Thursday, June 24, 2021

WILL JOE BIDEN VETO ANY ATTEMPT TO CURB THE POWERS OF HIS MINISTER OF PROPAGANDA AND OPEN BORDERS MARK ZUCKERBERG?

 

Two of Five House Big Tech Antitrust Bills Pass Committee

WASHINGTON, DC - OCTOBER 23: With an image of himself on a screen in the background, Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies before the House Financial Services Committee in the Rayburn House Office Building on Capitol Hill October 23, 2019 in Washington, DC. Zuckerberg testified about Facebook's proposed cryptocurrency …
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
2:48

The American Choice and Innovation Online Act and the Augmenting Compatibility and Competition by Enabling Service Switching (ACCESS) Act passed the committee stage yesterday night, with a vote of 24 to 20 in the House Judiciary Committee. The Big Tech bills are now cleared to proceed to a floor vote.

The bills are part of a major package of antitrust legislation aimed at curbing the power of the Big Tech companies. According to the letter of the laws, they tightly restrict large tech companies from discriminating against their competitors.

The American Choice And Innovation Online Act would prohibit the largest of tech companies from behavior that “excludes or disadvantages the products, services, or lines of business of another business user relative to the covered platform operator’s own products, services, or lines of business.” For example, this might mean that Google would not be able to exclude competitors to YouTube from its app store or search results.

The ACCESS Act aims to ensure user control of data, mandating that the largest tech companies allow users to access their data in a “structured, commonly used, and machine-readable format.” It also forces the largest tech companies to keep their application programming interfaces, or APIs, open to competitors.

They also grant a great deal of enforcement power to the federal government, some of whom, like associate attorney general Vanita Gupta, have made no secret of their belief that tech platforms should be penalized for carrying “misinformation.”

Big Media lobbyists have tried to tie a separate bill, the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, to bipartisan antitrust efforts. The JCPA, condemned by Reps. Kevin McCarthy, Jim Jordan, and others, would grant cartel power to big media companies that seek to collectively bargain with tech companies, giving them a much stronger bargaining position and an advantage over independent competitors.

The JCPA would give the force of law to an existing trend that emerged over the past five years, which has seen big media companies pressure Silicon Valley tech giants for prioritization in their algorithms and other special favors that give them an advantage over independent news content producers.

However, there is no sign that the antitrust subcommittee aims to tie the JCPA to these antitrust bills. The JCPA was not mentioned when the subcommittee announced its five antitrust bills earlier this month.

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. He is the author of #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election.


STAND UP IF YOU THINK NEO-FASCIST FOR OPEN BORDERS MARK ZUCKERBERG IS MORE POWERFUL THAN THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.

Rep. Jim Jordan Drafting Bill to Tackle Big Tech Power

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, questions Jennifer Williams, an aide to Vice President Mike Pence, and National Security Council aide Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman, as they testify before the House Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Nov. 19, 2019, during a public impeachment hearing of President Donald Trump's efforts …
Shawn Thew/Pool Photo via AP
2:04

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), who has taken a critical line against Democrat-led efforts to regulate Silicon Valley tech giants, notably the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, said he would draft his own bill aimed at curbing the excessive power of Big Tech.

In a post on Facebook, Jordan said his bill would encompass multiple elements, including the breakup of Big Tech companies, a private right of action that would allow American users to sue tech companies that censor them, and reform of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, the law that gives tech companies wide-ranging liability protection against lawsuits related to the hosting or removal of content.

“Here’s how you take on #BigTech,” wrote Rep. Jordan on Facebook.  “Speed up the legal process to break them up. Take away their liability protections by killing Section 230 as we know it. Create a private right of action to sue the companies when they censor you. We’re drafting a bill to do just that.”

The Ohio congressman and GOP ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee has been critical of some Big Tech regulations pushed by Democrats, including the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, a bill which would allow Big Media companies (which have relentless pushed tech companies to censor their competitors) the ability to form a powerful cartel to demand more special favors from Silicon Valley.

Speaking at a House Judiciary Committee hearing on the bill in March, Jordan warned against hasty passage of the bill, saying it would give “consortium and cartel power.”

Jordan has also been critical of Democrat-led antitrust efforts, recently noting that Microsoft appears to have escaped congressional scrutiny on its aggressive acquisition strategy.

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. He is the author of #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election.

Bokhari: Democrat Led Antitrust Bills Are a Massive Gamble

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 12: Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) asks Deputy Assistant FBI Director Peter Strzok a question on July 12, 2018 in Washington, DC. Strzok testified before a joint committee hearing of the House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform committees. While involved in the probe into Hillary Clinton's …
Alex Edelman/Getty Images
2:00

The antitrust subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee recently released five highly anticipated bills aimed at curbing the power of the Big Tech companies. The House is currently under the control of the Democrats, but these bills have been pitched as a bipartisan effort, led by subcommittee chairman Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) and ranking member Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO).

Republicans have developed an unfortunate habit of backing “anti-Big Tech” bills without looking too closely at the details. Recently, this has resulted in several members signing on to a particularly disastrous bill called the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, which aims to “fix” Big Tech by empowering Big Media — the very force that pressured Big Tech into censoring its platforms in the first place. With opposition from GOP leader Kevin McCarthyJim Jordan, and other prominent Republicans, the bill has stalled — but no Republican should have signed on to it in the first place.

So what about these new antitrust bills? There are no fewer than five of them, including a funding bill that appropriates hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars to the FTC and Department of Justice.

Rep. Buck, a Republican who is leading the charge to make these bills a bipartisan effort. However, Minority Leader Rep. McCarthy and Judiciary Committee ranking member Rep. Jordan oppose the bills — are they right?

Buck claims the bills will address perhaps the biggest concern for conservatives: censorship. This is not true — none of the bills address the problem of censorship directly, or reform Section 230, the law that gives Big Tech wide legal immunity to censor. Buck has also claimed that the legislation “breaks up” Big Tech, which is also not really true — one of the bills makes future acquisitions more difficult for the tech companies, but it does not separate their existing businesses.

It’s hard to believe that any bills with Rep. Cicilline behind them would address censorship, given that he was demanding Twitter censor Donald Trump less than a week after election day 2020.

If you look only at what the bills say they will do, you might come away thinking they’re quite good, or at least have some good things in them. One of them, the Ending Platform Monopolies Act, declares the largest of tech companies (those with a market cap higher than $600bn) may not “exclude from, or disadvantage, the products, services, or lines of business on the covered platform of a competing business or a business that constitutes nascent or potential competition to the covered platform operator.” Another, the ACCESS Act, mandates that those companies keep their platforms interoperable with competitors.

That seems like good news for competition, including free speech alternatives to Google-owned YouTube like Rumble and Bitchute. So what’s the catch?

Well, one big catch is enforcement. Every single one of the bills (apart from the funding bill) gives enforcement power to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DoJ). That is by no means necessary — there are plenty of other enforcement mechanisms, including enforcement via state attorneys general, and enforcement via a private right of action for injured parties. Lawmakers chose to hand enforcement power to the Biden administration instead.

The amount of enforcement power is quite extraordinary. Under the bills’ provisions, the tech giants could face fines of 15 percent of their total U.S. revenue in a calendar year, as well as 30 percent of the revenue of any injured party during the period in which they were discriminated against. These amount to colossal sums of money, far beyond even the multi-billion dollar fines levied against the tech giants by EU regulators.

That is a massive sledgehammer that Congress wants to give the Biden administration. More specifically, they want to give it to the FTC, the new chairwoman of which, Lina Khan, has made it quite clear that she considers “disinformation” on tech platforms to be a major problem. Here’s what she said in an interview with the Los Angeles Review of Books last year:

Concentrated control, coupled with a business model that incentivizes the dissemination of disinformation and inflammatory content (in the case of Facebook and Google),  or that strategically treats books as a loss-leader in order to sell a much broader panoply of consumer goods and Prime memberships (in the case of Amazon), has proven a highly damaging combination. [emphasis ours]

Khan also played a leading role in an antitrust investigation led by the same congressional committee that produced these bills. The investigation was led by the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Democrat congressmen Jerry Nadler (D-NY) and David Cicilline (D-RI), the chairman of the antitrust subcommittee and the leading Democrat congressman pushing these bills.

Here is what that report had to say:

Indirectly, the atomization of news may increase the likelihood that people are exposed to disinformation or untrustworthy sources of news online. When online news is disintermediated from its source, people generally have more difficulty discerning the credibility of reporting online. This process may also “foster ambivalence about the quality and nature of content that garners users’ attention,” particularly among young people. [emphasis ours]

Heaven forbid that young people start to think that CNN and the New York Times aren’t the high-quality news sources they claim to be!

But that’s not all. Here’s the next paragraph:

For example, during the Subcommittee’s sixth hearing, Subcommittee Chairman David N. Cicilline presented Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg with evidence of a Breitbart video that claimed that “you don’t need a mask and hydroxychloroquine is a cure for COVID.” As he noted, within the first five hours of this video being posted, it had nearly “20 million views and over 100,000 comments before Facebook acted to remove it.” Mr. Zuckerberg responded that “a lot of people shared that, and we did take it down because it violate[d] our policies.” In response, Chairman Cicilline asked if “20 million people saw it over the period of five hours . . . doesn’t that suggest, Mr. Zuckerberg, that your platform is so big that, even with the right policies in place, you can’t contain deadly content?” Mr. Zuckerberg responded by claiming that Facebook has a “relatively good track record of finding and taking down lots of false content.” [emphasis ours]

Breitbart News did not, in fact, claim that — it was a livestreamed press conference of medical professionals who claimed that.

Not that it matters. The goal of the Democrats (and, it seems, Lina Khan) is as clear as ever — to use antitrust, and other regulatory sledgehammers, to get tech companies to censor dissenting viewpoints — including impartial reporting from Breitbart News. Even as new information emerges revealing that many of the coronavirus stories denounced and censored as “misinformation” were, in fact, probably true, they remain committed to this authoritarian objective.

The fact that Biden pulled a bait-and-switch on Republican senators, by breaking with precedent and naming the 32-year old Khan, well known as an antitrust radical, to the position of FTC chairwoman right after she was confirmed as a commissioner, should be a big red flag. The Biden administration is sending a signal to Silicon Valley that it is fully prepared to use the power of the federal government to inflict pain on tech companies.

When the Democrats were out of power, their allies in the media whipped up massive advertiser boycotts against tech platforms like YouTube and Facebook as punishment for not censoring enough “misinformation” and “hate speech.” To that already-formidable weapon, these bills would allow the Democrats to add the threat of huge FTC and DoJ penalties for platforms that don’t play ball.

Speaking of which, one name that should be top of mind for every Republican supporting these bills is Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, the third-ranking official at the DoJ.

Gupta was confirmed to her position by the Senate in April, against the opposition of every Republican Senator. And there’s a reason they all opposed her — she is a rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth partisan who wants nothing more than to see conservatives banned from every major tech platform.

