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A new report published Monday found that social media platforms are failing to block the vast majority of reported antisemitic content, with Facebook and Twitter in particular showing the “poorest rate of enforcement action.”
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Meanwhile, the nation’s top cybersecurity official on Monday endorsed the idea of a new bureau that would track and analyze cybersecurity incidents to help understand trends and potential future attacks, while the newly unveiled $1.2 trillion bipartisan Senate infrastructure package includes several cybersecurity provisions.
FALLING SHORT: Major social media platforms failed to block 84 percent of antisemitic content that was reported to them through their own tools, according to a new report.
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Court rules encrypted email provider Tutanota must monitor messages in blackmail case
(Sean Gallup/Bongarts/Getty Images)
Share May 24, 2021 | CYBERSCOOP
The Federal Court of Justice (BGH) in Germany has ruled that encrypted email provider Tutanota must monitor for three months the messages of accounts implicated in a blackmail case.
The decision, which impacts two accounts in all, comes months after the Regional Court of Cologne ruled that Tutanota must provide said emails. Tutanota had asked BGH to re-examine that decision given that Tutanota does not consider itself a telecommunications service and therefore should not be required to monitor them under German law.