Sabtu, 13 Juli 2019

Facebook Dodged a Bullet From the F.T.C. It Faces Many More. - The New York Times

LONDON — After Facebook was hit on Friday with a fine of around $5 billion for privacy violations, critics immediately said it escaped largely unscathed: The settlement neither bruised its bottom line nor severely restricted its ability to collect people’s data.

Yet even if the Silicon Valley company dodged that bullet, its pain was just beginning.

Regulators and lawmakers in Washington, Europe and in countries including Canada have already begun multiple investigations and proposing new restrictions against Facebook that will probably embroil it in policy debates and legal wrangling for years to come. And in some of these places, the authorities are increasingly coordinating to form a more united front against the company.

In the United States, the potential for a federal antitrust investigation looms, several state attorneys general have initiated investigations of the company, and members of Congress are considering a federal privacy law and other restrictions. Not to mention that President Trump has turned up the heat on Facebook and other tech behemoths, including on Friday when he said that the platforms were “dishonest” and “crooked” and that “something is going to be done.”

That momentum will be on display this coming week on Capitol Hill. On Tuesday, the House Judiciary subcommittee on antitrust plans to hold a hearing featuring executives from Facebook, Apple, Amazon and Google about the power of the firms. That same day, the Senate Banking Committee is scheduled to hear from David Marcus, a top Facebook executive, on the company’s new Libra cryptocurrency project, which lawmakers have criticized and questioned.

In Europe, Facebook faces sanctions for breaking the region’s strict privacy laws, and the European Commission is in the early stages of an antitrust investigation against the company. In Britain, where a parliamentary report this year labeled Facebook “digital gangsters,” officials are writing new competition and social media laws, and regulators have started a broad antitrust inquiry targeted at Facebook and Google. France is also considering new penalties against the social network if hate speech and other harmful content is not removed within 24 hours.

And Australia, Japan, India, New Zealand and Singapore are either considering or have passed new rules against big internet platforms. Since 2016, at least 43 countries have passed or introduced regulations targeting social media and the spread of misinformation, according to Oxford University researchers.

“The debate has shifted,” said Tommaso Valletti, a professor at Imperial College Business School and the chief economist for the European Commission’s antitrust division. “The right question is not whether to intervene, but what kind of intervention do we need.”

For Facebook, these global fights could sting more than the F.T.C. decision and its $5 billion fine. While that amount would be a record penalty by the federal government against a technology company, it represents just a fraction of Facebook’s $56 billion in annual revenue. And while the F.T.C. also moved to increase oversight of how Facebook handles user data, none of the conditions in the settlement would impose strict limits on the company’s ability to collect and share data with third parties.

Yet governments and regulators can still potentially force the social media company to change how it conducts business through new laws and restrictions — a damaging outcome that Microsoft and other large companies have faced in the past. Already, Facebook has put huge amounts of time and resources into pushing back against tougher privacy, antitrust and hate speech rules, even as it has publicly expressed openness toward more regulation.

Facebook said in a statement on Saturday that, “by updating the rules for the internet, we can preserve what’s best about it.” The company added, “We want to work with governments and policymakers to design the sort of smart regulation that fosters competition, encourages innovation and protects consumers.”

Facebook is the centerpiece of a broader reckoning facing the tech industry, with governments beginning to collaborate in their response. The European Commission has shared information with the F.T.C. and the Justice Department about its past investigations into Google. And this spring, Ireland’s top privacy regulator, who has been investigating Facebook and Google, met with officials in Washington.

In May, an annual meeting of antitrust regulators from around the world turned into a four-day strategy session focused on the tech industry. Joseph Simons, the head of the F.T.C., and Makan Delrahim, the assistant attorney general overseeing antitrust at the Justice Department, were among those who attended the event in Colombia.

“It’s good news that the U.S. agencies are diving into this discussion,” said Andreas Mundt, Germany’s top antitrust enforcer, who helped organize the meeting and in February issued one of the first antitrust rulings against Facebook. “It’s clear these are companies that are active worldwide and thus a worldwide approach is not a bad idea.”

Mr. Mundt and other regulators believe that actions against Facebook and its industry peers must go beyond fines. Instead, many authorities want to force structural changes to how the businesses operate — like their collection of data and sale of digital advertising.

After the F.T.C. decision, Facebook’s next sanctions are expected to come from Europe, where the authorities have traditionally been more assertive against the tech industry than American regulators.

Ireland’s data-protection office has 11 investigations underway against Facebook for violations of European privacy law, the General Data Protection Regulation, or G.D.P.R. (Ireland has jurisdiction over Facebook under the privacy law because the company’s European headquarters is in Dublin.) At least two verdicts against the company are likely in the coming months.

