Tech bills of the week: Updated AI innovation; expanding cybersecurity for SNAP; and more
New federal legislation aims to establish voluntary AI testing standards through NIST and mandate chip-enabled security for SNAP benefit cards to prevent fraud. The AI innovation bill would codify the Center for Artificial Intelligence Standards and Innovation within NIST to develop unified AI standards through public-private partnerships. Separate bipartisan legislation addresses cybersecurity gaps in the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program by requiring chip technology for EBT cards, which currently lack the protections standard for credit cards.
Nextgov/FCW • Feb 28
SURVEILLANCE REGULATION TECH
FCC approves the merger of cable giants Cox and Charter
The Federal Communications Commission has approved Charter Communications' $34.5 billion acquisition of Cox Enterprises' residential cable, commercial fiber, and managed IT businesses. FCC Chairman Brendan Carr claimed the merger will expand rural connectivity and keep jobs in the U.S. The deal creates one of the largest cable and Wi-Fi providers in the country, consolidating significant telecommunications infrastructure under a single entity. The approval follows a pattern of merger-friendly decisions under the current FCC leadership.
Engadget • Feb 28
CORPORATE NEOCORP ANTITRUST
Conduent Data Breach Could Affect 25M People. Learn How to Protect Your Online Accounts
A ransomware attack on government contractor Conduent has exposed personal data of 25 million Americans across multiple state healthcare programs, including names, Social Security numbers, and medical information. The SafePay ransomware gang spent three months in Conduent's systems before discovery, exfiltrating approximately 8 terabytes of data. Many affected individuals were unaware their data flowed through Conduent's backend systems, highlighting systemic supply-chain vulnerabilities in government technology procurement.
CNET • Feb 27
CORPORATE SURVEILLANCE REGULATION
Acting head of the nation's cyber agency reassigned amid rising congressional scrutiny
Madhu Gottumukkala, the acting director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), has been reassigned to a new DHS role as director of strategic implementation. The move comes amid expected congressional questioning about his leadership decisions and connections to South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, now DHS Secretary. CISA faces growing oversight as Republican lawmakers scrutinize its disinformation research partnerships and seek to refocus the agency toward core infrastructure protection mandates.
POLITICO • Feb 27
SURVEILLANCE REGULATION CYBERWAR
Federal Bank Regulator Moves to Restrict US Stablecoin Rewards
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued its first major rules implementing the federal GENIUS Act, proposing restrictions on companies launching branded stablecoins through white-label platforms and offering customer rewards tied to stablecoin holdings. The rules aim to govern how stablecoin issuers operate within the banking system while maintaining safeguards around money laundering and sanctions compliance. The move comes as US lawmakers negotiate broader crypto market structure legislation ahead of a March 1 White House deadline.
Bloomberg • Feb 27
CRYPTO FINANCE REGULATION
Binance cannot arbitrate customer claims over crypto losses, US judge rules
A federal judge rejected Binance's motion to force arbitration on customers who accused the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange of illegally selling unregistered tokens that subsequently lost significant value. The court ruled that Binance failed to demonstrate adequate notification when it updated its terms of service in 2019, finding pre-2019 users never received actual notice of arbitration clauses. The decision keeps class-action claims in federal court and establishes precedent on how crypto exchanges must communicate contract modifications to users.
Reuters • Feb 27
CRYPTO FINANCE REGULATION
The Silicon Valley billionaires spending big to write America's AI rules
Silicon Valley billionaires are investing heavily in 2026 midterm elections to shape AI regulation, funding candidates across party lines to influence policy outcomes on algorithmic governance, export controls, and intellectual property. The spending aims to prevent restrictive AI legislation and maintain industry self-regulation as Congress and state legislatures debate AI oversight measures. The effort represents an unprecedented alliance of tech capital seeking to capture regulatory frameworks before they solidify.
Financial Times • Feb 27
CORPORATE GEOPOLITICS INEQUALITY
Trump announced a major deal on data centers. It's still unclear what's in it.
President Trump announced a "Rate Payer Protection Pledge" during his State of the Union address, claiming major tech companies agreed to build their own power plants for data centers so consumers don't pay for AI's energy appetite. Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, xAI, Oracle, and OpenAI are expected to sign the pledge on March 4. Lawmakers from both parties remain skeptical, noting the absence of enforcement mechanisms or policy specifics, and the Data Center Coalition spent nearly $1 million on lobbying in 2025.
