In our 282nd episode of The Cyberlaw Podcast, Stewart Baker interviews Sultan Meghji, the CEO and co-founder of Neocova and adjunct professor at the Washington University in St. Louis. Stewart and Sultan are joined by Nick Weaver (@ncweaver) and Matthew Heiman to discuss: The California attorney general unveiled proposed regulations under the California Consumer Privacy Act.; The Supreme Court allows blind people to sue if websites are not accessible.; The United States is shielding Big Tech through trade agreements.; The United States sanctioned eight Chinese firms over Beijing's treatment of the Uighurs.; There's a new nation-state malware that has a clever attack on TLS.; Apple and Google bowed to pressure from China to remove Hong Kong protest apps.; India is creating a national facial recognition system.; CISA, a component of DHS, is seeking subpoena power.; Are the French being hypocritical over "cyber sovereignty"?; A whitehat hacker stole and publicly released decryption keys from a ransomware gang.; And more! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of the firm.

Media files:

TheCyberlawPodcast-282.mp3

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