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2018年1月5日 星期五

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Tech world descends on Las Vegas

By Harper Neidig and Ali Breland

The tech world is descending on Las Vegas for the Consumer Electronics Show in the coming week.

The annual event to highlight the latest in consumer tech products is also a chance for tech to meet with high-profile federal, state and local officials.

This year, the absence of one prominent name is garnering much of the attention.

Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai pulled out of a scheduled appearance at the last minute, after he reportedly received death threats.

Pai has been in the spotlight after pushing through a repeal of the Obama administration's net neutrality rules in December. While popular with broadband providers, the move has been opposed by many of tech's biggest names as well as consumer advocates.

The repeal has sparked a firestorm of controversy. Pai has claimed his family was targeted with threats and harassment. Minutes before the agency voted on his repeal proposal at a December hearing, law enforcement evacuated the room after learning of a bomb threat.

An FCC spokesman declined to comment on why Pai pulled out of his appearance at the annual convention, saying only that the agency would not discuss security matters.

It will be the first time Pai is missing the event in five years. But there will be other prominent officials on hand.

Michael Kratsios, an adviser to President Trump and the U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer, will participate in a question-and-answer session on the administration's approach to tech policy on Tuesday.

And despite Pai's high-profile cancellation, the FCC will be well represented. On Tuesday, Commissioners Mignon Clyburn, Michael O'Rielly and Brendan Carr will participate in a roundtable discussion on what 2018 holds for tech regulatory policy.

They will be joined in that talk by FTC Commissioner Terrell McSweeny and David Redl, the head of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

Net neutrality isn't listed among the session's discussion topics, but it's likely officials will be pressed to address the controversial decision.

Pai was scheduled to appear alongside Acting FTC Chairman Maureen Ohlhausen for a panel discussion on Tuesday. Ohlhausen will still appear with Gary Shapiro, head of the Consumer Technology Association, for a Q&A on her agency's handling of the tech industry.

Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao will join a panel discussion on drones and driverless vehicles on Wednesday.

Govs. Steve Bullock (D-Mont.), Rick Snyder (R-Mich.) and Brian Sandoval (R-Nev.) will participate in a roundtable on states' role in innovation on Thursday.

While the tech world will be focused on Las Vegas, lawmakers will be busy on Capitol Hill with both chambers in session. Senators returned on Jan. 3, and House members return Monday Jan. 8. Much of the attention will be on resolving the spending fight and avoiding a government shutdown on Jan. 19. But there will also be tech issues on the docket.

On Tuesday, the House Commerce subcommittee on energy will examine modernization efforts at the Department of Energy at 10 a.m.

Also on Tuesday, the House Armed Services Committee will hold a hearing titled, "China's Pursuit of Emerging and Exponential Technologies" at 2 p.m.

 

Recent stories:

Apple to issue software fix for chip flaw

FCC unveils final version of proposal to gut net neutrality

Critical computer flaws set up security challenge in Washington

US regulators to discuss Bitcoin futures trading

Intel CEO sold $24M in stock after firm knew about cyber vulnerabilities

Zuckerberg vows to spend 2018 improving Facebook

Senate sex trafficking bill wins 60 co-sponsors

FCC chair pulls out of Consumer Electronics Show appearance

States pursue net neutrality rules after FCC rollback

US blocks sale of Moneygram to Chinese firm

Twitter says Trump's North Korea tweet doesn't violate terms of service

Germany to fine social media firms that don't remove hateful content

Google looks to mend fences after rocky 2017

 
 
 
 
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