“Facebook has powers that were previously poorly understood,” Helen Dixon, head of the Irish data commission, said in an interview. She declined to comment on specific Facebook cases, but said, “It’s up to us as regulators to enforce where we see accountability hasn’t been demonstrated.”

France is debating a sweeping new law that would require Facebook and other large internet platforms to prevent the spread of hate speech and other harmful content or risk fines. Germany has already enacted a similar law. In Britain, a similar measure is under consideration, as well as tougher competition rules that would create a new digital regulator and potentially require Facebook to make some of its data available to competitors.

Some academics and free speech advocates have raised concerns that in a rush to limit Facebook’s power, governments are drafting policies with unintended consequences. Human rights groups were alarmed by proposals in Singapore and India to give the government new powers to censor content on social media.

“They are all very reactionary,” said Samantha Bradshaw, a doctoral student and researcher at the Oxford Internet Institute who has been tracking government actions against Facebook and others. “I haven’t seen any proposals that really get to these systemic-level challenges about the algorithms, the data collection, and the privacy.”

What specific policies Facebook will accept remains unclear. In many places, the company has fought back against the regulatory and legal onslaught.

Ms. Dixon of the Irish data commission said Facebook has tried to stall her investigations by raising questions and challenges. The social network is “asking constantly for extensions,” she said. “There have been quite a few testy exchanges. Once you have a law with a very big stick” that can be used “against a very big company, they are going to seek to protect their interests at every turn.”

In Germany, Facebook is appealing an antitrust ruling that would prevent it from sharing data with its other apps, such as Instagram and WhatsApp, as well as websites that use the “like” and “share” buttons. It is simultaneously fighting elements of the French and British proposals regarding hate speech, saying they place too much responsibility on the company to judge what is acceptable online content.

Facebook and other tech giants also oppose a European Union proposal to toughen privacy rules for communications platforms like WhatsApp and Messenger.

In Australia, lobbyists were dispatched to battle antitrust proposals intended to limit Facebook and Google’s market power. And Canadian authorities are taking Facebook to court after the company refused to change its data-collection practices.

“They have softened their message toward the public, but ultimately they are trying to avoid as much binding regulation on them as possible,” said Margarida Silva, a researcher with Corporate Europe Observatory, a group that tracks lobbying in Europe.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/13/technology/facebook-privacy-investigations.html

2019-07-13 16:50:35Z
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Amazon Prime Day is every day for Amazon.com - Quartz

Did you hear? Amazon Prime Day is coming! It’s almost here! Two days of epic deals! More than one million products on sale! The robots are readying! Lady Gaga is headlining!

Amazon Prime Day, for the uninitiated, is Amazon’s annual blow-out shopping event. Amazon first tried out Prime Day in July 2015, to mark its 20th birthday. The shopping holiday is a consummate American experience—think Black Friday, after-Christmas sales—and Amazon, two decades into the retail game, felt confident it could create one all its own.

“Step Aside Black Friday – Meet Prime Day,” read Amazon’s press release introducing the event.

The first Prime Day was a success, of course. Amazon was a giant—the giant—of online retail, and when it declared a shopping holiday, people paid attention. Over the past four years, Prime Day has grown from an Amazon-led festivity to summer’s biggest shopping event. Other retailers, eager or perhaps desperate to compete, have launched counter-programming, and in doing so legitimized Prime Day more than Amazon ever could.

This year Target, Best Buy, and Walmart are among the retailers entering the fray, with deals on everything from swimsuits to laptops to vacuum cleaners that run before, during, and after Prime Day. “Amazon Prime Day is no longer just about Amazon,” says Michelle Skupin, a spokesperson for coupons site RetailMeNot. “Amazon Prime Day is no longer just about Amazon,” says Michelle Skupin, a spokesperson for coupons site RetailMeNot.

Prime Day is still mostly about Amazon. Investment firm Cowen estimates 63 million US households, or half of all households in the country, subscribe to Prime, Amazon’s $119-a-year membership that includes free two-day shipping, streaming music, streaming video, and unlimited photo storage, among other perks. More than two-thirds of those Prime households plan to shop on Amazon for Prime Day(s) 2019, according to market research firm The NPD Group, compared to 15% who plan to check out deals from both Amazon and other retailers.

More to the point, every day is Prime Day for Amazon. The company commands 47% of US retail e-commerce sales, according to industry researcher e-Marketer, nearly eight times the share of e-Bay, Amazon’s closest competitor. While the rest of retail is still scrambling to compete on free two-day shipping, Amazon plans to make one-day delivery standard.

