The Cyberlaw Podcast

Episode 319: Whaling at Scale

06.08.2020 - By Stewart BakerPlay

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In our 319th episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast, Stewart Baker interviews Georgetown academic Ben Buchanan, whose recent writings include The Hacker and the State: Cyber Attacks and the New Normal of Geopolitics, and A National Security Research Agenda for Cybersecurity and Artificial Intelligence. Stewart is also joined by Paul Rosenzweig (@RosenzweigP), Mark MacCarthy (@Mark_MacCarthy), Charles Michael, and Maury Shenk to discuss: Zoom plans to enable end-to-end encrypted video conferencing solely for paying customers, Alex Stamos comments; Judge rules Capital One must hand over Mandiant's forensic data breach report; Christopher Krebs, the director of DHS’s cybersecurity agency says to expect 'every intelligence service' to target COVID-19 research, GCHQ agrees; This Week in internet copyright fights: Ideological copyright enforcement meets world’s dumbest AI copyright bots: Twitter removed a Trump campaign video tribute to George Floyd due to a copyright claim. The video is still available on Trump’s YouTube channel; Instagram does not provide users of its embedding API a copyright license to display embedded images on other websites, the company said in a Thursday email to Ars Technica. The announcement could come as an unwelcome surprise to users who believed that embedding images, rather than hosting them directly, provides insulation against copyright claims.; Four of the nation's leading book publishers have sued the Internet Archive, the online library best known for maintaining the Internet Wayback Machine. The Internet Archive makes scanned copies of books—both public domain and under copyright—available to the public on a site called the Open Library.; Content mediation: Center for Democracy and Technology filed a lawsuit claiming Trump violated tech companies’ right to free speech with his executive order.; Trump’s lawyers used Section 230 in 2017 to defend him against a defamation suit.; Working the ref: Facebook and its CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, are facing criticism from users, competitors, civil rights organizations.; About three dozen of the company's earliest employees today signed on to a letter to Zuckerberg calling his choice a "betrayal" of the site's early ideals.; Facebook to block ads from state-controlled media entities in the US; Snap will stop promoting Trump’s account after concluding his Tweets incited violence; Twitter user conducts experiment to show Trump is treated differently than others by the platform – he Tweets exactly what Trump Tweets and gets banned.; And more! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.

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