Banking, Broadband, & Big Tech
Hello and welcome again to Citizen Tech, InformationWeek’s month-to-month coverage roundup. This month we’re wanting into cyber incident reporting for banks, the semiconductor chip scarcity, the European Union’s battle with Big Tech, President Biden’s broadband plans, and extra.
Banks Must Report Cyber Incidents
On November 18, the FDIC announced a brand new rule for cyber incident reporting for banks. As of May 1, 2022, a monetary establishment could have 36 hours to inform its main federal regulator of any vital cybersecurity incident, and to inform clients as quickly as potential of any disruption of service that lasts 4 or extra hours.
The rule covers all financial institution features and companies, as outlined by the Bank Service Company Act. It will possible embody fintech corporations.
Every dialogue of cybersecurity regulation within the United States appears to search out its manner again to notification protocols — largely that they don’t exist. The FDIC’s announcement is a vital step towards the creation of a cohesive, cross-industry reporting framework.
Still, anticipate resistance from firms. The FDIC’s announcement acknowledges that the 36-hour rule was controversial, with many banks arguing that it was too slim a window to determine the issue and react.
Biden Buoys, Bungles Broadband
After months of argument and guarantees, President Biden’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act passed into law, with main significance for the tech sector.
NextGov noted {that a} huge $42.45 billion will go to the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program, with every state receiving $100 million. The plan is to convey broadband entry to underserved elements of the US, significantly rural areas. Almost $6 billion will go to comparable packages.
All this appears like welcome information, however POLITICO was quick to disagree, saying the invoice makes a canine’s breakfast of meaningfully closing the digital divide. At fault are maps: The FCC and state governments can’t reliably find broadband lifeless spots. One regulator has claimed that the federal estimate on broadband availability is off by an unbelievable 80% in a single rural Mississippi county.
According to Pew Research data launched in August, rural Americans are inclined to lag behind their metropolis compatriots by about 8% to 10% p.c in key expertise markers. So whereas 89% of city Americans personal a smartphone, solely 80% of rural Americans have one. Home broadband is at 72% within the countryside, however the city and suburban figures aren’t a lot better: Seventy-seven p.c and 79%, respectively. (There’s an ethnic divide, too: Only 65% of self-identified Hispanic adults have house broadband.)
These low figures are a critical vulnerability, because the shift to distant work and on-line faculty made clear final 12 months.
More Chips for Everyone
Anyone who thought expertise had conquered geography has lastly discovered their lesson. As ships and vehicles sit idle, the Chinese semiconductors that industries like electrical automobile manufacturing depend on have gotten scarce.
Both the Biden administration and the European Commission have made efforts this month to spice up home chip manufacturing. American lawmakers are made vital progress this month towards passing the CHIPS Act, which might incentivize semiconductor manufacturing within the US. The Senate’s invoice would give $52 billion to semiconductor manufacturing alone.
The Biden administration, within the particular person of commerce secretary Gina Raimondo, has inspired the drive to wean American {industry} off overseas chips, as has a bipartisan group of 9 governors. Prominent amongst these governors is Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, a reminder that the way forward for the automotive {industry} is electrical and is dependent upon a constant provide of semiconductors.
Said Raimondo to reporters forward of an look on the Detroit Economic Club (by way of The Detroit News), “We’re at an inflection level and we’ve got to make selections. If we’re critical about restoring American management within the international financial system, we’ve got to start out by rebuilding our semiconductor {industry} so we are able to meet the calls for of this second.”
Meanwhile, in Brussels, the Van Der Leyen Commission is contemplating its personal CHIPS Act to boost European chip manufacturing from 10% to twenty% of the worldwide provide. Margrethe Vestager, longtime commissioner for competitors, introduced this month that the Commission wouldn’t be averse to pumping cash into chip manufacturing in Europe, reports Reuters.
Of course there are objections to this, and naturally the objections break down alongside geographical traces. French president Emmanuel Macron (channeling De Gaulle) has urged for extra beneficiant subsidies from Brussels, whereas Dutch and Irish lawmakers have wagged their fingers at any potential antitrust violation.
“Each case for the supply of semiconductors will be rigorously assessed based on their respective merits, so as to ensure that a project has a European nature and of course avoid a subsidy race within the union and beyond,” stated Vestager.