Here is just a small selection of the material she published prior to becoming Associate Attorney General:

In a 2019 article for Politico, she attacked Facebook for refusing to censor politicians:

With its new policy, Facebook will automatically presume speech from politicians to be newsworthy. Simply put: While major news organizations are strengthening fact-checking and accountability, Facebook is saying: If you are a politician who wishes to peddle in liesdistortion and not-so-subtle racial appeals, welcome to our platform… This is extraordinarily reckless. In effect, Facebook is providing politicians free rein to spread misinformation and racially divisive content with no accountability. [emphasis ours]

In a 2020 appearance on Face the NationGupta said:

We need expanded vote by mail with things like prepaid postage stamps. You’ve seen and heard about the attacks on the US Postal Service that are causing delays. Therefore, it’s really important that states change the rules to allow ballots that are postmarked on or before Election Day to be counted. It’s really important also that people apply for their absentee ballots and vote early so as not to overwhelm the system… In 2018 one in four voters voted by mail. You need massive voter education around the country. That’s also going to cost money. And we need to be fighting disinformation on platforms like Facebook and others. [emphasis ours]

And in a press release a month before the election, Gupta praised Facebook for its interference in the process:

We are seeing unprecedented attacks on legitimate, reliable, and secure voting methods designed to delegitimize the election. These are important steps for Facebook to take to combat disinformation and the premature calling of election results before every vote is counted.

Perhaps Gupta isn’t going to be involved in antitrust enforcement? Nope. In her Senate confirmation hearing, she specifically promised to take a leading role in antitrust enforcement, telling Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) that she would “bring the full force of our country’s antitrust laws to bear.”

The antitrust laws proposed by Reps. Cicilline and Buck amount to a massive regulatory sledgehammer against Big Tech. And the person who has promised to wield that sledgehammer is… Vanita Gupta!

It didn’t have to be this way. As I said earlier in the piece, enforcement could be handled exclusively via state AGs, or via private rights of action. If that were so, these bills could have sailed through Congress with minimal opposition from Republicans. But the Democrats want to give power to the likes of Vanita Gupta, so that is now unlikely to be the case.

One way these bills could possibly work is if a sixth bill were included, one which directly addressed the problem of censorship and deplatforming — a bill with a common carrier provision or something similar. That would be a truly bipartisan agenda, and would alleviate concerns that Biden officials would use their new enforcement power to demand yet more censorship from Silicon Valley. As it stands, the bills fail to directly address the number one issue that conservatives have with Big Tech, which is censorship.

With proper enforcement, the bills could indeed solve many egregious problems with Big Tech — but with the amount of power they grant to Gupta, Khan, and other Democrat cronies in the federal government, the overwhelming risk to Republicans interested in supporting these bills is that it will make the problem worse, not better.

There is a lot to unpack and no Republicans should just jump on board reflexively, and risk repeating the mistake made with the terrible JCPA.

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. He is the author of #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election.



Hauser also didn’t like the prevalence of Big Law talent on the Department of Justice team, which signaled to him that the Biden administration could go soft on corporate malefactors. 

Biden’s choice to make Harris his running mate elated not only Wall Street, but also Silicon Valley as she represents their interests in the United States Senate and has close family connections to tech executives. Harris’ brother-in-law is the chief legal officer for Uber, the ride-sharing corporation that has become a billion-dollar business by shifting most of the risk to its drivers.

Bokhari: Democrat Led Antitrust Bills Are a Massive Gamble

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 12: Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) asks Deputy Assistant FBI Director Peter Strzok a question on July 12, 2018 in Washington, DC. Strzok testified before a joint committee hearing of the House Judiciary and Oversight and Government Reform committees. While involved in the probe into Hillary Clinton's …
Alex Edelman/Getty Images
12:16

The antitrust subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee recently released five highly anticipated bills aimed at curbing the power of the Big Tech companies. The House is currently under the control of the Democrats, but these bills have been pitched as a bipartisan effort, led by subcommittee chairman Rep. David Cicilline (D-RI) and ranking member Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO).

Republicans have developed an unfortunate habit of backing “anti-Big Tech” bills without looking too closely at the details. Recently, this has resulted in several members signing on to a particularly disastrous bill called the Journalism Competition and Preservation Act, which aims to “fix” Big Tech by empowering Big Media — the very force that pressured Big Tech into censoring its platforms in the first place. With opposition from GOP leader Kevin McCarthyJim Jordan, and other prominent Republicans, the bill has stalled — but no Republican should have signed on to it in the first place.

So what about these new antitrust bills? There are no fewer than five of them, including a funding bill that appropriates hundreds of millions in taxpayer dollars to the FTC and Department of Justice.

Rep. Buck, the Republican who is leading the charge to make these bills a bipartisan effort; however, Minority Leader Rep. McCarthy and Judiciary Committee ranking member Rep. Jordan oppose these bills too — are they right?

Buck claims they will address perhaps the biggest concern for conservatives: censorship. This is not true — none of the bills address the problem of censorship directly, or reform Section 230, the law that gives Big Tech wide legal immunity to censor. Buck has also claimed that the legislation “breaks up” Big Tech, which is also not really true — one of the bills makes future acquisitions more difficult for the tech companies, but it does not separate their existing businesses.

It’s hard to believe that any bills with Rep. Cicilline behind them would address censorship, given that he was demanding Twitter censor Donald Trump less than a week after election day 2020.

If you look only at what the bills say they will do, you might come away thinking they’re quite good, or at least have some good things in them. One of them, the Ending Platform Monopolies Act, declares the largest of tech companies (those with a market cap higher than $600bn) may not “exclude from, or disadvantage, the products, services, or lines of business on the covered platform of a competing business or a business that constitutes nascent or potential competition to the covered platform operator.” Another, the ACCESS Act, mandates that those companies keep their platforms interoperable with competitors.

That seems like good news for competition, including free speech alternatives to Google-owned YouTube like Rumble and Bitchute. So what’s the catch?

Well, one big catch is enforcement. Every single one of the bills (apart from the funding bill) gives enforcement power to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DoJ). That is by no means necessary — there are plenty of other enforcement mechanisms, including enforcement via state attorneys general, and enforcement via a private right of action for injured parties. Lawmakers chose to hand enforcement power to the Biden administration instead.

The amount of enforcement power is quite extraordinary. Under the bills’ provisions, the tech giants could face fines of 15 percent of their total U.S. revenue in a calendar year, as well as 30 percent of the revenue of any injured party during the period in which they were discriminated against. These amount to colossal sums of money, far beyond even the multi-billion dollar fines levied against the tech giants by EU regulators.

That is a massive sledgehammer that Congress wants to give the Biden administration. More specifically, they want to give it to the FTC, the new chairwoman of which, Lina Khan, has made it quite clear that she considers “disinformation” on tech platforms to be a major problem. Here’s what she said in an interview with the Los Angeles Review of Books last year:

Concentrated control, coupled with a business model that incentivizes the dissemination of disinformation and inflammatory content (in the case of Facebook and Google),  or that strategically treats books as a loss-leader in order to sell a much broader panoply of consumer goods and Prime memberships (in the case of Amazon), has proven a highly damaging combination. [emphasis ours]

Khan also played a leading role in an antitrust investigation led by the same congressional committee that produced these bills. The investigation was led by the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Democrat congressmen Jerry Nadler (D-NY) and David Cicilline (D-RI), the chairman of the antitrust subcommittee and the leading Democrat congressman pushing these bills.

Here is what that report had to say:

Indirectly, the atomization of news may increase the likelihood that people are exposed to disinformation or untrustworthy sources of news online. When online news is disintermediated from its source, people generally have more difficulty discerning the credibility of reporting online. This process may also “foster ambivalence about the quality and nature of content that garners users’ attention,” particularly among young people. [emphasis ours]

Heaven forbid that young people start to think that CNN and the New York Times aren’t the high-quality news sources they claim to be!

But that’s not all. Here’s the next paragraph:

For example, during the Subcommittee’s sixth hearing, Subcommittee Chairman David N. Cicilline presented Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg with evidence of a Breitbart video that claimed that “you don’t need a mask and hydroxychloroquine is a cure for COVID.” As he noted, within the first five hours of this video being posted, it had nearly “20 million views and over 100,000 comments before Facebook acted to remove it.” Mr. Zuckerberg responded that “a lot of people shared that, and we did take it down because it violate[d] our policies.” In response, Chairman Cicilline asked if “20 million people saw it over the period of five hours . . . doesn’t that suggest, Mr. Zuckerberg, that your platform is so big that, even with the right policies in place, you can’t contain deadly content?” Mr. Zuckerberg responded by claiming that Facebook has a “relatively good track record of finding and taking down lots of false content.” [emphasis ours]

Breitbart News did not, in fact, claim that — it was a livestreamed press conference of medical professionals who claimed that.

Not that it matters. The goal of the Democrats (and, it seems, Lina Khan) is as clear as ever — to use antitrust, and other regulatory sledgehammers, to get tech companies to censor dissenting viewpoints — including impartial reporting from Breitbart News. Even as new information emerges revealing that many of the coronavirus stories denounced and censored as “misinformation” were, in fact, probably true, they remain committed to this authoritarian objective.

The fact that Biden pulled a bait-and-switch on Republican senators, by breaking with precedent and naming the 32-year old Khan, well known as an antitrust radical, to the position of FTC chairwoman right after she was confirmed as a commissioner, should be a big red flag. The Biden administration is sending a signal to Silicon Valley that it is fully prepared to use the power of the federal government to inflict pain on tech companies.

When the Democrats were out of power, their allies in the media whipped up massive advertiser boycotts against tech platforms like YouTube and Facebook as punishment for not censoring enough “misinformation” and “hate speech.” To that already-formidable weapon, these bills would allow the Democrats to add the threat of huge FTC and DoJ penalties for platforms that don’t play ball.

Speaking of which, one name that should be top of mind for every Republican supporting these bills is Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta, the third-ranking official at the DoJ.

Gupta was confirmed to her position by the Senate in April, against the opposition of every Republican Senator. And there’s a reason they all opposed her — she is a rabid, frothing-at-the-mouth partisan who wants nothing more than to see conservatives banned from every major tech platform.

Here is just a small selection of the material she published prior to becoming Associate Attorney General:

In a 2019 article for Politico, she attacked Facebook for refusing to censor politicians:

With its new policy, Facebook will automatically presume speech from politicians to be newsworthy. Simply put: While major news organizations are strengthening fact-checking and accountability, Facebook is saying: If you are a politician who wishes to peddle in liesdistortion and not-so-subtle racial appeals, welcome to our platform… This is extraordinarily reckless. In effect, Facebook is providing politicians free rein to spread misinformation and racially divisive content with no accountability. [emphasis ours]

In a 2020 appearance on Face the NationGupta said:

We need expanded vote by mail with things like prepaid postage stamps. You’ve seen and heard about the attacks on the US Postal Service that are causing delays. Therefore, it’s really important that states change the rules to allow ballots that are postmarked on or before Election Day to be counted. It’s really important also that people apply for their absentee ballots and vote early so as not to overwhelm the system… In 2018 one in four voters voted by mail. You need massive voter education around the country. That’s also going to cost money. And we need to be fighting disinformation on platforms like Facebook and others. [emphasis ours]

And in a press release a month before the election, Gupta praised Facebook for its interference in the process:

We are seeing unprecedented attacks on legitimate, reliable, and secure voting methods designed to delegitimize the election. These are important steps for Facebook to take to combat disinformation and the premature calling of election results before every vote is counted.

Perhaps Gupta isn’t going to be involved in antitrust enforcement? Nope. In her Senate confirmation hearing, she specifically promised to take a leading role in antitrust enforcement, telling Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-IA) that she would “bring the full force of our country’s antitrust laws to bear.”

The antitrust laws proposed by Reps. Cicilline and Buck amount to a massive regulatory sledgehammer against Big Tech. And the person who has promised to wield that sledgehammer is… Vanita Gupta!

It didn’t have to be this way. As I said earlier in the piece, enforcement could be handled exclusively via state AGs, or via private rights of action. If that were so, these bills could have sailed through Congress with minimal opposition from Republicans. But the Democrats want to give power to the likes of Vanita Gupta, so that is now unlikely to be the case.

