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    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      FTC rewrites rules on Big Tech mergers with aim to ease monopoly-busting

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission.

    Enlarge / Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission. (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg )

    Antitrust enforcers released a draft update outlining new rules today that officials say will make it easier to crack down on mergers and acquisitions that could substantially lessen competition in the US.

    Now the public has 60 days to review the draft guidelines and submit comments to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) before the agencies' September 18 deadline. A fierce debate has already started between those in support and those who oppose the draft guidelines.

    Over the next two months, the FTC hopes to gain widespread public support for what the FTC has positioned as commonsense updates as tech mergers have recently raised complex legal questions. In a press release , FTC Chair Lina M. Khan said that the merger guidelines "contain critical updates" and were "informed by thousands of public comments—spanning healthcare workers, farmers, patient advocates, musicians, and entrepreneurs."

    Read 28 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly

    • Ar chevron_right

      FTC rewrites rules on Big Tech mergers with aim to ease monopoly-busting

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission.

    Enlarge / Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission. (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg )

    Antitrust enforcers released a draft update outlining new rules today that officials say will make it easier to crack down on mergers and acquisitions that could substantially lessen competition in the US.

    Now the public has 60 days to review the draft guidelines and submit comments to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) before the agencies' September 18 deadline. A fierce debate has already started between those in support and those who oppose the draft guidelines.

    Over the next two months, the FTC hopes to gain widespread public support for what the FTC has positioned as commonsense updates as tech mergers have recently raised complex legal questions. In a press release , FTC Chair Lina M. Khan said that the merger guidelines "contain critical updates" and were "informed by thousands of public comments—spanning healthcare workers, farmers, patient advocates, musicians, and entrepreneurs."

    Read 28 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly

    • Ar chevron_right

      FTC rewrites rules on Big Tech mergers with aim to ease monopoly-busting

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission.

    Enlarge / Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission. (credit: Bloomberg / Contributor | Bloomberg )

    Antitrust enforcers released a draft update outlining new rules today that officials say will make it easier to crack down on mergers and acquisitions that could substantially lessen competition in the US.

    Now the public has 60 days to review the draft guidelines and submit comments to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) before the agencies' September 18 deadline. A fierce debate has already started between those in support and those who oppose the draft guidelines.

    Over the next two months, the FTC hopes to gain widespread public support for what the FTC has positioned as commonsense updates as tech mergers have recently raised complex legal questions. In a press release , FTC Chair Lina M. Khan said that the merger guidelines "contain critical updates" and were "informed by thousands of public comments—spanning healthcare workers, farmers, patient advocates, musicians, and entrepreneurs."

    Read 28 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagantitrust tagantitrust tagantitrust tagbig tech tagbig tech tagbig tech tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdepartment of justice tagdoj tagdoj tagdoj tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagfederal trade commission tagftc tagftc tagftc tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmergers and acquisitions tagmonopoly tagmonopoly tagmonopoly

    • Ar chevron_right

      Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty)

    The protracted arms race between criminals who wage distributed denial-of-service attacks and the defenders who attempt to stop them continues, as the former embraces “alarming” new methods to make their online offensives more powerful and destructive, researchers from content-delivery network Cloudflare reported Wednesday.

    With a global network spanning more than 300 cities in more than 100 countries around the world, Cloudflare has visibility into these types of attacks that’s shared by only a handful of other companies. The company said it delivers more than 63 million network requests per second and more than 2 trillion domain lookups per day during peak times. Among the services that Cloudflare provides is mitigation for the attacks, which are typically referred to by the abbreviation DDoS.

    Alarming escalation

    “In recent months, there's been an alarming escalation in the sophistication of DDoS attacks,” Cloudflare researchers Omer Yoachimik and Jorge Pacheco wrote Wednesday in a threat report that recaps highlights during the second quarter of this year. “And even the largest and most sophisticated attacks that we’ve seen may only last a few minutes or even seconds—which doesn’t give a human sufficient time to respond.”

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system

    • Ar chevron_right

      Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty)

    The protracted arms race between criminals who wage distributed denial-of-service attacks and the defenders who attempt to stop them continues, as the former embraces “alarming” new methods to make their online offensives more powerful and destructive, researchers from content-delivery network Cloudflare reported Wednesday.

    With a global network spanning more than 300 cities in more than 100 countries around the world, Cloudflare has visibility into these types of attacks that’s shared by only a handful of other companies. The company said it delivers more than 63 million network requests per second and more than 2 trillion domain lookups per day during peak times. Among the services that Cloudflare provides is mitigation for the attacks, which are typically referred to by the abbreviation DDoS.

    Alarming escalation

    “In recent months, there's been an alarming escalation in the sophistication of DDoS attacks,” Cloudflare researchers Omer Yoachimik and Jorge Pacheco wrote Wednesday in a threat report that recaps highlights during the second quarter of this year. “And even the largest and most sophisticated attacks that we’ve seen may only last a few minutes or even seconds—which doesn’t give a human sufficient time to respond.”