Reuters quotes administration consulting agency Kearney’s estimate that one “mega-semiconductor factory” might add as much as 85 billion euro to European GDP over the following decade.
EU’s Digital Decade
Expect an increasing number of tech information from the EU. On November 10 the European Commission introduced the adoption of three new campaigns for its Digital Europe Programme, to the tune of two billion euro. The greatest of those new packages will fund funding in all the pieces from synthetic intelligence to cloud and quantum infrastructure, with 1.38 billion euro to final till the tip of 2022. The different two pump cash into cybersecurity and a community of “digital innovation hubs.”
The Commission’s press release stresses that the brand new knowledge areas created by these packages is not going to be restricted by borders, and can favor (no less than in concept) small- to medium-sized companies and startups. Funding for digital expertise coaching can also be included.
A fact sheet on the Digital Europe Programme is out there on the Commission’s web site.
The announcement comes, maybe unsurprisingly, on the heels of the European Parliament’s rebuke of American Big Tech corporations. On November 8, MEPs invited Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen to Strasbourg as a part of the deliberations over a proposed Digital Services Act, which might counter focused promoting, opaque algorithms, unaccountability, and unlawful net content material. Cough, cough.
POLITICO walked through the implications of the Digital Services Act, together with baby safety measures and an try and maintain smaller, European tech corporations from being squashed.
Make no mistake: the narrative in Brussels and Strasbourg has good guys and unhealthy guys, and the unhealthy guys are completely American and Chinese (TikTok particularly). A surprising POLITICO graphic, drawn from 2020 NASDAQ and World Bank knowledge, reveals that they might have one thing of a degree: Apple’s market capitalization is barely better than France’s whole GDP. Facebook is value greater than Holland.
US, UK, and Australia Denounce Iranian-Sponsored Cyber Attacks
On November 17, safety businesses from the United States (FBI and CISA), the United Kingdom (NCSC), and Australia (ACSC) launched a
joint advisory figuring out a brand new superior persistent risk (APT), a prison group sponsored by the Islamic Republic of Iran.
The advisory claims that this new risk, which incorporates actors just like the Fox Kitten group, is liable for a lot of infrastructure assaults within the US and Australia, together with within the public well being sector, all through 2021. They appear to concentrate on identified vulnerabilities, chinks within the armor of Microsoft Exchange ProxyShell and Fortinet amongst others, to deploy ransomware.
The advisory warns that follow-on operations can embody or have included knowledge exfiltration or encryption, in addition to the (by now regular) ransomware.
Crypto in India: Don’t Expect a War
It’s not a secret that cryptocurrencies make central banks nervous: Bitcoin and the like exist to flout regulation and management. So far, few nationwide governments have dared ban cryptocurrency outright; we’ve seen a couple of years of chilly struggle, with the American Securities and Exchange Commission publicly sniping at Terraform Labs, for instance, and lots of governments mulling a ban on mixers.
Turkey, whose lira is in freefall, is transferring towards an outright ban. Nigeria tried a ban, however stays the second-largest Bitcoin market on the planet. In Russia, the Kremlin’s stance is ambiguous, as rumors of a CryptoRuble make the rounds. But China is the one main worldwide energy to efficiently outlaw crypto transactions by its residents, full cease.
Now, India could also be becoming a member of them. A new bill, the Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021, “seeks to prohibit all private cryptocurrencies in India, however, it allows for certain exceptions to promote the underlying technology of cryptocurrency and its uses.”
According to the BBC, the information precipitated rather small waves within the crypto markets: Bitcoin fell 13% in India, and Dogecoin dropped by 15%. There was no dramatic fall, significantly for the infamously unstable crypto market.
This means that the Indian Mutiny might not be as critical because it sounds. India’s Financial Express factors to the many failed bans (see Nigeria) and shrugs its shoulders. The wording of the invoice, too, waters down the ban a bit. What are the “certain exceptions,” and for whom do they apply?
What to Read Next:
Global Tech Policy Briefing for October 2021
The Future of Privacy: What IT Leaders Need to Know
Cyber Conflict Between US and Iran Heats Up (from Dark Reading)