launching a platform that puts people in control of their data.

    The advertising industry is in a state of flux, as privacy has become thefront-and-center issue for many consumers, regulators and companies. Apple’s recent moves with App Tracking Transparency (ATT) has been seen as particularly devastating to the advertising industry, by giving people a choice about whether to be tracked.

    Invisibly is taking that a step further, putting people in control of their own data and putting them in a position to benefit from the monetization of it. Founder and CEO Jim McKelvey, also co-founder of Square, sees this is as the perfect time for Invisibly to make its mark.

    “It’s time we enable people to take back control of their data,” Dr. Don Vaughn Ph.D., Head of Product at Invisibly says. “By creating a platform that lets people make money from their data, we’re not only educating people on how valuable their data is, we’re telling big tech it’s time to change the way things are done, and time to start fairly compensating people for the data they regularly profit from.”

    “Right now people can make a few dollars a month from sharing their data on our platform, but within the next couple of years, we hope that people will be able to earn around $1,000 per year from Invisibly,” Vaughn continues. “We believe that data licensing will be a powerful new source of passive income for people and are excited to help the industry change to a 100% consumer-consented data model that people are fairly compensated for.”

    The platform is now in beta. Those interested in participating can sign up at www.invisibly.com.

  • FTC May Target Google and Facebook’s Data and Algorithms

    FTC May Target Google and Facebook’s Data and Algorithms

    The Federal Trade Commission may target Google and Facebook’s data, and the algorithms they rely on, as part of a larger antitrust crackdown.

    Big Tech has been under increased scrutiny around the world, with regulators in the US and EU poised to take aggressive action to tackle antitrust issues. Google and Facebook, in particular, are facing some of the most intense scrutiny, and are already fending off lawsuits.

    The FTC may have one of the most novel solutions, and the one that should terrify Google and Facebook the most. FTC Chief Technologist Erie Meyer said companies that abuse privacy and collect user data illegally could be forced to pay fines, disclose data and turn over “algorithms that were juiced by ill-gotten data,” reports the Washington Examiner.

    The latter penalty should be especially concerning to both companies, as well as any other data-driven platforms. The algorithms companies use are often some of their most well-guarded secrets. When the US was trying to pressure ByteDance to sell TikTok, one of the issues that torpedoed a sale was China classifying algorithms — such as the one TikTok uses to drive engagement — as sensitive information that could not be exported. Indeed, much of TikTok’s success is believed to be the result of the algorithm it uses.

    If losing algorithms is on the table as a possible penalty, it may well be the single biggest motivation for Big Tech to straighten up and get its act together.

  • DuckDuckGo Testing Email Protection Service

    DuckDuckGo Testing Email Protection Service

    DuckDuckGo is testing a new email protection feature, designed to combat email trackers.

    Many emails, up to 70% of them in fact, contain trackers that tell the sender when, where and on what device the email was opened. The data is also used to build profiles, to coordinate with other ad services, such as those on websites.

    DuckDuckGo is looking to challenge this with its new Email Protectionservice.

    We’re excited to announce the beta release of DuckDuckGo’s Email Protection. Our free email forwarding service removes email trackers and protects the privacy of your personal email address without asking you to change email services or apps.

    Users sign up for an @duck.com email address and use it as the address they give out to others. DuckDuckGo strips out any trackers from emails sent to the address, and then forward it on to the person’s main address — all without saving anything.

    The service sounds like an excellent option for privacy-conscious users, made by a company that has built its reputation on protecting user privacy.

    The service is currently in beta. Those interested can sign up via the iOS or Android DuckDuckGo app by selecting Settings > Beta Features > Email Protection > Join the Private Waitlist.

  • Huawei Sees Cloud Success Wooing Government Buyers

    Huawei Sees Cloud Success Wooing Government Buyers

    Huawei is seeing early success with its pivot to cloud computing, despite concerns about the potential security threat it poses.

    Huawei was one of the leading telecom firms in the world, making a popular line of smartphones and leading the industry in wireless network equipment. The company increasingly found itself under scrutiny from governments and intelligence agencies around the world, with concerns it provided an avenue for Beijing to spy on others.

    The US, in particular, took an aggressive stance against the Chinese firm, banning it from networks and pressuring allies to do the same. Around the world, countries followed suit, excluding Huawei from 5G rollouts, or explicitly banning it altogether. The US also successfully cut the firm off from much of its semiconductor supply, putting its smartphone business in jeopardy.

    Huawei began pivoting to other businesses, including cloud computing, in an effort to diversify and offset its losses. It appears the strategy is paying off, as governments around the world are embracing the company’s cloud offerings.

    According to a report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Reconnecting Asia Project, developing economies and emerging markets are especially welcoming of Huawei.

