China’s Foreign Ministry this week criticized the U.S. Indo-Pacific strategy, saying it “will only undermine regional peace and stability and is doomed to fail.” During a May 24 news conference, a ministry spokesperson said the U.S. “concocted” the strategy, which will soon lead to the start of negotiations with several other countries on a new Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (see 2205230003), and “created political and military confrontation by ganging up with some countries.” China’s Ministry of Commerce said the framework “should be open and inclusive rather than discriminatory and exclusive,” according to an unofficial translation of a May 24 statement.
The U.S. and other techno-democracies should capitalize on their closely coordinated Russia sanctions work to create a new multilateral export control group, said two experts with Georgetown University’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology. A new regime, which would include a range of technology-producing nations that share democratic values, would help those countries address technology proliferation issues that existing regimes can not.
FCC nominee Gigi Sohn’s Senate confirmation process may remain indefinitely in limbo despite recent heightened pressure from the nominee’s supporters and opponents on three undecided Democratic senators, said political experts and communications policy observers in interviews. The three Democrats -- Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada, Mark Kelly of Arizona and Joe Manchin of West Virginia -- remained firmly on the fence Thursday.
A looser content moderation approach at Twitter under Elon Musk's ownership risks turning it into a fringe, extremist platform like 4chan, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., told us Thursday. “I’m concerned with what he’s rumored or said to believe” in terms of moderation, said Nadler: “That means you’re going to have all this disinformation on Twitter that wouldn’t have been previously allowed. That would concern me.” The Judiciary Committee will have to “wait and see” whether action is necessary, he said.
A looser content moderation approach at Twitter under Elon Musk's ownership risks turning it into a fringe, extremist platform like 4chan, House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., told us Thursday. “I’m concerned with what he’s rumored or said to believe” in terms of moderation, said Nadler: “That means you’re going to have all this disinformation on Twitter that wouldn’t have been previously allowed. That would concern me.” The Judiciary Committee will have to “wait and see” whether action is necessary, he said.
Elon Musk will buy Twitter for $44 billion and take it private (see 2204210038), the company announced Monday to Republican cheers and Democratic concerns. Unanimously approved by Twitter’s board, the deal is expected to close this year, the company said. Stockholders will receive $54.20 cash for each share of Twitter common stock, a 38% premium to Twitter's closing stock price April 1, the company said. Musk disclosed his 9% stake in Twitter on March 31. Stock dropped 5.66% Monday, closing at $51.70.
Elon Musk will buy Twitter for $44 billion and take it private (see 2204210038), the company announced Monday to Republican cheers and Democratic concerns. Unanimously approved by Twitter’s board, the deal is expected to close this year, the company said. Stockholders will receive $54.20 cash for each share of Twitter common stock, a 38% premium to Twitter's closing stock price April 1, the company said. Musk disclosed his 9% stake in Twitter on March 31. Stock dropped 5.66% Monday, closing at $51.70.
The FCC approved 4-0 a notice of inquiry asking questions about standards for receivers. As expected (see 2204190053), the main change from what Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel circulated were questions on encouraging innovation for both receivers and transmitters, added at Commissioner Geoffrey Starks' request. Commissioner Nathan Simington has made the issue one of his top focuses since he joined the FCC.
The FCC approved 4-0 a notice of inquiry asking questions about standards for receivers. As expected (see 2204190053), the main change from what Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel circulated were questions on encouraging innovation for both receivers and transmitters, added at Commissioner Geoffrey Starks' request. Commissioner Nathan Simington has made the issue one of his top focuses since he joined the FCC.
Democratic FCC nominee Gigi Sohn’s difficult confirmation process and the partisan divisions during the Senate’s 2020 approval of Republican Commissioner Nathan Simington (see 2012080068) don’t necessarily guarantee future commission nominees will face similarly contentious fights, lawmakers and communications policy stakeholders said in interviews. Some observers cited the Senate’s December 68-31 confirmation vote for FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel (see 2112070029) and its 2019 unanimous consent to approve Commissioners Brendan Carr and Geoffrey Starks to their current terms as signs that bipartisan consensus on some nominees remains possible.