Politico • Feb 27
CORPORATE NEOCORP REGULATION
How Chinese AI Chatbots Censor Themselves
Stanford and Princeton researchers found that Chinese AI models including DeepSeek and Alibaba's Qwen are significantly more likely than Western counterparts to dodge political questions or deliver inaccurate responses on sensitive topics. The study reveals systematic self-censorship mechanisms embedded in Chinese AI systems, with researchers finding techniques to force models to expose their hidden refusal instructions.
WIRED • Feb 27
CORPORATE GEOPOLITICS REGULATION
How AI is supercharging Russia's online disinformation campaigns
Security experts warn that Kremlin-aligned actors are deploying AI-generated synthetic videos at scale to shape public opinion across Europe and the US, while Western governments lack adequate tools and laws to respond. A King's College London professor's identity was hijacked via AI voice-over deepfake for a Russia-linked operation dubbed "matryoshka," which embeds false claims in layers of ambient re-posts from compromised accounts.
BBC • Feb 27
GEOPOLITICS CYBERWAR SOCIAL
Met police to pilot facial recognition identity checks, mayor confirms
The Metropolitan Police will deploy 100 officers using roaming facial recognition technology for six months to conduct identity checks on citizens. London Mayor Sadiq Khan backed the pilot despite previously stating the Met would consult stakeholders and ethics panels before implementing operator-initiated facial recognition. Civil liberties groups called the expansion "alarming" as the UK already deploys facial recognition via fixed cameras and retrospective systems nationwide.
The Guardian • Feb 27
SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY BIOMETRICS
Data Broker Breaches Fueled Nearly $21 Billion in Identity-Theft Losses
Congressional Democrats released findings showing data broker breaches have cost consumers tens of billions in identity theft losses. The report follows a WIRED investigation that exposed how data brokers hid opt-out pages from search engines using "no index" codes, making it nearly impossible for consumers to remove their personal information. Four companies subsequently removed the blocking code after congressional scrutiny.
WIRED • Feb 27
CORPORATE SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY
FTC declines to enforce a kids privacy law for data collected to verify users' ages
The Federal Trade Commission announced it will not enforce the Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA) against companies collecting personal data solely for age verification technologies, provided strict safeguards are followed. The policy shift incentivizes age verification adoption but privacy advocates warn it creates new risks. The Electronic Frontier Foundation noted that age verification systems have already experienced data breaches, citing a Discord incident where 70,000 users had government IDs exposed through a third-party vendor.
The Verge • Feb 27
CORPORATE SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY
Rocket Lab scrubs planned Feb. 25 launch of hypersonic scramjet vehicle for the US military
Rocket Lab scrubbed the planned February 25 launch of its HASTE suborbital rocket carrying DART AE, a scramjet-powered hypersonic test vehicle developed for the Defense Innovation Unit. The mission, dubbed "That's Not a Knife," would have been DIU's second hypersonic demonstration using Rocket Lab's HASTE platform after the November 2025 "Prometheus Run" launch. The vehicle tests technologies enabling sustained flight at Mach 5+ for missile defense and strike applications.
Space.com • Feb 26
CORPORATE CYBERWAR SPACE
Critical Cisco SD-WAN bug exploited in zero-day attacks since 2023
Cisco disclosed CVE-2026-20127, a maximum-severity authentication bypass vulnerability in Catalyst SD-WAN Controller and Manager products that has been actively exploited since 2023. The flaw allows unauthenticated remote attackers to gain administrative privileges and establish persistent access as rogue peers within SD-WAN fabric networks. CISA issued Emergency Directive 26-03 and added the vulnerability to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog, ordering federal civilian agencies to patch within 24-48 hours.
BleepingComputer • Feb 26
CORPORATE CYBERWAR TECH
The Media Merger You Should Actually Care About
Nexstar's proposed $6 billion acquisition of Tegna would create a broadcasting giant controlling more than 250 local TV stations across 44 states and the District of Columbia, requiring the FCC to waive or abolish ownership caps that have prevented excessive media concentration since the New Deal era. Trump-aligned FCC chair Brendan Carr supports lifting the ownership cap, while the merger faces opposition from both progressive groups and right-wing outlets including One America News and NewsMax.
The New Yorker • Feb 26
CORPORATE NEOCORP GEOPOLITICS
Slater's departure at DOJ signals new era for antitrust under Trump
Gail Slater, the Department of Justice's top antitrust enforcer, has resigned after less than a year leading the division amid repeated tensions with top Trump officials. Her departure raises questions about the administration's approach to major anti-monopoly cases and controversial mergers, including the proposed $70 billion Netflix-Warner Bros. Discovery deal. Trump had initially nominated Slater as part of a promised crackdown on Big Tech, declaring that "Big Tech has run wild for years."