    Emerging markets focus: The majority of deals (57 percent) are in countries that are middle-income and partly-free or not free. Africa leads the way with 36 percent of deals, followed by Asia (20 percent), the Americas (17 percent), Europe (17 percent), and the Middle East (10 percent).

    It appears Huawei is finding success bundling its services as part of a larger package, including giving customers access to funding from Chinese banks.

    Effective sales pitch: Huawei promises major commercial benefits to prospective customers, usually packages the delivery of hard infrastructure with services (60 percent of deals), and harnesses financing from Chinese policy banks to sweeten offers (nearly all deals for which financing could be identified).

    Interestingly, although perhaps not surprisingly, many of the countries embracing Huawei are ones that are considered “not free” or “partly free.”

    Non-liberal: 77 percent of deals are located in countries that are considered either “not free” (34 percent) or “partly free” (43 percent) according to Freedom House ratings.

    Huawei is clearly looking to achieve a degree of immunity from sanctions and bans from the West. It appears to have found a niche that is allowing it to do just that.

  • France Clears Microsoft and Google’s Cloud Technology for Sensitive Data

    France Clears Microsoft and Google’s Cloud Technology for Sensitive Data

    France has decided Google and Microsoft’s cloud technology can be used for sensitive data — with caveats.

    As cloud computing becomes more important to organizations around the globe, there is a growing concern about the risk of US surveillance of cloud data. The EU, in particular, has increasingly looked with suspicion and distrust at US providers.

    France appears to have come up with a solution, clearing Microsoft and Google’s technology for use in sensitive applications, according to Reuters. France will allow the companies’ technology to be used as part of a homegrown solution, as long as the servers are operated on EU soil and the companies storing and processing the data are European-owned.

    “We therefore decided that the best companies – I’m thinking in particular of Microsoft or Google – could license all or part of their technology to French companies,” said French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire.

    Companies that help create solutions meeting France’s requirements will receive a “trustworthy cloud” label.

    “We… hope that other Franco-American alliances will emerge in this area, which will allow us to have the best technology while guaranteeing the independence of French data,” said Minister for Digital Affairs Cedric O.

  • Google Sued for Allegedly Selling User Data

    Google Sued for Allegedly Selling User Data

    Google is facing another privacy-related lawsuit, this time for allegedly doing something the company promised it would never do: sell user data.

    The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Jose, and seeking class-action status, claims that Google is reneging on promises CEO Sundar Pichai made in a New York Times op-ed. In that article, Pichai said: “Google will never sell any personal information to third parties; and that you get to decide how your information is used.”

    According to Mercury News, the plaintiffs point to Google’s long history of privacy abuses and claim the company is “continually and surreptitiously” selling data via its digital ad “real-time bidding” system. In particular, while some companies are using the system as intended, the lawsuits claims others are siphoning off data for their own uses.

    “Many participants do not place bids and only participate to conduct surveillance and collect ever more detailed data points about millions of Google’s consumers,” the suit claims.

    The lawsuit is the latest scrutiny Google is facing for how it handles and administers the gargantuan amount of data it collects. Should the suit gain class-action status, it will only add to the company’s headaches.

  • Microsoft Will Keep EU Data in the EU

    Microsoft Will Keep EU Data in the EU

    Microsoft has upped its commitment to EU data privacy, promising to keep EU data within the bloc.

    Data privacy is a bigger concern than ever before, as individuals and lawmakers start holding companies accountable. As part of the shift toward more data responsibility, some jurisdictions have passed legislation requiring companies to take certain steps to protect user data.

    The EU’s GDPR is one of the strictest such laws, providing far more protection than US federal laws currently do. As a result, EU states and citizens have become increasingly concerned about their data being transferred to the US and coming under the scope of US surveillance efforts.

    Microsoft is working to address those concerns, promising it will go beyond existing agreements and keep EU data within the bloc. Brad Smith, President and Chief Legal Officer, announced the pledge on the company’s blog.

    Today we are announcing a new pledge for the European Union. If you are a commercial or public sector customer in the EU, we will go beyond our existing data storage commitments and enable you to process and store all your data in the EU. In other words, we will not need to move your data outside the EU. This commitment will apply across all of Microsoft’s core cloud services – Azure, Microsoft 365, and Dynamics 365. We are beginning work immediately on this added step, and we will complete by the end of next year the implementation of all engineering work needed to execute on it. We’re calling this plan the EU Data Boundary for the Microsoft Cloud.

    The new step we’re taking builds on our already strong portfolio of solutions and commitments that protect our customers’ data, and we hope today’s update is another step toward responding to customers that want even greater data residency commitments. We will continue to consult with customers and regulators about this plan in the coming months, including adjustments that are needed in unique circumstances like cybersecurity, and we will move forward in a way that is responsive to their feedback.

    While individual states have passed privacy laws, there have been increasing calls for for the US to address the issue on a federal level. Microsoft’s pledge, along with the increased challenges of doing business in the EU, will likely add increased pressure for measurable change.

