Article 5TE30 Elizabeth Holmes and “pinch-to-zoom” in Rittenhouse trial: 2021’s top policy stories

Elizabeth Holmes and “pinch-to-zoom” in Rittenhouse trial: 2021’s top policy stories

by
Jon Brodkin
from Ars Technica - All content on (#5TE30)
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In the world of tech policy news, 2021 began with Twitter and other social networks banning then-President Donald Trump after the January 6 insurrection. Many other noteworthy stories followed in the ensuing months.

The Elizabeth Holmes trial featured fascinating revelations about Theranos, while the judge in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial didn't let the prosecutor use an iPad's pinch-to-zoom feature. Missouri's Republican governor claimed that viewing HTML code is "hacking," WhatsApp forced users to share data with Facebook, Apple announced a controversial plan to scan photos, and the Supreme Court saved the software industry from API copyrights. President Joe Biden failed to give Democrats a majority on the Federal Communications Commission, and Republicans are now fighting Biden's belated attempt to fill the FCC's empty seat.

As usual, we wrote plenty of stories about telecom companies behaving badly-such as when Verizon forced users onto pricier plans to get $50-per-month government subsidies. This article lists and summarizes our top policy stories of the year, which we selected based on reader interest and importance.

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