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system

    • Ar chevron_right

      Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023

    Attackers find new ways to deliver DDoSes with “alarming” sophistication

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty)

    The protracted arms race between criminals who wage distributed denial-of-service attacks and the defenders who attempt to stop them continues, as the former embraces “alarming” new methods to make their online offensives more powerful and destructive, researchers from content-delivery network Cloudflare reported Wednesday.

    With a global network spanning more than 300 cities in more than 100 countries around the world, Cloudflare has visibility into these types of attacks that’s shared by only a handful of other companies. The company said it delivers more than 63 million network requests per second and more than 2 trillion domain lookups per day during peak times. Among the services that Cloudflare provides is mitigation for the attacks, which are typically referred to by the abbreviation DDoS.

    Alarming escalation

    “In recent months, there's been an alarming escalation in the sophistication of DDoS attacks,” Cloudflare researchers Omer Yoachimik and Jorge Pacheco wrote Wednesday in a threat report that recaps highlights during the second quarter of this year. “And even the largest and most sophisticated attacks that we’ve seen may only last a few minutes or even seconds—which doesn’t give a human sufficient time to respond.”

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagddos tagddos tagddos tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdistributed denial of service attack tagdns tagdns tagdns tagdomain name system tagdomain name system tagdomain name system

    • Ar chevron_right

      AT&T says lead cables in Lake Tahoe “pose no danger” and should stay in place

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023 • 1 minute

    A man with an umbrella walking past a building with an AT&T logo.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Ronald Martinez )

    AT&T's legacy telephone network may have nearly 200,000 miles of lead-covered cables, according to an estimate by AT&T submitted in a court filing.

    "Based on its records, AT&T estimates that lead-clad cables represent less than 10 percent of its copper footprint of roughly two million sheath miles of cable, the overwhelming majority of which remains in active service," AT&T wrote in a court filing yesterday in US District Court for the Eastern District of California. "More than two thirds of its lead-clad cabling is either buried or in conduit, followed by aerial cable, and with a very small portion running underwater. There are varying costs of installation, maintenance, and removal by cable type (aerial, buried, buried in conduit, underwater)."

    Reacting to the court filing, financial analyst firm Raymond James & Associates wrote in a research note, "AT&T is telling us that the total exposure is 200,000 route miles or less." With about two-thirds of the lead cables either buried or installed inside conduit, "We believe the implication for AT&T's data is that the route miles that should be addressed most immediately is about 3.3 percent (or less)," the analyst firm wrote.

    Read 24 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables

    • Ar chevron_right

      AT&T says lead cables in Lake Tahoe “pose no danger” and should stay in place

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023 • 1 minute

    A man with an umbrella walking past a building with an AT&T logo.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Ronald Martinez )

    AT&T's legacy telephone network may have nearly 200,000 miles of lead-covered cables, according to an estimate by AT&T submitted in a court filing.

    "Based on its records, AT&T estimates that lead-clad cables represent less than 10 percent of its copper footprint of roughly two million sheath miles of cable, the overwhelming majority of which remains in active service," AT&T wrote in a court filing yesterday in US District Court for the Eastern District of California. "More than two thirds of its lead-clad cabling is either buried or in conduit, followed by aerial cable, and with a very small portion running underwater. There are varying costs of installation, maintenance, and removal by cable type (aerial, buried, buried in conduit, underwater)."

    Reacting to the court filing, financial analyst firm Raymond James & Associates wrote in a research note, "AT&T is telling us that the total exposure is 200,000 route miles or less." With about two-thirds of the lead cables either buried or installed inside conduit, "We believe the implication for AT&T's data is that the route miles that should be addressed most immediately is about 3.3 percent (or less)," the analyst firm wrote.

    Read 24 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables

    • Ar chevron_right

      AT&T says lead cables in Lake Tahoe “pose no danger” and should stay in place

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 July 2023 • 1 minute

    A man with an umbrella walking past a building with an AT&T logo.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Ronald Martinez )

    AT&T's legacy telephone network may have nearly 200,000 miles of lead-covered cables, according to an estimate by AT&T submitted in a court filing.

    "Based on its records, AT&T estimates that lead-clad cables represent less than 10 percent of its copper footprint of roughly two million sheath miles of cable, the overwhelming majority of which remains in active service," AT&T wrote in a court filing yesterday in US District Court for the Eastern District of California. "More than two thirds of its lead-clad cabling is either buried or in conduit, followed by aerial cable, and with a very small portion running underwater. There are varying costs of installation, maintenance, and removal by cable type (aerial, buried, buried in conduit, underwater)."

    Reacting to the court filing, financial analyst firm Raymond James & Associates wrote in a research note, "AT&T is telling us that the total exposure is 200,000 route miles or less." With about two-thirds of the lead cables either buried or installed inside conduit, "We believe the implication for AT&T's data is that the route miles that should be addressed most immediately is about 3.3 percent (or less)," the analyst firm wrote.

    Read 24 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagat&t tagat&t tagat&t taglead cables taglead cables taglead cables

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