One way these bills could possibly work is if a sixth bill were included, one which directly addressed the problem of censorship and deplatforming — a bill with a common carrier provision or something similar. That would be a truly bipartisan agenda, and would alleviate concerns that Biden officials would use their new enforcement power to demand yet more censorship from Silicon Valley. As it stands, the bills fail to directly address the number one issue that conservatives have with Big Tech, which is censorship.

With proper enforcement, the bills could indeed solve many egregious problems with Big Tech — but with the amount of power they grant to Gupta, Khan, and other Democrat cronies in the federal government, the overwhelming risk to Republicans interested in supporting these bills is that it will make the problem worse, not better.

There is a lot to unpack and no Republicans should just jump on board reflexively, and risk repeating the mistake made with the terrible JCPA.

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. He is the author of #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election.

The rule of Google: Joe Biden lards up his administration with Big Tech execs

By Monica Showalter

 

They don't call him 'quid pro Joe' for nothing.

Joe Biden is larding up his apparently coming administration with a revolving door of Big Tech executives.

According to Business Insider:

President-elect Joe Biden is relying on Big Tech to help oversee his transition to the White House.

On Tuesday, he and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris released a list of names for their "Agency Review Teams." These teams will go into each government agency and plan a smooth handover of power from President Donald Trump's administration to the Biden administration.

As reported by Protocol and Ars Technica, the list includes several big players from the world of tech, including from Amazon, Uber, LinkedIn, Lyft, Airbnb, Dropbox, and Stripe.

The report says nobody from Google is there, but, wait, there's this:

The list contains no names from Google, but it does have an employee of Sidewalk Labs, an urban innovation company owned by Alphabet, Google's parent company. 

The list also contains employees of big Silicon Valley-linked philanthropy organizations, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Chan-Zuckerberg Initiative, and Schmidt Futures.

The names on the list are not all guaranteed jobs inside the Biden administration once the transition is complete — although it is likely that at least some of them will stay on.

And there's also this, from someone on the left, who works at this plutocrat-hostile think tank:

 

Biden transition is quietly putting Google and Facebook employees into its transition landing teams. pic.twitter.com/UI2QZKTcz6

— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) December 11, 2020

 

And don't think the quid pro Joe isn't real. The quid pro quo being seen is little more than Joe Biden rewarding his Big Tech campaign donors, whose in-kind donation to Democrats in censoring the news, particularly the news about Hunter Biden's crime- and corruption-filled laptop. Big Tech helped Joe, censoring news, manipulating search engine results, and now Joe is helping them, or at least selling out the government posts so that these officials can get in and run rampant. 

Vanity Fair, which is a leftist rag, is up front and open about it:

 

Facebook is reportedly attempting to curry favor with Joe Biden and his incoming administration by planning a series of campaigns promoting top-line items on the president-elect’s agenda. The so-called “charm offensive,” according to the Financial Times, involves encouraging users to take the anticipated coronavirus vaccine and share content about the Paris Climate Agreement, which President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from and Biden has pledged to rejoin as one of his first acts as president—part of the massive commitments to address climate change that he campaigned on.

The move is a pivot away from Facebook’s generally hands-off approach to combating misinformation across its platform, which has made the website a kind of free-for-all for its billions of users. 

That's right, Facebook is promising to do the Biden administration's bidding. Facebook also is facing a huge anti-trust suit to break it up, much as was done with the oil trusts at the turn of the 20th century and the telecom trusts in the 1970s and 1980s. Think that bit of helpfulness to Biden might just do the trick? (One thing is for sure here: It shows that President Trump could never be bought. Biden is another story and sure enough, he comes cheap.)

Tucker Carlson has a video, dating from September, about just how cozy Big Tech and their Democrats are, one hand washing the other, Big Tech doing its part to elect Democrats and Democrats protecting Big Tech. Big Tech comes into the Biden government, and when Democrats are out of power, Democrats go on to take jobs at Big Tech.

 

The revolving door revolves and revolves...

The implications, well beyond the selling of government to the people with the most money and censorship power, is hardly the half of it. These people specialize, in spying on Americans whether they know it or not. Carlson has a video of how Facebook does just that. Put them in the berths of Big Government, via Biden, and all of a sudden, it's all about the Lives of Others, spying on small people for small things, knowing everything they do, neighbor no longer trusting neighbor, and ballots no longer secret, which is socialism in its actual form.

It's disturbing as can be that with Biden a weak puppet, it's not just the Obamatons and Wall Street taking over, it's Big Tech. Big Tech knows it's in for a cushy ride with Joe Biden at the helm. For the rest of us, it's dangerous times. 

 

Forbes: Big Tech’s Elite ‘Most Notable Billionaire Winners’ of 2020 Election


JOHN BINDER

11 Dec 2020

Big Tech executives will be the “most notable billionaire winners” of the presidential election if former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) are sworn in as president and vice president in January 2021, according to Forbes.

If Biden takes office, four billionaires will have come out on top as a result of their quest to unseat President Donald Trump, according to Forbes. Three of those billionaires are from Silicon Valley, California’s tech industry where a handful of multinational corporations have monopolized power.

Forbes notes:

Dustin Moskovitz: Mark Zuckerberg’s college roommate, the Facebook and Asana cofounder spent big to fight Trump. He gave more than $800,000 to Biden and made a $20 million-plus donation to Future Forward, a super-PAC that shelled out $100 million to fund a last-minute TV ad blitz attacking Trump. “It’s raining in San Francisco, which is actually just perfect,” Moskovitz tweeted the day after Biden was named the victor. “5 star weekend.”

Reid Hoffman: The LinkedIn cofounder was one of Biden’s top fundraisers, helping the former vice president haul in record sums for his campaign. Hoffman himself gave more than $12 million this cycle, including at least $500,000 to Biden and $1.5 million to Unite The Country, a pro-Biden super-PAC. He told Axios in the days before the election that he would put $1 million into a digital ad campaign urging voters to be patient as votes are counted. Ahead of the 2016 election, Hoffman trolled Trump with his own Cards Against Humanity-style game called “Trumped Up Cards.”

Reed Hastings & Patty Quillin: The Netflix cofounder and co-CEO and his wife, Patty Quillin, reportedly co-hosted a fundraiser for Pete Buttigieg in December 2019 but ended up giving at least $1.4 million to Biden. Quillin was also one of the biggest political donors to California propositions this year. She put $2 million into opposing Proposition 20, which would have made it more difficult for convicted felons to qualify for early parole. It was struck down by voters. She put a quarter-million dollars into supporting Proposition 17, giving parolees in the state the right to vote, which won.

The other billionaire set to win big if Biden is sworn into office is former hedge fund executive Jim Simons who is worth more than $23 billion and who spent more than $20 million to defeat Trump.

Biden’s choice to make Harris his running mate elated not only Wall Street, but also Silicon Valley as she represents their interests in the United States Senate and has close family connections to tech executives. Harris’ brother-in-law is the chief legal officer for Uber, the ride-sharing corporation that has become a billion-dollar business by shifting most of the risk to its drivers.

In his transition, Biden has reportedly stacked positions with special interests from Big Tech. Most recently, the former vice president announced that former Obama official Susan Rice would become head of his Domestic Policy Council. Rice currently sits on the board of Netflix.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder

 

 More Silicon Valley Insiders Added to Biden Transition Team


ALLUM BOKHARI


After an election year in which the tech giants repeatedly interfered in the election against President Donald Trump, Joe Biden is now rewarding Silicon Valley by appointing insiders to a range of roles in his transition team.

Shortly after election night, the Financial Times reported that former Google CEO Eric Schmidt is being considered to lead a key tech task force inside the White House.

As Politico recently reported, four more Google and Facebook employees have been added to Biden’s transition team.

They are : Zaid Zaid, a Facebook public policy official, Chris Upperman, a Facebook manager, Rachel Lieber, a Facebook director and associate general counsel, and Deon Scott, a Google program manager who also worked in the Obama administration’s Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Biden transition is quietly putting Google and Facebook employees into its transition landing teams. pic.twitter.com/UI2QZKTcz6

— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) December 11, 2020

 

This is just the latest news of the Biden team’s efforts to court current and former Silicon Valley employees.

As Breitbart News previously reported, plenty other alumni of big tech, including former executives at companies like Amazon and Airbnb, are also expected to join the Biden transition team:

A recent report outlines the number of Big Tech executives that are expected to join Joe Biden’s transition team in the coming weeks. The team includes insiders from the entire range of Silicon Valley Masters of the Universe.

report published by Protocol has revealed that a huge number of Big Tech executives are expected to join Joe Biden’s presidential transition team, with Protocol stating there’s “definitive Silicon Valley representation and thought leaders on tech issues involved in shaping the future of the federal government. ”

Notable tech execs joining the transition team include:

Ÿ Tom Sullivan, Amazon’s director of international tax planning (State Department)

Ÿ Brandon Belford, Lyft’s senior director to the chief of staff (Office of Management and Budget)

Ÿ Divya Kumaraiah, Airbnb’s strategy and program lead for cities (Office of Management and Budget)

Ÿ Will Fields, Sidewalk Labs’ senior development associate (Treasury Department)

Ÿ Nicole Wong, former Google and Twitter, former Obama Deputy Chief Technology Officer (Office of Science and Technology Policy)

Ÿ Martha Gimbel, senior manager of economic research at Schmidt Futures (Council of Economic Advisers)

Ÿ Linda Etim, senior adviser at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (team lead for International Development)

This comes after Silicon Valley companies intervened in the election on behalf of Joe Biden. In addition to Twitter and Facebook both burying the New York Post’s reporting on the Biden family’s financial ties to Ukraine and China, Google also suppressed conservative news sources.

Six months before the election, following a major change to its core search algorithm, clicks and impressions to Breitbart News from Google searches for “Joe Biden,” dropped to zero and stayed their through election day. Prior to Google’s update, clicks and impressions from the search term saw a normal pattern of activity.

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. His new book, #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election, which contains exclusive interviews with sources inside Google, Facebook, and other tech companies, is currently available for purchase.


YOU CAN'T SEPARATE DEBACLE JOE BIDEN FROM HIS TECH CRONY BILLOINAIRES!

Big Tech and Big Law dominate Biden transition teams, tempering progressive hopes

Alexander Nazaryan administration takes office in January.

WASHINGTON — For six years, Brandon Belford worked as an economic policy adviser to President Barack Obama in the White House and federal agencies. He moved to the Bay Area when Donald Trump became president, part of a massive flight of Obama officials from Washington to Silicon Valley, Wall Street and Hollywood. He took high-ranking positions with Apple and then Lyft, where he is currently the ride-sharing company’s chief of staff.

Now Belford is back, as part of one of the “transition teams” named by President-elect Joe Biden to restock a federal government that has been battered after four years of Trump by hiring new officials and advising the incoming administration on what its first governing steps should be. 

Those steps could be timid, judging by the composition of those teams, where Obama-era centrism prevails. That has some progressives worried that Biden represents nothing more than a return to normal, at a time when many of them believe the nation is ready to embrace policy ideas well to the left of center. 

“The status quo is killing us,” says former Bernie Sanders press secretary Briahna Joy Gray, who now hosts a podcast called “Bad Faith.” 

Belford is joined by dozens of other Democratic operatives who have spent the past four years working at prestigious law firms and think tanks. On these “agency review teams” are high-ranking executives from Amazon, partners at white-shoe law firms like Covington & Burling and enough experts from D.C. center-left think tanks — including six from the Brookings Institution alone — to fill a center-left think tank.

