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PHOTO: PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP
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Senior Officials Leave Cyber Agency. Two senior officials responsible for the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s Secure By Design program have left the agency. Bob Lord and Lauren Zabierek, senior advisers at the agency, are no longer working there, both people said on LinkedIn.
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CISA launched a major campaign around secure development for software products towards the end of the Biden administration, signing dozens of companies up to a pledge to incorporate security from the ground up in their development processes. (CyberScoop)
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PHOTO: WILL OLIVER/SHUTTERSTOCK
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Hegseth Under Fire for Second Signal Chat. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth is attracting scrutiny for reportedly sharing sensitive details on a military strike in a Signal chat that included his wife and attorney.
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The Signal chat is separate from an earlier scandal in which a journalist was mistakenly invited to a group conversation about strikes on Yemen, which included the Trump administration’s most senior defense and intelligence officials. (WSJ)
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Noem Victim of Theft, Badge Stolen. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem had her handbag lifted Sunday night at a restaurant in Washington D.C., Ms. Noem confirmed at the White House Easter Egg Roll on Monday morning. The bag contained her passport, department security badge and $3,000 in cash, a spokesperson confirmed. (New York Times)
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PHOTO: ANDREW KELLY/REUTERS
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Finra Seeks to Modernize Rules. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority is launching a broad modernization effort across it rules, including cybersecurity regulations. The self-regulatory organization for broker-dealers is asking for input from member firms regarding which rules need to be overhauled, changed or even eliminated. (Dow Jones Risk Journal)
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PHOTO: CHRIS WATTIE/REUTERS
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Shopify Must Face Privacy Lawsuit. A federal appeals court ruled that Canadian ecommerce platform Shopify must face a proposed class-action lawsuit in California, potentially setting a jurisdictional precedent for consumers seeking to sue non-U.S. companies.
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California residents can sue the platform in the state, the court said, because it collected information on them. Shopify argued its activities were nationwide and didn’t specifically target residents by state. (Reuters).
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