The Hill • Feb 26
CORPORATE NEOCORP ANTITRUST
US tells diplomats to lobby against foreign data sovereignty laws
The Trump administration has ordered U.S. diplomats to lobby against foreign governments' data sovereignty laws, arguing that regulations restricting how American tech companies handle foreigners' data would disrupt global data flows, increase costs and cybersecurity risks, limit AI and cloud services, and expand government control. A February 18 State Department cable signed by Secretary Marco Rubio instructs diplomatic posts to push back against data localization requirements in Europe and other jurisdictions.
TechCrunch • Feb 26
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Inside the story of the US defense contractor who leaked hacking tools to Russia
Doogie Williams, former general manager of Trenchant — an L3Harris division developing offensive hacking and surveillance tools for U.S. intelligence — pleaded guilty to stealing and selling classified zero-day exploits to a Russian firm. Prosecutors said Williams, a 39-year-old Australian citizen with security clearance, abused full network access to download tools onto portable drives over an extended period. The case exposes critical vulnerabilities in contractor vetting for offensive cyber capabilities and raises questions about which foreign actors ultimately obtained these tools.
TechCrunch • Feb 26
CORPORATE GEOPOLITICS CYBERWAR
Lawmakers Ask Tech Companies What User Data They Provided to D.H.S.
US lawmakers demanded answers from Meta, Google and other technology companies following reporting that the Department of Homeland Security issued subpoenas for user information tied to accounts tracking or commenting on ICE activities. The requests come amid scrutiny over DHS cooperation with tech platforms on surveillance targeting immigration-related political content.
The New York Times • Feb 26
CORPORATE SURVEILLANCE PRIVACY
How scammers are using AI deepfakes to steal money from taxpayers
The Washington Post • Feb 26
CYBERCRIME SOCIAL MEMETIC
Ad Tech Company Optimizely Targeted in Cyberattack
Ad technology firm Optimizely confirmed that a voice-phishing attack compromised internal business systems including Zendesk and Salesforce, exposing customer data. The breach affects major enterprise clients including PayPal, Salesforce, Vodafone, and Zoom. Voice phishing enables attackers to bypass technical security measures by targeting employees through social engineering.
SecurityWeek • Feb 26
CORPORATE PRIVACY CYBERCRIME
Jamie Dimon says society should start preparing for AI job displacement: 'Now's the time to start thinking about' it
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned society must prepare for AI-driven job displacement and would support government intervention including potential bans on mass AI layoffs to prevent social destabilization. Speaking at Davos, Dimon stated AI's effect on labor "may go too fast for society" and advocated for government retraining incentives and local retraining programs. JPMorgan has already displaced workers through AI but retrained them for other roles, demonstrating corporate ability to manage transition while acknowledging broader societal risks. Dimon's position marks a notable shift among financial elites toward acknowledging AI unemployment as a systemic threat requiring policy intervention.
Fortune • Feb 26
FINANCE LABOR POSTLABOR
Destitute survivors of south-east Asia's cyberscam farms an 'international crisis'
The Guardian reports that thousands of survivors freed from forced-labor cyberscam compounds across Southeast Asia are now destitute and sleeping on streets, with aid agencies warning of an international humanitarian crisis. Victims trafficked into compounds to conduct global cryptocurrency and investment scams lack passports, money, and support from Cambodian authorities who have failed to offer victim screening or other assistance.
The Guardian • Feb 25
CORPORATE FINANCE INEQUALITY
Teenager first in SA to be prosecuted for allegedly creating deepfake images
William Hamish Yeates, 19, became the first person in South Australia prosecuted under 2024 Commonwealth laws criminalizing non-consensual deepfake pornography. He faces eight counts of creating or altering sexual material without consent for allegedly generating explicit deepfake images of a teenage girl and distributing them on social media. The case marks an early enforcement action against AI-generated intimate image abuse under Australia's federal deepfake legislation.
ABC News • Feb 25
PRIVACY REGULATION CYBERCRIME
Tech Companies Shouldn't Be Bullied Into Doing Surveillance
The Electronic Frontier Foundation reports that the Secretary of Defense has issued an ultimatum to AI company Anthropic, threatening to terminate government contracts if the company does not make its technology available to the U.S. military without use restrictions. The EFF is urging Anthropic to refuse the demands and maintain its principles against surveillance applications.
Electronic Frontier Foundation • Feb 25
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