Progressives knew this was coming. “I am very concerned about the role Uber executives would play in this administration,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez D-N.Y., told Yahoo News. Even though she also effusively praised the appointment of Ron Klain as the incoming White House chief of staff, Ocasio-Cortez vowed that corporate America would not “pull the wool over our eyes” when it came to crafting the Biden presidency.

Some have put it less bluntly. “Biden’s transition team is full of wealthy corporate executives who are completely disconnected from the struggles of the working class,” complains left-leaning activist Ryan Knight, whose Twitter handle is @ProudSocialist. 

App-based drivers from Uber and Lyft protest in a caravan in front of City Hall in Los Angeles on October 22, 2020 where elected leaders hold a conference urging voters to reject on the November 3 election, Proposition 22, that would classify app-based drivers as independent contractors and not employees or agents. (Photo by Frederic J. BROWN / AFP) (Photo by FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)More

He was presumably referring to the two dozen agency review team officials who come from law firms like Arnold & Porter. Or to the 40 or so members of the Biden transition who are current or recent lobbyists.

The agency review teams are not exactly settling into their cubicles just yet. For one, President Trump has not yet conceded the election, and the transition has been hindered in part by Republican operatives at the General Services Administration. And agency review is an enormously complex process, one that actually began months ago. The transition teams are supposed to ensure a “smooth transfer of power,” in large part by making sure that capable officials are ready to get to work in their respective agencies the moment Biden lifts his hand from the Lincoln Bible.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, one member of the Biden campaign working on agency-related matters says teams were primarily tasked with surveying the landscape of the federal bureaucracy. She says that the transition teams would make some hiring recommendations, but only as a secondary function.

With a single exception, the agency review team members mentioned in this article did not respond to requests for comment.

One with a typically impressive biography is that of Aneesh Chopra, who served as the U.S. chief technology officer for Obama before starting his own medical data logistics company, CareJourney. Now he is on the transition team for the U.S. Postal Service, where he will presumably work to undo the alleged damage by another logistics maven: Trump appointee Louis DeJoy.  

Of course, most progressives are glad that there’s a Biden transition to speak of, instead of a second Trump term. But they also recognize their own role in the Democratic candidate’s victory.

“Everyone fell into line and did everything they could to get Joe Biden elected,” says Max Berger, a progressive activist who worked for Elizabeth Warren’s presidential campaign and Justice Democrats, the group that helped elect Ocasio-Cortez to the House in 2018. 

Berger recognizes that progressives will be a “junior partner” to the establishment Democrats with whom Biden has been ideologically and temperamentally aligned for a good half-century. They want to be partners all the same, not just the loyal opposition.

Many are cheered by some of the agency review teams. For one, they are notably more diverse, a stark contrast to Trump’s reliance on white males for so much of his advice. On the transition team for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is Jedidah Isler, the Dartmouth professor who in 2014 became the first Black woman to earn a doctorate in astrophysics from Yale. The transition team for the Small Business Administration includes Jorge Silva Puras, a political leader in Puerto Rico who also teaches entrepreneurship at a community college in the Bronx. 

“The presence of labor officials throughout many of the groups is notable,” says David Dayen, executive editor of the American Prospect. In the Department of Education team, for example, are several executives from the American Federation of Teachers.

He called the Federal Reserve and Treasury teams “all-stars,” a sentiment shared by other progressives interviewed for this article. On the Treasury team is Mehrsa Baradaran, a progressive economist who has written on the racial wealth gap. She is also on the Federal Reserve team, along with Reena Aggarwal, a corporate governance expert.

Progressive strategist Elizabeth Spiers says the finance-related teams are not “not quite Elizabeth Warren levels of aggressiveness but also not stuffed with finance people.” Biden’s advisers appear to have learned the lessons of his former boss. During Obama’s first year, he relied on banking executives to help quell the financial crisis. They did so in ways that steered the new president away from progressive proposals, such as nationalizing those very same banks

There is not a single current executive from Citibank or Goldman Sachs on any of the transition teams. Bank of America has also been shut out. JPMorgan can boast a single toehold in the agency review process: Lisa Sawyer of the Pentagon team. A spokesman for JPMorgan told Yahoo News that the bank was “following the appropriate election laws” and that Sawyer was “not on an agency review team that will touch any banking issues.”

“I think the Biden administration is going to be surprising to progressives in some ways and disappointing in others, and the agency review teams reflect that,” Dayen says. During the summer, the American Prospect published a lengthy exposé about Biden’s foreign policy advisers’ lucrative foray into corporate America. Many are set to return to the highest echelons of official Washington. 

“I have to be cautiously optimistic,” says Waleed Shahid, communications director for the Justice Democrats. 

Relatively young progressives like Shahid are less likely to wax romantic about the way things were in Washington. They are less interested in experience than conviction. But for many in Biden’s camp, a lack of experience was among the several fatal flaws of the Trump years.

“Everyone — right or left — has made the mistaken assumption for years that governing is easy,” says “The Death of Expertise” author Tom Nichols, who teaches at the Naval War College and is an ardently anti-Trump Republican.

“After having a bunch of nitwits and cronies loose in the government,” Nichols wrote in an email, “I think a lot of people on the left are really giving in to the assumption that as long as you’re not Trump, or not a complete idiot, anyone can do it.”

Given the title and theme of his book, Nicholas cautioned against that approach. “It’s a childish and silly approach to government, but it’s a bipartisan problem,” he told Yahoo News.

While progressive may not see their stars like Sens. Bernie Sanders or Elizabeth Warren occupying the Treasury Department, they do very much hope that a Biden presidency amounts to more than a third Obama term. It was unaddressed economic inequality, they believe, that bred the populist resentment that gave Trump an opening in 2016. The coronavirus has only made that inequality worse. That will only increase populist resentment, they worry, to be exploited by a Trump acolyte — or perhaps Trump himself, again — in 2024.

Addressing that inequality, for now, falls to transition team officials like Mark Schwartz of Amazon and Ted Dean of Dropbox, as well as Arun Venkataraman of Visa and David Holmes of defense contractor Rebellion Defense, in which Eric Schmidt of Google is an investor. Many of these officials are veterans of the Obama administration or Democratic offices on the Hill. 

“There is a lot of corporate influence there,” says Maurice Weeks, co-founder of the Action Center on Race and the Economy. “And that is troubling.” But he is encouraged by the presence of “hard-core progressives” like Sarah Miller, a former Treasury deputy who is both an anti-Facebook activist and the executive of the American Economic Liberties Project, which seeks to curb corporate power. She is now on the Treasury transition team.

In some ways, the difference is between former Obama officials who, like Miller, went on to become activists and those who moved on to become rich. The latter did only what many government officials had done before them. But at a time of mass unemployment, a stint at the corporate law firm Latham & Watkins (three transition team members) may not seem as impressive as it may have when Obama was president.

“We don’t just want to rewind the clock by four years,” Weeks says.

For many progressives, Trump was a singular threat to important institutions of the federal government, but rebuilding those institutions is simply not as important as rebuilding entire communities shattered by economic, social and racial inequalities. 

It doesn’t help matters that, today, tech giants are distrusted by conservatives and progressives alike. Firms that were run out of Palo Alto garages now chafe at antitrust laws like the railroad companies of a century ago. 

And like those companies, they know how to use their influence. In 2019 alone, two of the biggest and most influential technology firms — Amazon and Facebook — each spent $17 million on “government affairs,” better known as lobbying.

Ocasio-Cortez’s reference to Uber may have been a subtle warning to the incoming administration: The brother-in-law of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris is Tony West, who worked for the Department of Justice under President Bill Clinton and is now the chief counsel at Uber. Jake Sullivan, another top Biden adviser, also worked for Uber

The company recently won a major victory in California with Proposition 22, a successful response to legal efforts to make Uber drivers and other “gig workers” employees, not contractors. That’s exactly the kind of labor policy, Ocasio-Cortez says, the Biden administration must avoid.

Many top Obama staffers went to Silicon Valley in 2017. They could be returning to Washington with a new appreciation for free market capitalism at a time when “socialism” is no longer a dirty word. 

“Joe Biden’s transition is absolutely stacked with tech industry players,” noted Protocol, an online publication that covers technology.

That’s exactly what worries Jeff Hauser, executive director of the Revolving Door Project, which tracks what Trump has called, without much affection, “the swamp.” He notes that the transition team for the Office of Management and Budget appears to have borrowed rather avidly from Silicon Valley, with team members hailing from Lyft, Airbnb and Amazon.  

The budget office wields an “enormous amount of power,” says Hauser, including in both how congressionally appropriated money is doled out and how certain rules are implemented. Though it had a supporting role in Trump’s impeachment drama over foreign aid, OMB is otherwise obscure, making it a perfect site for covert exercises of federal power. 

Hauser also didn’t like the prevalence of Big Law talent on the Department of Justice team, which signaled to him that the Biden administration could go soft on corporate malefactors. 

Watching the transition, Gray, the former Sanders adviser, recalled an old saying: “The fish rots from the head.” The head, in this case, is Joe Biden, of whom Gray has long been a skeptic.

“He’s a fundamentally conservative man,” Gray says. She reasons that if Biden was “unmoved by the largest protest movement in American history” to endorse Medicare for All, he can’t be trusted to do much for conservative causes like a $15 minimum wage and the Green New Deal.

Still, she believes that Biden can be made to hear the voices of progressives — if, Gray says, they are loud enough. She points out that there is widespread support for progressive legislation like the $15 minimum wage in Florida, even though Trump won the state. 

Biden easily won Oregon, but a push to legalize small amounts of drugs, known as Measure 110, was even more popular than he was.

She sees that as evidence that progressive ideas are more popular than Biden himself. “Progressives should never stop screaming that reality from the rooftops,” Gray told Yahoo News. And she vowed to keep fighting, even with Trump gone and a Democratic president in the Oval Office once again. 

“I don’t accept resignation,” she said.

Cover thumbnail photo: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters


Facebook Finds Way to Shove


Even More Ads in Your Face

GLENN CHAPMAN/AFP/Getty Images
GLENN CHAPMAN/AFP/Getty Images
2:33

Social media and online advertising giant Facebook is constantly inventing new ways to deliver ads to users, this time placing them inside its Oculus Quest virtual reality system.

The Verge reports that Facebook plans to begin testing ads inside its Oculus Quest virtual reality system very soon. Over the next few weeks, advertisements will start appearing inside VR titles including Resolution Games Blaston along with two other unnamed apps.

Facebook plans to later expand the system based on user feedback, aiming to create a “self-sustaining platform” for VR development. Facebook first introduced ads in the Oculus mobile app last month, and its used limited Oculus data to target Facebook advertising since 2019, so integrating advertising tech with Oculus products was not entirely new but the addition of advertisements in actual VR games marks the first time Facebook has included ads in the Oculus VR platform itself.

The company stated in a blog post: “Once we see how this test goes and incorporate feedback from developers and the community, we’ll provide more details on when ads may become more broadly available across the Oculus platform and in the Oculus mobile app.”

Similar to Facebook’s non-VR apps, users can block specific posts or companies from appearing in ad slots and Facebook says it doesn’t plan to change how it collects or analyzes user information. Facebook claims that some of the most sensitive data, including raw images from Oculus headset cameras and weight or height information from Oculus Move fitness tracking, remains entirely on the user’s device. Facebook also reportedly has “no plants” to target ads based on movement data or recordings from its voice assistant.