  • Facebook and Instagram Try to Scare iOS Users Into Accepting Tracking

    Facebook and Instagram Try to Scare iOS Users Into Accepting Tracking

    Facebook and Instagram are resorting to scare tactics to convince iOS users to allow the companies to track them.

    The latest version of iOS 14 forces apps to ask for permission before tracking users. Apple has framed the feature in the context of protecting user privacy and, just as importantly, giving users control over their own data and how it is used. As a company that charges for the vast majority of its products and services, Apple does not view its customers as the product, and doesn’t need to sell its users’ data to make money.

    In contrast, Facebook, Instagram and other social media companies view their users as their main product, profiting off the wholesale monetization of their data. Facebook has made no bones about its opposition to Apple’s latest iOS privacy move, and is now resorting to scare tactics to convince iOS users to give them permission to track them and continue profiting off of them.

    In the most recent notification asking for permission, Facebook and Instagram’s iOS apps imply that, without permission to track, the apps may not remain free. Ashkan Soltani, a technology reporter and former Obama White House advisor, was the first to report on the change.

  • Roku Loses YouTube TV App

    Roku Loses YouTube TV App

    Roku has officially lost the YouTube TV app, after previously warning its customers of the possibility.

    Roku warned customers earlier this week they could lose access to YouTube TV due to a contract dispute. Unlike many contract disputes, money was not the issue. Instead, Google was more interested in customer data than more money.

    “We are disappointed that Google has allowed our agreement for the distribution of YouTube TV to expire,” a Roku spokesperson told WebProNews. “Roku has not asked for one dollar of additional financial consideration from Google to renew YouTube TV.”

    Much of the issue hinged around Google’s data practices, with Roku endeavoring to protect its customers from the search giant.

    “We have only asked Google for four simple commitments,” the spokesperson continued. “First, not to manipulate consumer search results. Second, not to require access to data not available to anyone else. Third, not to leverage their YouTube monopoly to force Roku to accept hardware requirements that would increase consumer costs. Fourth, not to act in a discriminatory and anticompetitive manner against Roku.”

    Given the scrutiny Google is already under, playing hardball with Roku is not a good look for the company, and may create further problems down the road.

  • User Data at Heart of Roku and Google/YouTube TV Dispute

    User Data at Heart of Roku and Google/YouTube TV Dispute

    Roku has accused Google of “predatory, anti-competitive and discriminatory” actions regarding its YouTube TV streaming service.

    Roku is the number one streaming platform in the US, making it a major factor in the success of TV streaming services. Meanwhile, Google’s YouTube TV has quickly become one of the most popular cable TV alternatives.

    According to Deadline, however, Roku is warning its customers they may not be able to access YouTube TV in the near future. While many disputes in the industry are often the result of money, Roku says Google is not asking for “a single additional dollar in value” in the current negotiations.

    Instead, Roku says Google is “attempting to use its YouTube monopoly position to force Roku into accepting predatory, anti-competitive and discriminatory terms that will directly harm Roku and our users.” In particular, Deadline reports Roku is accusing Google of trying to “manipulate the user experience to siphon data and tilt search results in YouTube’s favor,” with the company more interested in customer data than charging Roku more.

    In addition, Google may require Roku to upgrade its devices with more powerful chips to accommodate YouTube TV, something that would be a costly endeavor.

    It is not clear when the issue will come to a head and potentially disrupt service, although the end of April is a strong possibility, as it coincides with many media contract deadlines.

  • Huawei Could Monitor Calls on One of the Largest Dutch Wireless Networks

    Huawei Could Monitor Calls on One of the Largest Dutch Wireless Networks

    Huawei is facing accusations that it had the access and ability to monitor all the calls made on KPN’s wireless network, one of the largest in the Netherlands.

    Huawei has been facing accusations for years that it serves as a conduit for Beijing to spy on governments and companies around the world. The US ultimately banned the Chinese firm from participating in its networks, and many of its allies did the same.

    Dutch newspaper De Volkskrant saw a confidential report prepared for KPN in 2010 by the Capgemini consultancy firm. According to The Guardian, the report found that Huawei and China could have monitored calls by then prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende, as well as Chinese dissidents.

    KPN has downplayed the report, saying it “never observed that Huawei took client information.” At the same time, it did acknowledge that one of its suppliers had “unauthorised, uncontrolled or unlimited access to our networks and systems”.

    The report was originally commissioned after the Dutch intelligence service warned of potential espionage. Despite the findings, KPN continued to use Huawei for its 3G and 4G deployments, although it excluded the company from its 5G network.

    The report concluded that the findings put “the continued existence of KPN Mobile in serious danger” since customers “may lose confidence … if it becomes known the Chinese government can monitor KPN mobile numbers.”

    It remains to be seen what fallout KPN may still face now that the report has become public.