- How Trump handles tariffs against countries including China, where tech companies like Apple a**emble many of their goods
- Whether Trump deploys the US surveillance state (as well as companies’ own data collection efforts) to carry out promises of mass deportations
- The future of global attempts to fight climate change with likely reduced help from the US
- Environmental regulation within the US
- Export controls on AI chips
- Ongoing (and potential new) antitrust cases against many of the largest tech firms
- The possible end of incentives to buy electric vehicles
- The Federal Communications Commission’s role in attempting to revoke spectrum licenses over speech Trump doesn’t like
- The future of tech’s liability shield Section 230
- Immigration policy, including H-1B visas for high-skilled tech workers
- How Trump shields US tech companies from the EU’s DSA and DMA laws.
- And however the saga over TikTok’s status in the US possibly ends
Donald Trump is officially president again
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge; Getty Images Donald Trump has been officially sworn in as the 47th president of the US. Although we’ve already experienced a Trump presidency beginning in 2016, this term could look far different than the first one, particularly when it comes to tech regulation. The heads of major tech companies have apparently come to learn how to deal with Trump, following an era of techlash that invited fury against them from both sides. The executives — who mostly stayed at arm’s distance during the beginning of Trump’s first term — have been quick to get into Trump’s good graces, be it with trips to Mar-a-Lago, attendance at the inauguration, changes to their company policies, or notices to millions of users thanking Trump for his (predicted) role in getting their popular social media app back online. There’s good reason for the CEOs to cozy up to Trump. The next four years could see...
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge; Getty ImagesDonald Trump has been officially sworn in as the 47th president of the US. Although we’ve already experienced a Trump presidency beginning in 2016, this term could look far different than the first one, particularly when it comes to tech regulation.The heads of major tech companies have apparently come to learn how to deal with Trump, following an era of techlash that invited fury against them from both sides. The executives — who mostly stayed at arm’s distance during the beginning of Trump’s first term — have been quick to get into Trump’s good graces, be it with trips to Mar-a-Lago, attendance at the inauguration, changes to their company policies, or notices to millions of users thanking Trump for his (predicted) role in getting their popular social media app back online.There’s good reason for the CEOs to cozy up to Trump. The next four years could see the president’s choices impact their companies and workers in a laundry list of areas. We’ll be looking at:
Sophia Wilson
Atlanta
Atlanta
Published by: aplhsindia.in
