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Tech is reshaping the world — and not always for the better. Whether it’s the rules for Apple’s App Store or Facebook’s plan for fighting misinformation, tech platform policies can have enormous ripple effects on the rest of society. They’re so powerful that, increasingly, companies aren’t setting them alone but sharing the fight with government regulators, civil society groups, and internal standards bodies like Meta’s Oversight Board. The result is an ongoing political struggle over harassment, free speech, copyright, and dozens of other issues, all mediated through some of the largest and most chaotic electronic spaces the world has ever seen.

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Reddit now lets you opt out of political ads.

It’s one of a few updates the company shared in a post how it will support Reddit communities during elections. Reddit also plans to release an “after-election report” in Q1 2025 about how things went on the platform and is experimenting with a dedicated tip line for moderators to escalate election-related concerns.


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WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich was released in a prisoner swap with Russia.

Gershkovich, who had been sentenced to 16 years in prison, was released Thursday along with Paul Whelan, Alsu Kurmasheva, Vladimir Kara-Murza, and twelve others.

The Wall Street Journal reports the exchange involved “24 prisoners and at least six countries,” including Vadim Krasikov, who was serving a life sentence in Germany for shooting and killing a Chechen rebel leader in a Berlin park.


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The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has hired its first Chief AI Officer.

This was mandated for all federal agencies back in March, so expect more of these kinds of announcements.

CISA’s general ambit means this hire is a tad bit more significant than the average Chief AI Officer — the agency deals with foreign influence operations and election cybersecurity, for instance. (In 2020, the agency’s head was yeeted by Trump for saying that the election had in fact been safe and secure.)


CISA Names First Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer | CISA

[Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA]

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Thiel protege Blake Masters loses his primary race.

Masters last ran (and lost) against Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ) for his senate seat; this cycle he was angling for a House seat in Arizona.

The other notable Peter-Thiel-protege-turned-politician is, of course, JD Vance, the Republican nominee for vice president.


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The Supreme Court came pretty close to making it impossible to moderate platforms.

CNN has a rare inside look at the Supreme Court deliberations that led to the (bad!) Texas and Florida social media regulations being put on hold and sent back to the lower courts to figure out how they would affect other kinds of websites and services. It almost went the other way, until Samuel Alito went too far in his first draft and Amy Coney Barrett flipped, eventually joining the 6-3 majority opinion.

[Alito] questioned whether any of the platforms’ content-moderation could be considered “expressive” activity under the First Amendment.

Barrett, a crucial vote as the case played out, believed some choices regarding content indeed reflected editorial judgments protected by the First Amendment. She became persuaded by Kagan, but she also wanted to draw lines between the varying types of algorithms platforms use.

The ruling is already having an impact on other moderation cases.


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Trump is definitely not being weird at the National Association of Black Journalists Convention.

You can watch all 34 minutes of the interview here.


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Senators will introduce the No Fakes Act to keep AI companies from copying your voice or appearance.

Sens. Chris Coons (D-DE) and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) updated their discussion draft that seeks to prevent debacles like that between Scarlett Johansson and OpenAI. It’s gained the support of SAG-AFTRA and the Recording Industry Association, but the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which counts tech companies among its donors, previously raised concerns that the draft bill was overly broad.


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Kamala Harris supports KOSA.

The vice president and likely Democratic presidential nominee applauded the Senate’s vote to pass the Kids Online Safety Act and urged full passage through Congress.


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The DOJ enters its defense of the TikTok ban-or-divest law.

A month after TikTok made its First Amendment case against a potential ban, lawyers for the government responded Friday. The partially redacted filings (available in full here) include their arguments that the Chinese government could use data collected by the app or manipulate its algorithm to influence US elections.

One example pointed to search tools for the company’s internal Lark messaging tool, shown below.


At least as of 2022, Lark contained multiple internal search tools that had been developed and run by China-based ByteDance engineers for scraping TikTok user data, including U.S. user data. f. (U) One of those tools allowed ByteDance and TikTok employees in the United States and China to collect bulk user information based on the user’s content or expressions, including views on gun control, abortion, and religion. 
Screenshot: Document #01208647195, TikTok v. Merrick Garland
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Apple signs onto The White House’s AI commitments.

It’s the latest company to commit to The White House’s voluntary AI agreement, which promotes the safe and responsible development of AI. OpenAI, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Meta, Adobe, Nvidia, and others already signed onto the agreement last year.


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Kamala Harris just joined TikTok.

As the fervor among Democrats surrounding her still-new presidential campaign continues, Vice President Kamala Harris has now joined TikTok.

“I’ve heard that recently I’ve been on the For You page, so I thought I would get on here myself,” she says in the clip.

Harris has previously expressed national security concerns about TikTok parent company ByteDance, but also said the Biden administration has “no intention to ban TikTok.”


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New York governor weighs in on KOSA vote.

Democratic Governor Kathy Hochul recently signed the state’s own laws to protect kids online, exemplifying how states have been the first to move on this kind of legislation. Hochul said in a statement that when she signed those bills, “we were sending a message to the nation. Now, I’m excited to see the Senate take steps to help safeguard more young people nationwide.”


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KOSA and COPPA 2.0 pass procedural vote threshold.

The bill they’re contained in passed the 60 vote threshold to close debate, but the Senate must still vote to fully pass it. Schumer indicated that could happen early next week. Should it pass, it goes to the House – but that could take a while considering members are leaving early for summer recess.


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Schumer anticipates Senate passage of KOSA and COPPA 2.0 “early next week.”

“Once the Senate clears today’s procedural vote, KOSA and COPPA will be on a glide path to final passage early next week,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said ahead of the cloture vote, which closes debate and sets up the bills for a full vote.


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KOSA is tucked into a bill called the “Eliminate Useless Reports Act.”

That bill is being used as the vehicle for KOSA and COPPA 2.0. They’re basically tucked in as an amendment to this unrelated bill that deals with duplicative reporting requirements for federal agencies.


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Sen. Marsha Blackburn lists what KOSA is not.

The Tennessee Republican, another of the bill’s lead sponsors, began her remarks with what KOSA doesn’t do. It doesn’t cover nonprofits, it doesn’t include rule-making, it doesn’t include news outlets, and it doesn’t give the government new authority, she said.


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Sen. Richard Blumenthal objects to Paul’s “mischaracterization” of KOSA.

“There’s no censorship in this bill. None. Zero,” the Connecticut Democrat who’s the bill’s lead sponsor said on the Senate floor. “It is about product design. Much as it would be about a car that is unsafe and is required to have seatbelts and airbags.”


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Sen. Rand Paul makes the case for KOSA opponents: “It is content, not design, that this bill will regulate.”

The Kentucky Republican said the bill “promises to be pandora’s box of unintended consequences.” He added that “there’s enough to hate this bill from the right and left,” describing, for example, how discussion of sexuality, climate change, and abortion could cause anxiety, which the duty of care mandates platforms try to mitigate.


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Meta may be facing its first EU antitrust fine.

Reuters reports that Meta could be slapped with fines as high as $13.4 billion for tying classified advertisements service Marketplace with its Facebook social network.

The ruling, which is expected in the coming weeks, would come over 18 months since the European Commission accused Meta of “abusive practices” that enabled it to distort competition in the online classified ads market.


How the Supreme Court’s Chevron ruling could doom net neutrality

The court struck down Chevron deference last month. That’s a big deal for the future of net neutrality.