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Media Bits and Bytes - October 2, 2018

Cali Net Neutrality Law; Facebook FUBAR; Hacking the Vote; The New Season; Privacy Law Debate; Taking the Public Pulse

Getty Images/ROBERTO SCHMIDT
By Heather Kelly  
September 30, 2018
CNN
 
The Department of Justice said it is filing a lawsuit against the state of California over its new net neutrality protections, hours after Gov. Jerry Brown signed the bill into law on Sunday.

 

Everything We Know About Facebook's Massive Security Breach

By Louise Matsakis and Issie Lapowsky
September 28, 2018
Wired
 
The social network disclosed that an unprecedented security issue, discovered September 25, impacted almost 50 million user accounts. The company says that the attackers could see everything in a victim's profile.

 

US Mid-terms: Hackers Expose 'Staggering' Voter Machine Flaws

September 28, 2018
BBC News
 
A report outlines major flaws in voting hardware, weeks before US mid-term elections. One ballot machine, used in 23 US states, carries a cybersecurity flaw that was reported over a decade ago, the hackers claim.

 

Start Of New Broadcast Season Overshadowed By Corporate Drama

By Nellie Andreeva 
September 24, 2018
Deadline
 
This summer marked unprecedented upheaval at the broadcast networks.

 

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The Privacy-Law Debate Is Heating Up Again in D.C.

By Gaurav Laroia
September 24, 2018
Free Press
 
Letting technology companies set the terms of the privacy debate in Congress inevitably means that concerns about civil-rights violations, disparate impacts, and predatory data collection and advertising practices will take a back seat to industry talking points.

 

When Journalists Report Social Media as Public Opinion

By Elizabeth Dubois, Anatoliy Gruzd, and Jenna Jacobson
September 28, 2018
Policy Options
 
Journalists should be careful when using social media posts to report what the public thinks, and should tell readers how the data was collected.