A Facebook spokesperson did however clarify that the system will use information from users Facebook profiles as well as “whether you’ve viewed content, installed, activated, or subscribed to a Oculus app, added an app to your cart or wishlist, if you’ve initiated checkout or purchased an app on the Oculus platform, and lastly, whether you’ve viewed, hovered, saved, or clicked on an ad within a third-party app.”

Read more at the Verge here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or contact via secure email at the address lucasnolan@protonmail.com

Amazon Introduces Consumer Surveillance Technology to Full-Size Grocery Stores

Jeff Bezos arrive at the Vanity Fair Oscar Party on Sunday, March 4, 2018, in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Evan Agostini/Invision/AP
2:40

Amazon’s “Just Walk Out” technology, which eliminated cashiers in its Amazon Go convenience stores, has now been integrated into a full-size 25,000 square foot Amazon Fresh grocery store for the first time. The system uses camera surveillance, pressure-sensitive shelves, and biometric data to charge customers for items they put in their carts.

The Verge reports that e-commerce and tech giant Amazon is integrating its Just Walk Out retail shopping tech in a full-size grocery store for the first time. According to an announcement from Amazon, the new 25,000 square foot Amazon Fresh store is significantly larger than the 10,400 square foot Amazon Go Grocery store it opened last year, or its standard 1,200 and 2,300 square feet Go convenience stores.

The new store will be Amazon’s fourteenth Fresh location in the United States when it opens on June 17 in Bellevue, Washington. When Amazon previously opened a 35,000 square foot Amazon Fresh store last year using its Dash Carts, it prompted speculation that the company’s Just Walk Out technology might not be a viable option for larger stores.

But Amazon has always claimed that Just Walk Out can scale up to stores of any size, using a series of overhead cameras and pressure-sensitive shelves to determine what shoppers put in their carts. Amazon’s vice president of Physical Retail and Technology, Dilip Kumar, commented:

Bringing Just Walk Out technology to a full-size grocery space with the Amazon Fresh store in Bellevue showcases the technology’s continued ability to scale and adapt to new environments and selection.

I’m thrilled it’ll help even more customers enjoy an easier and faster way to shop and can’t wait to get their feedback on this latest Just Walk Out offering.

Amazon says that when customers arrive at the new store in Bellevue, Washington, they’ll be prompted to pick a checkout option and that traditional checkouts will still be available when customers need them. If customers choose to use the Just Walk Out technology, they can enter the store by scanning a QR code in the Amazon app, inserting a linked credit or debit card, or scanning their palm. They are automatically billed for the items in their cart once they leave the store.

Read more at the Verge here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or contact via secure email at the address lucasnolan@protonmail.com


Indian H-1B visa workers in the United States are rooting for Joe Biden and hoping President Donald Trump and his pro-American reforms will get the boot, according to reports in Indian media.

 

Zuckerberg Funded 2020 Election Grants in at Least 21 Pennsylvania Counties

The money skewed heavily toward PA’s ‘blue’ counties.

Mon Apr 26, 2021 

Todd Shepherd

 5 comments

 

 

Reprinted From Broad and Liberty.

Grant monies awarded to help fund the 2020 election in at least 21 different Pennsylvania counties were heavily skewed toward counties with high Democratic registration and recent voting turnout, an analysis from Broad + Liberty shows.

Pennsylvania Republicans are currently considering legislation that would change the rules for private grants such as these in future elections, requiring them to go directly to the Pa. Department of State to be distributed evenly. Similar bills have been passed in Georgia and Arizona and are being considered in other states. 

The funds came from the nonprofit Center for Tech and Civic Life, founded in 2015. The CTCL drew national attention in the runup to the 2020 election after Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan gave $250 million to the nonprofit, according to a CTCL press release from September. A month later, the couple donated another $100 million to  CTCL.

Approximately $22 million in total was granted from CTCL to Pennsylvania counties. 

Pennsylvania Republicans were skeptical and sometimes irate with the grants, claiming that the nonprofit was buying election infrastructure to help propel Democratic turnout in a state that nearly all agreed would be essential to winning the Electoral College.

Rep. Jim Struzzi (R-Indiana County), a sponsor of the Pennsylvania bill, asserted in a The Center Square article that CTCL’s actions may violate the 14th amendment because “all eligible voters must be given equal access to their right to vote.” Allowing grants to some counties and not others is unfair, he said. 

Democrats, and even a judge who heard a complaint on the matter, rebuffed these claims by pointing to grants given by CTCL to some counties in the commonwealth that had voted for Trump by a 2-to-1 margin in 2016.

But while it is true that the CTCL gave grants to “red” counties like Luzerne, Erie and Mifflin, those grants were a fraction of what was given to bluer counties, especially in the southeast.

For example, Luzerne County received a grant of just over $173,000, averaging out 78 cents per registered voter. Erie County’s grant of $148,729 came to 73 cents per registered voter.

Meanwhile, Philadelphia and the collar counties enjoyed grants several times larger.

Delaware County’s grant of $2.2 million boosted election spending by $5.17 per registered voter, while Chester County’s $2.5 million averaged $6.57 per registered voter. These suburban collar counties were essential to flipping the state of Pennsylvania, even as Republicans increased their vote counts in Philadelphia itself. 

 

On a raw dollars basis, both Chester and Delaware received more from their respective grants than the total doled out to all of the “red” counties combined.

Meanwhile, the $10 million and change granted to Philadelphia came to an astonishing $8.87 to spend per registered voter — roughly 12 times more than the per-voter award to Luzerne or Erie counties. Philadelphia’s grant was five times larger than the largest “red” county grant.

Broad + Liberty is still waiting on grant documentation from Armstrong County and will update the story and the graphic when that information is received.

All grant award amounts are based on documents obtained via Right to Know request by Broad + Liberty, or were obtained by the Foundation for Government Accountability, a Washington D.C.-based nonprofit. Voter registration numbers were based on statistics available from the Pennsylvania Department of State on November 2, 2020.

“We must put a stop to private money election grants to cities and counties,” said Rep. Eric Nelson, (R-Westmoreland). “Big tech significantly outspent government in selective areas resulting in a dangerous precedent for all future elections. I fought this before the election and will continue to battle tactics that result in the unequal treatment of voters.”

A request for comment to CTCL was not returned.

The Thomas Moore Society filed suit against many of the blue counties before the election.

“Phill Kline, the man leading the legal charge, insisted local officials can’t accept those grants and that the money was flowing to areas where ‘progressive’ voters are numerous, leaving out conservatives,” reported Chris Brennan for the Philadelphia Inquirer.

“[U.S. District Judge Matthew W.] Brann pointed to a serious flaw in that logic with his ruling [in October]. CTCL has given grants to 18 Pennsylvania counties, 11 of which supported Trump for president four years ago. Five of those counties backed Trump by a margin of two to one,” the Inquirer report concluded.

Rep. Seth Grove (R-York County), who also supports the bill that would restrict these kinds of grants, said the disproportionate amounts were striking.

“I don’t think anybody would disagree that Philly would get substantially more money than some of these counties. But proportionally, it appears to look as though some red counties were patted on the head and said, ‘Oh, here you go’ to say that money went to red and blue counties combined,” Grove said.

Gov. Wolf’s spokeswoman, Lyndsay Kensinger, told another outlet that the governor is opposed to the legislation.

“The CTCL funding last year was used for non-partisan purposes, including most importantly purchasing protective equipment that helped keep poll workers safe in an unprecedented election year,” she said. “Instead of making it more difficult for the counties to obtain resources they need to administer elections, we should focus our efforts on commonsense election improvements such as allowing pre-canvassing of ballots, which is supported by the state county commissioners association and all 67 counties,” she said.

A portion of the Philadelphia CTCL grants used to fund “satellite election offices” also drew controversy and a lawsuit in the runup to the November vote. The issue gained instant notoriety when President Trump referred to them by saying “Bad things happen in Philadelphia” in the first presidential debate.

The city spent $2.2 million of the CTCL grants on satellite offices spread throughout the city that could register a voter, give them an absentee ballot, and accept the ballot back all at the same spot.

A small number of people claiming to be Trump poll watchers attempted to gain access to the offices but were denied, which spurred Trump’s comments at the debate. The city claimed the locations were not early voting centers, but instead were duplications of the main election office in City Hall, and thus weren’t open to poll watchers.

The Trump campaign sued to try and force access for poll watchers, but lost in a 2-1 decision in Commonwealth Court.

At least two of the grant request submissions (from Lehigh and Mifflin) show that the counties did not request a specific dollar figure from the CTCL, but instead were leaving the grant award to be decided by the nonprofit. Those grant submissions show that the counties mainly supplied the CTCL with the number of registered voters they served, and what the counties’ budgets were for that year.

Reports have varied as to the number of counties that have accepted grants from CTCL, but below is a list of all the counties that accepted a grant, as listed in a spreadsheet from CTCL. If a county has a hyperlink it will take you to grant documents obtained by Broad + Liberty.

Allegheny; Armstrong; Berks; Centre; Chester; Dauphin; Delaware; ErieJuniata; Lancaster; LehighLuzerneMercerMifflinMonroeMontgomery; Northumberland; Philadelphia; Pike; Somerset; Venango; Wayne; York.

Sen Kamala Harris is a product of Silicon Valley's billionaires and will enforce their agenda in DC.

Eg, she's an author of the S.386 bill that allows the Fortune 500 to hire more white-collar workers from India for jobs needed by America's college grads https://t.co/gKCuD9DH5z

— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) August 12, 2020

Reports: India’s H-1B Workers Back Joe Biden for President

BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images

NEIL MUNRO

31 Oct 202038

7:45

Indian H-1B visa workers in the United States are

rooting for Joe Biden and hoping President

 Donald Trump and his pro-American reforms will

 get the boot, according to reports in Indian media.

“Many H-1B visa holders, according to Jeya Ganesh, are wishing for a Biden win,” said a report in IndiaTimes.com. “Biden would be the preferred choice for skilled workers. He established clearly that he would resolve the hurdles for tech workers,” he said, adding, “If Trump gets reelected …  Canada is one option I am looking forward to.”

At least 500,000 Indians hold H-1B visas or H4EAD work permits that keep them in a wide range of U.S. white-collar jobs — despite the exclusion of many American graduates from career jobs. Nearly all of those visa workers hope the federal government will quickly provide them with the huge prize of green cards and citizenship. But that process is facing political challenges as Trump pushes popular rewrites of the H-1B program to help younger American graduates get white-collar jobs.

The support for Biden among Indians reflects the same rational assessment made by poor migrants at the U.S-Mexican border. “Asylum-seekers stranded in Matamoros, Mexico, have a plea for voters in November: Elect Joe Biden and “get us out of this hell,” said an October 20 report from the New Republic:

Migrants (& Wall St.) say they want Joe Biden to win – b/c he will open the United States to many more cheap-labor migrants.
That huge inflow, of course, would cut wages & raise housing $, so shifting yet more wealth to employers & coastal investors. https://t.co/6LGJQtVTj9

— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) October 27, 2020

“The most pressing concerns for many [migrant] Indians and [citizen] Indian-Americans remain immigration and H-1B visas and how the outcome of the elections impact these issues,” said IndiaExpress.com:

“If Biden-Harris prevail, the immigration situation will improve,” says [Manish] Kothari. “However, the H-1B situation could continue to be challenging because of how the State Department has changed under the Trump administration. It will take some time to undo these changes.”

Trump’s hostile immigration policies over the past four years have deeply impacted many Silicon Valley employees and their families. “Many workers had to return and this could continue in the next administration. Students who come to the US will be protected because new H-1B entrants from India will have more challenges arriving. We’ve already seen both examples of workers having to return to India and students rising to take available jobs,” explains [Nirav] Shah.