Since Amazon launched its first Prime Day its quarterly sales have more than doubled.

Prime Day isn’t really about the one million product sales or that new line of Lady Gaga cosmetics. It’s the illusion that for online shopping to be all about Amazon is a special event, rather than the norm. When Prime Day ends, 63 million US households will still have their Prime memberships pulling them back to Amazon.com, where the perks and deals last all year long.

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https://qz.com/1665390/amazon-prime-day-is-every-day-for-amazon-com/

2019-07-13 16:33:00Z
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Amazon Prime Day Deals Start Today (Yes Today) Act Now to Get a $24.99 Fire TV Stick 4K & $29.99 Fire Tablets - Cord Cutters News, LLC

Amazon Prime Day won’t officially start until Monday, July 15th but that has not stopped Amazon from offering early deals. Starting today if you asked your Amazon Alexa smart speaker what “whats my deals” you will be able to get early access to some Prime Day deals. When I asked my Alexa what my deals are it offered me a $22 Echo Dot along with a $29.99 Fire 7 Tablet to name a few of the deals. All of the deals my Amazon Echo offered ended up being cheaper than the listing on Amazon.com

Update: Amazon is offering the Fire TV Stick 4K on sale for $24.99 (typically $49.99) through Echo speakers. Keep asking for more deals until your Echo offers you the $24.99 Amazon Fire TV Stick 4K. (This deal will likely be live on Amaozn.com tomorrow.)

One warning when you look at these deals in your Amazon Orders page it will still show the item at full price. If you click on the Order Details you will see the Order summary listing the discounted price. Example:

Amazon has also announced that starting on Sunday, July 14th select Prime Day deals will go live on Amazon.com early.

Wondering what you should expect from Prime Day 2019? Here are all the deals Amazon has announced so far:

Amazon Devices

Electronics

Video Games

Smart Home

Household Essentials

Fashion

 

Home & Kitchen

Home Improvement 

Major Appliances

Amazon Brands and Exclusives

Beauty, Health & Personal Care

Toys & Baby Products

 Sports & Outdoors

Automotive, Tools, Lawn & Garden

Did you know we have a YouTube Channel? Every week we have a live Cord Cutting Q&A, and weekly Cord Cutting recap shows exclusively on our YouTube Channel!

Please follow us on Facebook and Twitter for more news, tips, and reviews. Need cord cutting tech support? Join our Cord Cutting Tech Support Facebook Group for help.

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https://www.cordcuttersnews.com/amazon-prime-day-deals-start-today-yes-today-act-now-to-get-a-24-99-fire-tv-stick-4k-29-99-fire-tablets/

2019-07-13 13:48:00Z
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Facebook's $5B FTC fine was so laughable its stock price went UP after the announcement - Boing Boing

In 2011, the US Federal Trade Commission put Facebook under consent decree after the company "deceived consumers by telling them they could keep their information on Facebook private, and then repeatedly [allowed] it to be shared and made public."

The way the FTC generally works is that if it catches a company doing something terrible, it issues one of these "consent decrees" which amount to, "don't do it again, or we'll take the company away."

But Facebook did it again. Hard. And rather than shutting Facebook down, the FTC fined them $5B, which may sound like a lot, it's only about 30% of the revenue from a single quarter and less than a quarter of the company's annual profits. It's basically a license fee for criminality, a tax on lawbreaking that allows the company to retain the vast majority of its profits from criminal activities.

And the street knows it. After the FTC announced the fine, Facebook's share price went up.

And as Peter Kafka notes, regulatory compliance costs aren’t exactly a deterrent either: Facebook will pay the fine, eat the cost of a few more lawyers and PR people to ensure compliance with this new order, and carry on with the business of, uh, issuing a new worldwide currency while exposing underpaid contractors to horrifying videos of people being murdered for $15 an hour.

Facebook’s $5 billion FTC fine is an embarrassing joke [Nilay Patel/The Verge]

(Image: Jason McELweenie, CC-BY, modified) ,



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July 13, 2019 at 11:09AM

Analysts Warning: Don't Expect Much From Gold Next Week - Kitco News

(Kitco News) - Next week will be a test of endurance for gold bulls, as they wait to see if prices can hold above $1,400 an ounce in what is expected to be a relatively quiet week.

According to some analysts, an impending rate cut at the end of the month provides some support for the yellow metal in the next few weeks, but there are no significant factors on the horizon to change the fundamental backdrop in financial markets and provide new momentum to the precious metal.

"It's been a rollercoaster week for gold, so it's not surprising that we see some investors take some profits off the table," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.

