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California to Spend $6 Billion to Bridge the Digital Divide Governor Gavin Newsom inked a massive spending bill that promises to bring faster internet to rural and low-income areas where schoolchildren struggled with remote learning during the pandemic. Governor Gavin Newsom signed the broadband infrastructure bill on Tuesday. (Screenshot via Courthouse News) (CN) Tackling the state’s glaring digital divide, California Governor Gavin Newsom on Tuesday inked plans for a $6 billion overhaul of the state’s outdated broadband internet infrastructure. From an elementary school in one of California’s prime farming regions, Newsom lamented the state’s past failures to improve internet access and said the funding is intended to give children an equal chance to flourish in the digital age. ....
What You Need to Know About Home Monitoring Systems aarp.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aarp.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Thu, Mar 11th 2021 5:38am Karl Bode As companies like Google shift away from individual behavior tracking in their ad efforts, telecoms like T-Mobile are headed in the opposite direction. The wireless giant this week announced it would be automatically enrolling all of its customers (including recently acquired Sprint customers) in a new behavioral tracking and ad system the company is launching on April 26. Whereas Google is shifting to its FLOC system that tends to clump consumers into groups of like minded consumers (an approach that still comes with its own issues), T-Mobile is doubling down on individualized targeting, and will start sharing its customers’ web and mobile-app data with advertisers. ....
Uploaded: Fri, Jan 29, 2021, 6:48 am 4 Time to read: about 2 minutes Palo Alto police Officer Marianna Villaescusa and dispatcher Lindsay Moore discuss the day s plans in the dispatch room in 2012. Embarcadero Media file photo. This article is part of a larger story on police agencies encrypting radio dispatch communications, which can be found here. - While the FBI and California Department of Justice (DOJ) say private information might fall into the wrong hands when the public and the press listen to radio transmissions on scanners, there have been hundreds of instances of police abuses of the system by law enforcement staff themselves, according to the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation, an international nonprofit organization advocating for privacy and accountability regarding technology and the law. The foundation has researched abuses of the system by law enforcement employees for the past five years. ....