Pramod, who “has spent nearly 13 years in the US, said he would want to see Biden as the next US president,” according to the IndiaTimes.com.  “Biden is good. But I don’t want to keep my hopes up,” he said.

Indian students in the United States, many of whom cycle between university courses and visa jobs, also support Biden. “I personally feel that [Trump’s student visa reform] this is some sort of attack on the international students,” said Ratul Biswas, a University of Minnesota Ph.D. student from India. He told the Star Tribune that he hopes to land a job as a professor in the flooded market for U.S. academic slots.

“Of course Biden,” responded Ajay Bhutoria, a Democrat-aligned Indian in Silicon Valley, Breitbart News asked him who is the favorite of Indian-origin H-1B workers in the valley. “They don’t have a vote, but their voices are for Biden,” he added. In Silicon Valley, he said 80 percent of naturalized Indians are voting for Biden rater than Trump, partly because of the H-1B visas issue, he said.

“The community understands who the real friend of India is, who the foe,” Bhutoria told FinancialExpress.com. “Trump is a foe. … He has suspended the H1 Visa Programme [and] put trade deals with India in jeopardy.”

Many Indian Americans rationally favor the H-1B program. The huge program — and other visa worker pipeless — bring in at least 150,000 Indian visa workers per year, thereby providing Indian-run businesses with cheap and controllable labor and also expanding the cultural, economic, and political clout of Indians in the United States:

Another survey shows Indian-Americans vote overwhelmingly for welcoming pro-diversity Democrats.
Yet GOP legislators support the policies that import roughly 150K Indian workers (incl. #H1B for US jobs) & 150K Indian legal immigrants per year. https://t.co/h03hkUtEQA

— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) October 15, 2020

“Biden has clearly said he is going to raise at the H-1[B] program and increase it as the industry needs. He’s going to streamline the Green Card process in the first hundred days … so people in the Green Card [waiting line] can get the Green Card much faster,” Bhutoria told Breitbart.

On October 22, IndiaWest.com posted an op-ed appeal by Biden to Indian American voters:

I’ve always felt deeply connected to the Indian American community because of the values we share: duty to family and elders, treating people with respect and dignity, self-discipline, service, and hard work.

[Sen.] Kamala [Harris] is smart, tested, and prepared. But another thing that makes Kamala so inspiring is her mother, Shyamala Gopalan. We feel Kamala’s pride when she talks about her. She was from Chennai, where her father, Kamala’s grandfather, was active in the fight for Indian independence.

We also believe America is a land of opportunity. But it’s likely you and your family have been caught in the middle of President Trump’s crackdown of legal immigration and pathways to permanent residency and citizenship and his decisions on the H-1B visa program. And his dangerous rhetoric about immigrants has empowered white supremacists and even fueled hate crimes against Indian Americans.

Trump has also made much effort to win Indian American votes, particularly by helping businesses and cementing trade and security ties with India as its borders are challenged by an aggressive China.

Indian government officials also lean towards Biden, according to the Indian writer of an op-ed at CNN.com, who briefly noted the importance of the H-1B visa worker issue to India. “Indian diplomats say privately that handling the Trump administration has been complicated,” he wrote, adding:

If Biden wins, the Indian government can be expected to re-engage on climate issues, an easing of immigration restrictions and a resumption of less rancorous trade talks. New Delhi would also like to shore up sagging multilateralism and expects a President Biden to be less eager to pull all US troops out of Afghanistan, a major point of difference with the Trump administration.

There is also considerable vicarious pride in the choice of an Indian-American, Sen. Kamala Harris, as Biden’s running mate. One noticeable characteristic of the present campaign is the degree to which both candidates have gone to woo the Indian-American community. That the US is home to what is perceived by Indians as their most successful diaspora is just one more — and arguably the most lasting — reason that India and the US will remain close, irrespective of election results in either country.

Trump's H-1B rewrite is a huge break from the Fortune 500 b/c it shrinks their outsourcing & subcontracting policies.
So a huge win for US labor-rights, but few journos have the freedom to get past corporate/progressive framing of #H1B as 'immigration.'https://t.co/2lPDZhY2oH

— Neil Munro (@NeilMunroDC) October 29, 2020

Businesses and progressives praise open-ended legal migration partly because migrants’ arrival helps transfer wealth from wage earners to stockholders.

Migration moves money from employees to employers, from families to investors, from young to old, from homebuyers to real estate investors, and from the central states to the coastal states.

Migration also allows investors and CEOs to skimp on labor-saving technology, sideline U.S. minorities, ignore disabled peopleexploit stoop labor in the fields, short-change labor in the cities, impose tight control on American professionals, centralize technological innovation, undermine labor rights, and get many progressive reporters to cheerlead for Wall Street’s priorities.

 

Kamala Harris Raked in Cash from Big Tech During Democrat Primary

 

JOHN BINDER

 

During the 2020 Democrat presidential primary, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) was bestowed with the most billionaire donations of the nearly 30 candidates who ran for the nomination.

In the primary, Harris secured more donations from billionaires than any other Democrat running, according to a November 2019 analysis by Forbes. Before dropping out in early December 2019, Harris raked in donations from at least 46 billionaires.

A number of Harris’s donations came from executives and employees of big tech corporations, as Breitbart News reported at the time.

By August 2019, seven Facebook executives and employees had donated $1,000 or more to Harris’s campaign, nearly 20 Google executives and employees had donated more than $1,000, four Twitter executives and employees had donated more than $1,000, and 71 Amazon executives and employees had donated anywhere from $5 to $2,000.

Notably, Harris took donations from Impossible Foods president Dennis Woodside, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, and Salesforce chairman Marc Benioff.

Despite a lack of enthusiasm and support among primary voters, Harris’s campaign was propped up by a base of elite coastal donors, with less than 40 percent of her funding coming from small-dollar donors giving $200 or less as of October 2019.

On Tuesday, Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden confirmed Harris as his vice presidential pick. In a statement, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) called Harris a “champion for hardworking families everywhere.”

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.

 

Report: Facebook Manually Censored NY Post Biden Corruption Bombshell

 

TOM CICCOTTA

 

A report published this week alleges that Facebook manually censored the New York Post bombshell story about Biden family corruption.  According to the Guardian, Facebook moderators manually overrode the platform’s automatic processes to censor the Post, an effort that successfully censored about half of the engagement the article would have received, according to researchers.

According to a report by the Guardian, internal documents from Facebook suggest that the platform intentionally restricted the distribution of a New York Post report that allegedly revealed ties between Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden and a Ukrainian energy company. The suppression was not automatic or based on Facebook’s AI and algorithmic approach to content, but rather done by hand by Facebook moderators.

This does not come as a surprise as some Facebook executives announced their decision to restrict the distribution of the report. In a tweet, Facebook’s Policy Communications Director Andy Stone said that the story would be restricted in some form on the platform.

“While I will intentionally not link to the New York Post, I want be clear that this story is eligible to be fact checked by Facebook’s third-party fact checking partners. In the meantime, we are reducing its distribution on our platform,” Stone wrote in a tweet on October 14.

While I will intentionally not link to the New York Post, I want be clear that this story is eligible to be fact checked by Facebook's third-party fact checking partners. In the meantime, we are reducing its distribution on our platform.

— Andy Stone (@andymstone) October 14, 2020

According to an internal Facebook policy, the platform will remove “unverified rumors” that could lead to violence, harm, or voter interference. It is not clear how this policy is applied by Facebook.

“Generally, we take action on misinformation rated by fact-checking partners by reducing its spread and surfacing more information to people,” the policy reads. “However, we will remove misinformation if it violates our Community Standards, including misinformation and unverified rumors that could contribute to the risk of imminent violence or physical harm, voter and census interference content, and certain manipulated videos…”

Facebook’s censorship of the Post was deemed successful by social media engagement experts that examined the decision. They found that the Post‘s bombshell article only reached about half the engagement it would have been expected to reach on its own. Mark Zuckerberg denied censoring the Post during his recent testimony to the Senate Commerce Committee.

Breitbart News reported over the weekend that Twitter has finally reinstated the Twitter account belonging to the New York Post. The newspaper was locked out of their account on October 14 following the publication of the Hunter Biden story.

Stay tuned to Breitbart News for more updates on this story.

Wall Street Praises Kamala Harris as Joe Biden’s VP: ‘What’s Not to Like?’

JOHN BINDER

Wall Street executives are praising Democrat presidential nominee Joe Biden’s choosing Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA) as his running mate against President Trump, feeling they dodged a bullet from a progressive insurgency.

In interviews with the Wall Street JournalCNBC, and Bloomberg, executives on Wall Street expressed relief that Biden picked Harris for vice president on the Democrat ticket, calling her a “normal Democrat” who is a “safe” choice for the financial industry.

Morgan Stanley Vice Chairman Tom Nides told Bloomberg that across Wall Street, Harris joining Biden “was exceptionally well-received.”

“How damn cool is it that a Black woman is considered the safe and conventional candidate,” Nides said.

Peter Soloman, the founder of a multinational investment banking firm, told Bloomberg he believes Harris is “a great pick” because she is “safe, balanced, a woman, diverse, what’s not to like?”

As the Journal notes, many on Wall Street see Harris is another conscious decision by the Democrat establishment to stave off populist priorities to reform Wall Street:

To some Wall Street executives, Ms. Harris’s selection signals a more moderate shift for the Democratic Party, which its progressive flank has pushed to the left in recent years. [Emphasis added]

“While Kamala is a forceful, passionate and eloquent standard-bearer for the aspirations of all Americans, regardless of their race, gender or age, she is not doctrinaire or rigid,” said Brad Karp, chairman of law firm Paul Weiss, who co-led a committee of lawyers across the country who supported Ms. Harris during the primary. [Emphasis added]

Marc Lasry, CEO of Avenue Capital Group, called Harris a “great” pick for Biden. “She’s going to help Joe immensely. He picked the perfect partner,” Lasry told CNBC.

Executives at Citigroup and Centerview Partners made similar comments about Harris to CNBC and the Journal, calling her a “great choice” and “direct but constructive.”

Founder of financial consulting firm Kynikos Associates Jim Chanos was elated in an interview with Bloomberg over Harris joining Biden on the Democrat ticket:

“She’s terrific,” said Chanos, founder of Kynikos Associates. “She’s got force of personality in a good way. She takes over a room. She certainly has a charisma and a presence which will be an asset on the campaign.” [Emphasis added]

Harris is no stranger to praise from Wall Street executives. In the 2019 Democrat presidential primary, Harris won over a number of financial industry donors, even holding a fundraiser in Iowa that was backed by Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.

While criticizing “the people who have the most” in Democrat primary debates, Harris raked in thousands in campaign cash from financial executives from firms such as the Blackstone Group, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, and Wells Fargo.

This month, the New York Times admitted the “wallets of Wall Street are with Joe Biden” in a gushing headline about the financial industry’s opposition to Trump:

Financial industry cash flowing to Mr. Biden and outside groups supporting him shows him dramatically out-raising the president, with $44 million compared with Mr. Trump’s $9 million.

Harris’s views on trade and immigration, two of the most consequential issues to Wall Street, are in lockstep with financial executives’ objective to grow profit margins and add consumers to the market.

On trade, Harris has balked at Trump’s imposition of tariffs on foreign imports from China, Mexico, Canada, and Europe — using the neoliberal argument that tariffs should not be used to pressure foreign countries to buy more American-made goods and serve as only a tax on taxpayers.

