Neither the EU nor Australia (for now) will snoop in the mail. US bans Kaspersky, worries about Russia link 🔐 #WEEKLY ~ June 23th
The U.S. Department of Justice is suing Adobe. The opioid crisis among teens on Snapchat. SpaceX unveils Starlink Mini. Apple reportedly hacked. Social networks labeled as cigarettes? Weird ideas.
You're reading paid english version of #TYDEN. It's always up to twice as long as the free version (which is not available in english anyway). More information, more context, more details. In the subscription settings of your account it’s possible to choose which version (Czech, English, podcast) you want to receive by email/notification. Thousands characters, thousands words, to read. Every sunday.
The US Department of Justice is suing Adobe for allegedly harming "consumers by enrolling them in its default, most profitable subscription plan without clearly disclosing" the terms of the plan. (The Verge)
FTC Takes Action Against Adobe and Executives for Hiding Fees, Preventing Consumers from Easily Cancelling Software Subscriptions (FTC)
The opioid crisis among teens on Snapchat: law enforcement sources and parents say Snap helped fuel the U.S. overdose epidemic through fake pills sold online (Rolling Stone)
AMD is working with police and a hosting provider to investigate allegations of corporate data theft after a BreachForums user reported that AMD's systems were breached (Bloomberg)
AMD said that hackers gained access to limited information related to the assembly of certain AMD products on a third-party vendor's website, and it does not expect any material business impact. (Bloomberg)
A planned EU Council vote on an amendment to a bill that could force WhatsApp and Signal to scan images and links for CSAM has been withdrawn from the agenda. Countries are clashing over how to protect privacy when removing illegal photos and grooming on private chat apps. (Politico)