Overnight Technology

Hillicon Valley — Musk floats super PAC

Elon Musk said on Wednesday he is contemplating starting a super PAC to support moderate candidates.

Meanwhile, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Wednesday introduced a legislation aimed to ban the sale of location data by third-party data brokers.

This is Hillicon Valley, detailing all you need to know about tech and cyber news from Capitol Hill to Silicon Valley. Send tips to The Hill’s Rebecca KlarChris Mills Rodrigo and Ines KagubareSubscribe here.

Musk predicts fall ‘red wave,’ teases political funding

Elon Musk on Wednesday said he is considering creating a moderate super PAC to support centrist candidates.

Musk said on Twitter that he might establish a “Super Moderate Super PAC” to back candidates from both parties with moderate views. 


The tech billionaire also predicted a “massive red wave in 2022.” 

Read more here.

Dems push to ban location data sales

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) on Wednesday introduced legislation targeting the sale of location data by third-party data brokers.

The data broker industry has come under renewed scrutiny in light of the leak of a Supreme Court draft opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade, allowing abortion bans in several states to take effect. 

Read more here.

MORE TROUBLE FOR KLOBUCHAR’S BILL

Four Senate Democrats asked Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) to revise a key antitrust bill that they said could “supercharge harmful content online” as written.  

Their letter comes as Klobuchar and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the lead sponsors of the American Innovation and Choice Online Act, push for a floor vote this month on the bipartisan bill. It advanced out of the Judiciary Committee earlier this year with bipartisan support.

The bill would ban dominant tech platforms from preferencing their own products and services over rivals’. As written, the legislation would likely apply to Apple, Amazon, Google and Meta. 

Read more here.

New Times editor weighs in on Twitter use

Joe Kahn, who this week became the executive editor of The New York Times, said journalists should “step back” from using social media to complain about leadership at their outlets or get into arguments with critics online.

Kahn had been asked about a recent controversy at The Washington Post, one of the Times’s top competitors, involving the suspension and firing of multiple high-profile staffers who engaged in behavior on social media the Post said it would not tolerate.

Read more here.

BITS & PIECES

An op-ed to chew on: Antitrust populism would shift US from free market to managed economy 

Notable links from around the web: 

Facebook and Anti-Abortion Clinics Are Collecting Highly Sensitive Info on Would-Be Patients (Reveal and The Markup / Grace Oldham and Dhruv Mehrotra) 

Inside a Corporate Culture War Stoked by a Crypto C.E.O. (The New York Times / Ryan Mac and David Yaffe-Bellany) 

A Ragtag Band of Hackers Is Waging Cyberwar on Putin’s Supply Lines (Bloomberg / Ryan Gallagher) 

🔭 Lighter click: “Cosmic Reef” 

One more thing: RIP

Microsoft announced on Wednesday that it will no longer support Internet Explorer after 27 years of service.

Read more here.

That’s it for today, thanks for reading. Check out The Hill’s Technology and Cybersecurity pages for the latest news and coverage. We’ll see you tomorrow.

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