The gold market is seeing decent gains for the week with prices holding above critical psychological support at $1,400 an ounce. Gold got a boost mid-week after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, in his semi-annual testimony before Congress, all but confirmed a rate cut on July 31. August gold futures last traded at $1,418.60 an ounce, up more than 1% since last Friday.

However, analysts said that gold's rally is now pricing in July's rate cut and the market needs some new information to make another leg higher in the near-term. Hansen added that investors shouldn't expect to see much action in the next few weeks as the summer trading season kicks in.

He added that because of low market activity, he expects near-term profit taking to weigh on gold.

"The reasons for holding gold haven't gone away, but I think we could start to see some nervous longs in the marketplace as the price struggles to make a new high," he said. "If I'm selling, it's not to sell short; but I'm selling to reduce my exposure to neutral."

Colin Cieszynski, chief market strategist at SIA Wealth Management, said that gold prices have seen substantial gains recently, so it's not surprising to see the market shift into a consolidation phase.

He added that the uptrend still remains in place even if the rally slows in the next few weeks.

It's All About The Fed… Yet Again

While Powell signaled that the U.S. central bank is ready to cut interest rates to support the U.S. economy, some market expectations are starting to shift as to whether the July cut will be a one-and-done move or the start of a new easing cycle.

In a recent interview, KC Chang, precious metal analyst at IHS Markit, said that he sees the July move as an "insurance cut," to provide a little bit more fuel for an already robust U.S. economy.

The CME FedWatch Tool shows that markets are pricing in a more than 75% chance of a 25 basis-point move and a 24.5% chance for a 50 basis-point move on July 31. Markets are still pricing in three rate hikes by the end of the year.

Bill Baruch, president of Blue Line Futures, said that bond yields are pushing higher as markets scale back Federal Reserve monetary policy action.

Cieszynski said that expectations for aggressive monetary policy action could depend on the second quarter earnings season, which starts next week with Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, and JPMorgan all on the earnings docket.

He added that because of slowing global growth, he expects this earnings season to be disappointing.

The U.S. Is Strong, But It Can't Withstand A Global Slowdown

The U.S. economy remains relatively healthy, but Daniel Ghali, commodity strategist at TD Securities, said that the question on a lot of investors’ minds is if the U.S. can be an island in a sea of lower growth, a scenario he sees as unlikely.

Powell said global growth uncertainty is one of the major factors weighing on U.S. growth potential.

"Global growth is not just slowing, but it has contracted in some countries and that will eventually have a big impact on the U.S.," he said.

One nation that is drawing a lot of attention from market watching is Singapore; the nation's economy is highly reliant on trade and early Friday government data said its domestic economy shrank 3.4% on an annual basis, the worst quarter-on-quarter performance since 2012.

"We are comfortable with prices holding above $1,400 an ounce as markets wait for new updates from the Fed following the July meeting," said Ghali.

Debt Is Also A Growing Issue

Weaker global growth is expected to continue to weigh on investor sentiment, but analysts also warn that geopolitical uncertainty is also a factor to keep an eye on.

"With trade tensions dominating the discussion in recent months, concerns surrounding the need to raise the debt ceiling had taken a back seat. But that all changed this week, with a report suggesting the debt ceiling might need to be raised by early September, a month earlier than previously believed," said economists at Capital Economics. "It should be a relatively straightforward task for Congress to agree on a two-year spending deal that also raises the debt ceiling. But anything could happen amid the acrimony between Democrats and the president."

Friday, Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin, warned that the U.S. government could run out of cash by September if Congress doesn't lift the debt ceiling before its August recess.

"We model various scenarios for cash projections. Based on updated projections, there is a scenario in which we run out of cash in early September, before Congress reconvenes," Mnuchin wrote in a letter to Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi.

During his testimony, Powell warned that the U.S. deficit is on an unsustainable path; however, he added that Congress needs to raise the debt ceiling in a timely manner so the nation can meet its obligations.

"To not raise the debt ceiling is unthinkable," he said. "The Fed can't shield the economy if the debt ceiling is not raised."

Record-High Equities Don't Pose a Risk For Gold

Some markets analysts have said that gold could struggle next week, as investors shift their focus to the record-breaking equity markets with the earnings season’s kick off.

However, Hansen said that investors ignore gold in the near-term, as both markets are rallying for the same reason: loose monetary policy.

The S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average both hit record highs this week following the comments from Powell.

"I think you could see gold a bit lower as investors chase dividend-paying stocks, but they will also look to gold to protect their portfolios," said Hansen. "However, for gold to really shine, equities markets need to slow."

The Final Say

The release of next week's retail sales will garner significant focus from investors, as consumer spending has been a significant source of growth for the U.S. economy. Economists note that weaker than expected data could add to further calls for the U.S. Fed to aggressively cut interest rates.