Likewise, the Biden-Harris plan for national immigration policy — which seeks to drive up legal and illegal immigration levels to their highest levels in decades — offers a flooded labor market with low wages for U.S. workers and increased bargaining power for big business that has long been supported by Wall Street.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.

 

Sold Out: How High-Tech Billionaires &

Bipartisan Beltway Crapweasels Are

ScrewingAmerica's Best & Brightest


By Michelle Malkin and John Miano

Mercury Ink, 480 pp.

Hardcover, ISBN: 1501115944, $16.80

http://smile.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1501115944/centerforimmigra

Kindle, 10644 KB, ASIN: B00VBW3SYQ, $14.99

Book Description: The #1 New York Times bestselling author and firebrand syndicated columnist Michelle Malkin sets her sights on the corrupt businessmen, politicians, and lobbyists flooding our borders and selling out America’s best and brightest workers.

In Sold Out, Michelle Malkin and John Miano reveal the worst perpetrators screwing America’s high-skilled workers, how and why they’re doing it—and what we must do to stop them. In this book, they will name names and expose the lies of those who pretend to champion the middle class, while aiding and abetting massive layoffs of highly skilled American workers in favor of cheap foreign labor. Malkin and Miano will explode some of the most commonly told myths spread in the media like these:

Lie #1: America is suffering from an apocalyptic “shortage” of science, technology, engineering, and math workers.

Lie #2: US companies cannot function without an unlimited injection of the most “highly skilled” and “highly educated” foreign workers, who offer intellectual capital and entrepreneurial energy that American workers can’t match.

Lie #3: America’s best and brightest talents are protected because employers are required to demonstrate that they’ve made every effort to hire American citizens before resorting to foreign labor.

For too long, open-borders tech billionaires and their political 

enablers have escaped tough public scrutiny of their means and 

motives. Sold Out is an indictment of not only political corruption 

in Washington, but also the journalistic malpractice that enables it.

It’s time to trade the whitewash for solvent. American workers 

deserve better and the public deserves the unvarnished truth.

 

 

Tech Elites Endorse Joe Biden to Secure More Foreign Workers for U.S. Jobs

 

JOHN BINDER

 

Tech industry elites have endorsed Democrat presidential candidate Joe Biden, citing their opposition to President Trump’s efforts to prioritize Americans for high-paying tech jobs in the United States.

Twenty-four winners of the Turing Award, considered the Nobel Peace Prize for computer science, have endorsed Biden on the premise that the former vice president will allow the tech industry to import more foreign workers, specifically those on H-1B visas, to fill coveted U.S. jobs.

The list includes Google executive Vinton Cerf, Pixar executive Ed Catmull, Facebook executive Yann LeCun, and Alphabet executive John Hennessy.

“Information technology is thoroughly globalized. Academic computer science departments attract talented students, many of whom immigrate and become American inventors and captains of industry,” the executives and industry insiders wrote in their endorsement of Biden:

We celebrate open source projects, the lifeblood of our field, as exemplars of international collaboration. Computer Science is at its best when its learnings and discoveries are shared freely in the spirit of progress. These core values helped make America a leader in information technology, so vital in this Information Age. Joe Biden and Kamala Harris listen to experts before setting public policy, essential when science and technology may help with many problems facing our nation today. As American computer scientists and as US citizens, we enthusiastically endorse Joe Biden for President and Kamala Harris for Vice President. [Emphasis added]

Since mass unemployment hit the U.S., spurred by the Chinese coronavirus crisis, Trump signed an executive order halting a number of visa programs including the H-1B visa. Likewise, the Trump administration is eyeing H-1B visa reforms that would more effectively weed out the business model of outsourcing that has allowed American workers to be replaced by foreign H-1B visa workers.

In August, billion dollar tech corporations such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Twitter signed onto a U.S. Chamber of Commerce lawsuit against Trump’s executive order — arguing that they have a right to import foreign workers to fill U.S. jobs.

Unlike Trump, Biden has promised to increase the number of foreign H-1B visa workers that tech corporations will be able to import every year. The practice is a boon to tech executives.

There are about 650,000 H-1B visa workers in the U.S. at any given moment. Americans are often laid off in the process and forced to train their foreign replacements, as highlighted by Breitbart News. More than 85,000 Americans annually potentially lose their jobs to foreign labor through the H-1B visa program.

Analysis conducted in 2018 discovered that 71 percent of tech workers in Silicon Valley, California, are foreign-born, while the tech industry in the San Francisco, Oakland, and Hayward area is made up of 50 percent foreign-born tech workers. Up to 99 percent of H-1B visa workers imported by the top eight outsourcing firms are from India.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.

 


Mark Zuckerberg: ‘There Is a Risk of Civil Unrest Across the Country’

 

LUCAS NOLAN

 

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told analysts on a recent conference call with analysts that he believes there could be “civil unrest” across the country following the presidential election.

ZDNet reports that during a conference call with analysts, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg stated that the social media giant plants to post notices at the top of users’ news feeds on November 3 discrediting claims by either U.S. presidential candidate that they have won the election if the site deems the announcement premature.

Zuckerberg stated: “If any candidate or campaign tries to declare victory before the final results are called, we will put a notification to the top of People’s Facebook and Instagram feed letting them know the results aren’t final yet and we’ll put an informational label on the candidate’s post.”

Zuckerberg added that Facebook was taking the initiative as “There is a risk of civil unrest across the country, and given this, companies like ours need to go well beyond what we’ve done before.”

Discussing Facebook’s various efforts around the election, Zuckerberg stated that the site “helped 4.4 million people register [to vote] exceeding the goal that we set for ourselves this summer.”

Facebook has also paused all new political ads on its site for this week, Zuckerberg commented on this stating: “We’re doing this because while I generally believe that the best antidote to bad speech is more speech, in the final days of an election, there may simply not be enough time to contest new claims.”

Breitbart News recently reported that Facebook revealed in a blog post that a number of political ads were “improperly” restricted due to a technical error as the company attempted to prevent new political ads from being posted ahead of the November 3 election. Facebook stated that “technical flaws” caused a number of ads to be “paused improperly.”

Facebook stated that it has “implemented changes to fix these issues” and most of the advertisements were now running without any issues. Facebook stopped accepting new ads related to political issues on Tuesday and stated that it would allow pre-existing ads to run during that period but would block any adjustments to the ads’ content or design.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or email him at lnolan@breitbart.com

 

Sen. Roger Wicker Introduces Bill to Clamp Down on Big Tech Censorship

Mark Zuckerberg frowning
Getty/Chip Somodevilla
2:28

U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker (R-MS), ranking member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, introduced a bill aimed at curbing tech censorship called the PRO-SPEECH Act last week.

The bill would establish baseline protections to prohibit Big Tech from engaging in unfair, deceptive, or anti-competitive practices that limit or control consumers’ speech.

The bill draws a strict distinction between publishers and platforms, requiring that platforms abide by a series of rules regarding access to the service.

According to a press release from Sen. Wicker’s office, the bill aims to:

  • Preserve consumers’ ability to access lawful content, applications, services, or devices, so long as they do not interfere with an internet platform’s functionality or pose a data privacy or data security risk to a user.
  • Prohibit internet platforms from taking any actions against users based on racial, sexual, religious, partisan, or ethnic grounds.
  • Prohibit large internet platforms from blocking or discriminating against competing internet platforms by declaring such actions presumptively anti-competitive.
  • Require an internet platform to disclose to the public accurate information regarding the platform management practices, performance characteristics, and commercial terms of service of any app store, cloud computing service, operating system, search engine, or social media network it owns; and
  • Authorize the Federal Trade Commission to enforce the Act under Section 5 of the FTC Act notwithstanding any other provision of law.

“The big social media companies continue to abuse their market power by censoring content, suppressing certain viewpoints, and prioritizing favored political speech,” said Sen. Wicker in a statement.

“My bill would put safeguards in place to preserve internet freedom, promote competition, and protect consumers from these blatantly biased practices. It is time for Congress to act to ensure the internet can be an open forum where diverse views are expressed.”

Allum Bokhari is the senior technology correspondent at Breitbart News. He is the author of #DELETED: Big Tech’s Battle to Erase the Trump Movement and Steal The Election.

WSJ: Amazon Is Filled with Fake Reviews and Bogus Ratings

Jeff Bezos
AFP Photo/Alex Wong
2:50

In a recent article, the Wall Street Journal notes that Amazon’s e-commerce platform is still largely populated by fake reviews and inflated product ratings, giving customers an inaccurate view of product quality.

The Wall Street Journal reports in an article titled “Fake Reviews and Inflated Ratings Are Still a Problem for Amazon,” that many Amazon sellers are still offering monetary incentives to customers and purchasing fake reviews in order to boost the rating of their products.
The WSJ provided an example of these practices, writing:

A charging brick recently caught my eye on Amazon. It was a RAVPower-branded two-port fast charger, and it had five stars with over 9,800 ratings. The score seemed suspect but Amazon itself was the seller, so I added it to my cart anyway.

The device arrived a day later, along with a clue to all that customer satisfaction. A small orange insert offered a $35 gift card—roughly half of the product’s price—with instructions on how to redeem the gift: “Email us A. Your order ID (screenshot) B. Your review URL (or screenshot).”

Since the fast-charging tech is new to the market, “We want to see how people like it,” said Donny Dong, vice president of sales at Sunvalley, the parent of RAVPower. He said the company didn’t force customers to leave five stars in order to claim a gift card.

An Amazon spokesperson informed the WSJ that this practice violates the company’s policy which bans sellers from offering financial rewards for reviews. Amazon has added 50 million Prime members and made profits of over $26 billion since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic, more than the previous three years combined.

But as the company has grown and Amazon purchases increased, so did review manipulation. Sellers have begun taking advantage of the online shopping craze using new methods to increase ratings on products ranging from cordless vacuums to toilet paper holders.

For shoppers, this means that they can no longer fully trust a “five star” rated item. An Amazon spokesperson said that the company analyzes 10 million reviews a month using a combination of human moderators and machine-learning tools to stop review manipulation. “We will continue to innovate to ensure customers can trust that every review on Amazon is authentic and relevant,” a spokesperson said.

Read more at the Wall Street Journal here.

Lucas Nolan is a reporter for Breitbart News covering issues of free speech and online censorship. Follow him on Twitter @LucasNolan or contact via secure email at the address lucasnolan@protonmail.com

Leahy: Push Poll Purports to Show Majority of Republican Voters Support Media Cartel Bill

NEW YORK - JULY 08: Risa Turken reads The New York Times with an article about the London terror attacks while riding the subway during the morning rush hour July 8, 2005 in New York City. Security on subway trains and buses was increased in the wake of explosions that …
Mario Tama/Getty Images
17:06

A push poll released Wednesday, paid for by an establishment media-funded nonprofit designed to hype a Big Media cartel protection bill given the misleading name of the Journalism Competition and Protection Act (JCPA) by its sponsors, purports to show a majority of Republican voters back the legislation.

Echelon Insights, a polling firm founded and run by Patrick Ruffini, who handled grassroots outreach and technology for the George W. Bush 2004 presidential campaign, and Kristen Soltis Anderson, a Washington Examiner columnist and Fox News contributor, partnered with the News Media Alliance, a strong supporter of the JCPA, to produce the poll.

The News Media Alliance website claims it “is a nonprofit organization representing more than 2,000 news organizations and their multiplatform businesses in the United States and globally. Alliance members include print, digital and mobile publishers of original news content. Headquartered near Washington, D.C., in Arlington, Va., the association focuses on ensuring the future of news media through communication, research, advocacy and innovation.”

