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How Government Agencies Can Digitally Transform
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Column: Waiting for Democrats to condemn Lightfoot s racism, and hearing only crickets
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by PAUL ARMENTANO
When it comes to marijuana policy, it’s time for the federal government to get out of the way.
Eighteen states, home to over 40 percent of the U.S. population, have legalized the possession and use of marijuana by anyone over the age of 21. Over 30 states regulate the production and dispensing of cannabis for medical purposes.
Federal law, which denies that cannabis possesses any therapeutic use whatsoever and which mandates that possessing any amount of cannabis is a criminal offense, is woefully out of sync with these state policies. Each year, this chasm between state and federal law grows wider.
Feb 23, 2021 3:10 PM PT
In a recent Linux Foundation blog post titled Preventing Supply Chain Attacks like SolarWinds, the foundation s Director of Open Source Supply Chain Security, David A. Wheeler, adamantly pushed the need for software developers to embrace the LF s security recommendations to prevent even worse assaults on government and corporate data security in the wake of the rampant data breach.
Wheeler s post is timely and filled with information to make it harder for hackers to exploit the future systems we all depend on. He includes 11 Linux Foundation recommendations including how organizations can harden their build environments against attackers, the need to begin shifting towards implementing and then requiring verified reproducible builds, and the practice of changing tools and interfaces so unintentional vulnerabilities are less likely.
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If you are not from her home state of Minnesota, your first inkling that Sen. Amy Klobuchar is a serious lawmaker may have come during Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearings in 2018. The hearings were a circus. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse spun conspiracy theories about dark money. Sen. Patrick Leahy demanded to know who hacked his email in 2001. Protesters in Halloween costumes howled from the gallery. But Klobuchar asked Kavanaugh to defend two antitrust rulings he had made as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
Antitrust: Taking on Monopoly Power from the Gilded Age to the Digital Age, by Amy Klobuchar. Knopf, 624 pp., $32.50.
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