"We estimate that retail sales were little changed in June, but that would still be consistent with real consumption growth rebounding to more than 3% annualized in the second quarter," said economists at Capital Economics.

Along with retail sales, markets will receive regional manufacturing sentiment data as well as housing construction numbers.



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July 13, 2019 at 01:58AM

TSX down, U.S. markets up - Business News - Castanet.net

Canada's main stock index fell in late-morning trading, weighed down by losses in the technology, materials and financial sectors.

The S&P/TSX composite index was down 26.14 points at 16,501.76.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 129.43 points at 27,217.51. The S&P 500 index was up 5.58 points at 3,005.49, while the Nasdaq composite was up 21.55 points at 8,217.59.

The Canadian dollar traded for 76.64 cents US compared with an average of 76.51 cents US on Thursday.

The August crude contract was up 15 cents at US$60.35 per barrel and the August natural gas contract was up 3.6 cents at US$2.45 per mmBTU.

The August gold contract was up US$3.20 at US$1,409.90 an ounce and the September copper contract was down 0.4 of cent at US$2.68 a pound.



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July 12, 2019 at 10:31PM

Report of $5 billion Facebook settlement with FTC draws criticism - Axios

A man walks by reporters and TV cameras
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Photo: Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images

News that the Federal Trade Commission has approved a roughly $5 billion fine against Facebook for privacy violations prompted instant outcry from some critics and lawmakers.

Why it matters: The FTC decision could have consequences for Facebook's billions of users — and frame the next stage of a global debate over how to regulate consumer privacy. A consensus that the settlement is weak would provide more ammo for proponents of new privacy laws — whereas an assessment that the penalties are serious would strengthen the hands of those who oppose new regulation.

Flashback: It has been 474 days since the FTC confirmed that it was investigating the company, following revelations that a researcher associated with consultancy Cambridge Analytica had swept up Facebook user data in a digital dragnet.

  • Critics charged that Facebook had violated a previous 2012 settlement with the FTC that required it to take more care when it came to user privacy, allowing the agency to levy greater penalties.
  • Now, the agency's three-commissioner Republican majority has reportedly signed off on a roughly $5 billion settlement, with its two Democrats voting against the deal.
  • The Department of Justice has to review the settlement before it becomes final.

What they're saying: The race to spin the potential settlement started as soon as the news broke.

Capitol Hill Democrats and advocates of aggressive new privacy regulation panned the deal.

  • Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) called the $5 billion fine, the largest in FTC history, a "tap on the wrist" for the mammoth Facebook.
  • Presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said the settlement was a "victory for Facebook."
  • Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) said that with "the FTC either unable or unwilling to put in place reasonable guardrails to ensure that user privacy and data are protected, it’s time for Congress to act.”

Industry groups and allies praised it.

  • "The FTC’s Facebook fine is unprecedented and will undoubtedly motivate better privacy practices by all businesses," said Carl Szabo, the general counsel of trade association NetChoice, in a statement.

What we don't know: The exact terms of the settlement, which is expected to put restrictions of some kind on Facebook's behavior that go beyond just the financial penalty.

  • Both the FTC and Facebook declined to comment.

Facebook's stock popped on the news, suggesting the markets didn't view it as a major blow to the social giant.

  • The company itself estimated that the fine in the case could be as high as $5 billion earlier this year.

Yes, but: Even with the FTC case settled, plenty of challenges will confront Facebook in the United States and abroad. That includes scrutiny from state attorneys general, the possibility of future antitrust action and a new tax on its revenues in France that has drawn scrutiny from the Trump administration.

The big picture: The fine has been hanging over the privacy debate in Washington for months, raising the question of whether regulators have enough power to rein in companies like Facebook.

  • Advocates for strong privacy laws have said the FTC should be able to pursue more significant penalties against companies on a first offense, for example, or have a broader ambit to write regulations.

But momentum has seriously slowed for a new national law.

  • Last month, a top lawmaker on the Senate Commerce Committee backed away from a bipartisan panel that was seen as one serious effort to negotiate a privacy bill with broad support.

The bottom line: The approved settlement may be record-setting, but it looks less imposing in the context of Facebook's revenue, which was $15 billion for the most recently reported quarter. Any teeth in the accord are more likely to lie in restrictions placed on Facebook's behavior — and whether the deal lights a fire under lawmakers working on the privacy issue.

Go deeper: Our guide to reading a settlement when it's finalized and released

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https://www.axios.com/ftcs-facebook-fine-draws-fire-5a3e3171-8138-4973-8701-b227791834d7.html

2019-07-13 10:30:00Z
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