The News Media Alliance Board of Directors is populated by a Who’s Who of establishment media executives:

Board chairman Antionette “Toni” Bush, executive vice president and global head of government affairs for News Corp, which owns Fox News, Maribel Perez Wadsworth, publisher of USA TODAY, Chris Argentieri,  president of California Times, which includes the Los Angeles Times and San Diego Union-Tribune, Gregg Fernandes, executive at The Washington Post, which is owned personally by billionaire Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Guy Gilmore, chief operating officer of Digital First Media, owned by hedge fund Alden Capital, which has been notoriously criticized for purchasing thriving local newspapers, decimating the local reporting staff, and milking the last ounce of value from the once respected local news brand, Rebecca Grossman-Cohen, executive at The New York Times, Donna Hall, publisher of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the regional bastion of establishment media in the Southeast, Jeffrey M. Johnson, president and group head of Hearst Newspapers,  Dan Krockmalnic, executive with Boston Globe Media Partners, Mark Newhouse, executive vice president of newspapers for Advance Publications, and Barbara Wall, who serves on the Board of Directors of Gannett Company, Inc.

The House version of the JCPA, HR. 1735, is sponsored by Rep. David Cicilline, (D-RI) and co-sponsored by 27 other members of the House of Representatives, 21 Democrats and six Republicans, two of whom, Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and Rep. Burgess Owens (R-UT), are surprising because both have publicly criticized the kind of establishment narrative reporting embodied by the participants in the News Media Alliance. Rep. Ken Buck (R-CO) is the most vocal Republican cosponsor of the bill.

The bill summary provided at Congressional Research Services, says it “creates a four-year safe harbor from antitrust laws for print, broadcast, or digital news companies to collectively negotiate with online content distributors (e.g., social media companies) regarding the terms on which the news companies’ content may be distributed by online content distributors.”

Echelon Insights characterized the JCPA as “a bipartisan bill that would grant news publishers a limited, temporary safe harbor to negotiate better business terms with Big Tech platforms, including Facebook and Google.”

But opponents of the bill, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH), and House Speaker Rep. Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), as well as other leading conservatives, paint JCPA in an entirely different light.

“The Journalism Competition and Preservation Act will give even more power to the mainstream media and Silicon Valley. We need to protect our small newspapers and ensure they are compensated for their content. This will allow big tech to further consolidate power and make it even easier to censor conservative voices on social media,” Sen. Blackburn t0ld Breitbart News earlier this month.

“In the case of the collective bargaining [in the JCPA], yeah it sounds interesting. . . That is, you could have some of the newspapers that are locally owned or owned by a conglomerate, they’ll cut their own deal. They’ll say ‘you’re right, we’re a credible, reputable news organization—collectively bargain with us for our content. But everyone else who challenges our narrative or our views, they get a different deal and you could even not promote their information if you want.’ So, like I said, the intent is good. But I think in practice it opens the door to greater collusion between big media and big tech,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) told Breitbart News last month.

As Breitbart reported last month, the bill “would allow big media companies like the New York Times and CNN to form a cartel to pressure tech companies for special treatment.” It has been blasted by “President Trump’s tech censorship experts, one of the two Republican FCC commissioners, House GOP leader Rep. Kevin McCarthy, Rep. Jim Jordan, and staffers to fellow members of the House Freedom Caucus.”

The Echelon Insights poll was conducted over a five-day period from June 4 to June 8, and is remarkable mainly for the blatantly leading nature of the questions it posed to respondents, and its polling methodology, which was entirely internet based. The 956 poll respondents were “Republican and Republican-leaning voters,” who were “sampled from web panels matched to L2 Voter File.”

Notably, Echelon Insights did not provide a margin of error on the survey, which most polling forms typically include.

While the reported demographics of the poll respondents appeared to match the reported demographics of other polls of Republicans done by firms that rely on sample selection and questioning methodologies that are not entirely internet based, the leading nature of the poll questions are another matter entirely.

Specifically, the questions were framed in a way to allow the Big Media members of the News Media Alliance–USA Today, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times and others–to masquerade as conservative media and local media, which they decidedly are not.  That’s the way the narrative of the poll was framed.

The questions are blatantly one sided. There’s no balance to the question. They play into the current free speech, Pro-Trump sentiment against Big Tech among conservative Republicans. [Note: Some parts of questions below are highlighted in bold for emphasis.]

The first question introduces the idea of the bill, which the poll says is “a proposal that would allow news publishers to band together to collectively negotiate better terms for the use of their content by Big Tech.”

  • Policymakers are working on a proposal that would allow news publishers to band together to collectively negotiate better terms for the use of their content by Big Tech, notably Google and Facebook. Would you support or oppose such a proposal?

The next question presents an inaccurate description of the bill in the two possible responses offered to the respondent:

  • There is currently a debate in Congress over this proposal. Which of these statements comes closest to your view, even if neither of them is exactly right?
    1. Congress should pass this proposal, because it gives small, local, and conservative news media more tools to fight back against Big Tech by requiring that they have a chance to work together and get fair compensation for their work
    2. Congress should keep the law as it is, which would require each individual news outlet to try to strike deals with Big Tech on their own

The subsequent question does the same thing in the two responses:

  • Some members of Congress are opposed to this proposal, arguing that Big Tech should be free to negotiate with whomever it likes. Which of these statements comes closest to your view, even if neither of them is exactly right?
    1. These members of Congress are doing the bidding of Big Tech and its lobbyists, and will only hurt smaller, local, and conservative publishers as a result
    2. These members of Congress have well-reasoned objections to protecting local and conservative news outlets from Big Tech

The poll then moves on to a series of agree/disagree questions, which it frames as follows:

  • Supporters of the proposal which would allow print, broadcast, or digital news publishers of all sizes to band together to collectively negotiate better terms for the use of their content by Big Tech have given some reasons why they say the plan is needed. For each, please indicate if you think you agree or disagree with the statement.

The questions that follow are framed in a way that continues to support the News Media Alliance masquerade that it is both “local” and “conservative:

  • Local news outlets and conservative media need to be able to band together to better negotiate a fair deal with Big Tech.
  • If news publishers are forced to cut deals with Big Tech one-on-one, Facebook and Google will take advantage of this and use their power to ignore small, local, and conservative news publishers, leaving them out of negotiations entirely.
  • Elected officials who oppose this proposal are allowing Big Tech to have all the negotiating power instead of giving conservative and local media the tools to fight back.
  •  Because Big Tech has so much power, it will be able to drive small, local, and conservative news outlets out of business if it is allowed to leave them out of negotiations.
  • It is important to make Big Tech treat conservative media like any other news outlet.
  • It is important to stop Big Tech from discriminating against conservative media.
  • Local and small news organizations should have the same negotiating power as big ones, like the New York Times.
  • Big Tech companies should fairly compensate local and conservative news publications for their content.
  •  Congress should pursue this proposal to help local and conservative media even if it also benefits national news organizations like the New York Times or the Washington Post.
  • Big Tech companies should be required to offer the same compensation terms to local and conservative publishers as they do to national news organizations.

After all the respondents are asked these push poll questions, they are asked the question whose responses are highlighted as one of the Echelon Insights poll:

  • Knowing what you now know about the proposal to allow news publishers to band together to collectively negotiate better terms for the use of their content by Big Tech, notably Google and Facebook, would you support or oppose such a proposal?

Not surprisingly, here are the key findings Echelon Insights said the poll revealed:

  • 73% of Republican voters surveyed believe that local news outlets and conservative media need to be able to band together to better negotiate a fair deal with Big Tech.
  • Three out of four (75%) Republican voters surveyed believe that Big Tech should not be allowed to profit from news content unless it is fairly compensating news organizations for using that content.
  • 70% of Republican voters surveyed believe Facebook and Google take advantage of news publishers when they negotiate on a one-on-one basis and use their power to ignore small, local, and conservative news publishers, leaving them out of negotiations entirely.
  • More than two-thirds (67%) of Republican respondents agree that elected officials who oppose the JCPA are allowing Big Tech to have all the negotiating power instead of arming conservative and local media with the tools to fight back.

Here are the key findings Echelon Insights said the poll revealed:

  • 73% of Republican voters surveyed believe that local news outlets and conservative media need to be able to band together to better negotiate a fair deal with Big Tech.
  • Three out of four (75%) Republican voters surveyed believe that Big Tech should not be allowed to profit from news content unless it is fairly compensating news organizations for using that content.
  • 70% of Republican voters surveyed believe Facebook and Google take advantage of news publishers when they negotiate on a one-on-one basis and use their power to ignore small, local, and conservative news publishers, leaving them out of negotiations entirely.
  • More than two-thirds (67%) of Republican respondents agree that elected officials who oppose the JCPA are allowing Big Tech to have all the negotiating power instead of arming conservative and local media with the tools to fight back.

The final two questions of the poll, whose responses are listed below, continued the theme of incorrectly portraying the bill as a battle between conservative media and Big Tech:

  • Facebook and Google are lobbying against this proposal. Does that make you more or less likely to support it?
    1. Much more likely 45%
    2. Somewhat more likely 22%
    3. Somewhat less likely 10%
    4. Much less likely 6%
    5. Unsure 17%
  • Conservative publications like National Review, Newsmax, the Daily Caller, and the Washington Examiner are supporting this proposal. Does that make you more or less likely to support it?
    1. Much more likely 34%
    2. Somewhat more likely 31%
    3. Somewhat less likely 9%
    4. Much less likely 4%
    5. Unsure 22%

The final question makes no mention of truly local media outlets and other conservative media that oppose the JCPA.

As Breitbart reported last month, such opposition is well founded:

Under the current wording of the bill, media companies would be allowed to form a cartel to strengthen their hand in negotiations with tech companies.

The bill also allows them to exclude media companies that are not “similarly situated” to members of the cartel from the benefits of these negotiations, opening the door for competition to be marginalized.

The bill also specifically allows the media cartel to negotiate with the tech companies on issues related to “quality, accuracy, attribution or branding, and interoperability of news,” allowing them to set universal standards for the industry without the say of their competitors.

Republican FCC commissioner Nathan Simington issued a warning earlier this week that the JCPA could be extremely damaging to local news.

“I would love more clarity on what counts as “similarly situated,” what constitutes a “digital news organization,” and “terms that would be available,” Simington told Breitbart News.

“For example, if a local newspaper has inferior economies of scale to a national one, commercial terms with bulk rates per click are worse for the local newspaper, while commercial terms with a lump sum per piece of content are worse for the national newspaper. If these terms are available to both, but negotiated by the national newspaper, they will actively harm the local one.”

In addition to opposition from communications and technology experts like Simington, the JCPA is also opposed by House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy, Judiciary Committee ranking member Jim Jordan, and Sen. Marsha Blackburn.

Rep. McCarthy called the bill the “antithesis of conservatism” in comments to Breitbart News in March. Rep. Jordan has warned it will grant the media “cartel power.” Sen. Blackburn has said it will grant “even more power to the mainstream media and Silicon Valley.

Some of the other results of the poll show the misleading nature of the questions. For instance, the poll claimed 68 percent of respondents trusted local news — your local newspaper or local TV news station — a lot. The poll lumped Fox News, Newsmax, and conservative talk radio into a category called “conservative news organizations,” which 67 percent of respondents said they trusted “a lot,” and put the New York Times and national news broadcasts into a category called “national news organizations,” which 37 percent of respondents said they trusted “a lot.”

However, a 2019 Gallup Poll found that on reporting about state and local government among all voters, only 8 percent of respondents said local TV reporting was excellent, and just 37 percent said it was good.


No comments: