Tag Archives: granting

U.S. stops granting export licenses for China’s Huawei – sources

Jan 30 (Reuters) – The Biden administration has stopped approving licenses for U.S. companies to export most items to China’s Huawei, according to three people familiar with the matter.

Huawei has faced U.S. export restrictions around items for 5G and other technologies for several years, but officials in the U.S. Department of Commerce have granted licenses for some American firms to sell certain goods and technologies to the company. Qualcomm Inc (QCOM.O) in 2020 received permission to sell 4G smartphone chips to Huawei.

A Commerce Department spokesperson said officials “continually assess our policies and regulations” but do not comment on talks with specific companies. Huawei and Qualcomm declined to comment. Bloomberg and the Financial Times earlier reported the move.

One person familiar with the matter said U.S. officials are creating a new formal policy of denial for shipping items to Huawei that would include items below the 5G level, including 4G items, Wifi 6 and 7, artificial intelligence, and high-performance computing and cloud items.

Another person said the move was expected to reflect the Biden administration’s tightening of policy on Huawei over the past year. Licenses for 4G chips that could not be used for 5g, which might have been approved earlier, were being denied, the person said. Toward the end of the Trump administration and early in the Biden administration, officials had still granted licenses for items specific to 4G applications.

American officials placed Huawei on a trade blacklist in 2019 restricting most U.S. suppliers from shipping goods and technology to the company unless they were granted licenses. Officials continued to tighten the controls to cut off Huawei’s ability to buy or design the semiconductor chips that power most of its products.

But U.S. officials granted licenses that allowed Huawei to receive some products. For example, suppliers to Huawei got licenses worth $61 billion to sell to the telecoms equipment giant from April through November 2021.

In December, Huawei said its overall revenue was about $91.53 billion, down only slightly from 2021 when U.S. sanctions caused its sales to fall by nearly a third.

Reporting by Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru, Stephen Nellis in San Francisco, and Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld in Washington; Additional reporting by David Kirton in Shenzhen; Editing by Shailesh Kuber and Stephen Coates

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Takeaways from the ruling granting Trump’s request for a special master in Mar-a-Lago probe

She did not agree, however, with Trump’s arguments that there had been a “callous disregard” for his constitutional rights with the search.

A significant win for Trump

The primary takeaway is simple: The ruling is a major legal win for Trump.

Trump filed a lawsuit seeking a special master to review the materials the FBI seized last month, and now one will be appointed with the potential to decide that certain materials are out of bounds to the FBI’s investigation.

Cannon bought into the skepticism Trump’s lawyers raised about the unprecedented search of the Florida resort, as they questioned whether investigators could be trusted to properly filter through the thousands of documents that were seized. The judge rejected the Justice Department’s assurances that its internal filter team had already sorted out materials that could be subject to attorney-client privileges.

Ultimately, the special master appointment may merely lead to a delay in the federal investigation into documents taken to Mar-a-Lago, but it now introduces a new layer of uncertainty and unpredictability into the investigation.

The former President did not get absolutely everything he asked for — the judge did not rule that any materials seized from his home should be returned to him, for instance.

Immediate next steps focus on rules for special master

Cannon left undecided many key questions about how the special master will operate. She sketched out a plan for how things will move forward for at least the rest of this week and focused on settling those logistical matters.

She ordered Trump’s lawyers and prosecutors to “confer” on several big-ticket items: Who are the proposed candidates to serve as special master? What will their specific “duties and limitations” be? What should be their schedule and pacing? And how much will they be paid for their work?

Both sides were told to file a “joint filing” by Friday, spelling out their answers to these questions. Based on how the case has progressed so far, it seems unlikely that the two sides will agree on much. They’ll both be able to put in writing their ideas for how they want this to move forward.

Cannon said she will “expeditiously” issue a court order setting out “the exact details and mechanics of this (special master) review process” after the joint filing comes in.

She noted the need to settle disputes between the parties about “whether certain seized documents constitute personal or presidential records” and “whether certain seized personal effects have evidentiary value.”

Plans to review for “executive privilege”

Trump had said that a special master review needed to go beyond documents covered by attorney-client privilege, and that materials covered by executive privilege should be filtered out as well.

Executive privilege refers to private communications presidents have with their advisers and other types of internal communications within the executive branch that are withheld from public release. While disputes over the privilege have come up in congressional investigations, the reaches of executive privilege — particularly when a former president is arguing it should apply when a current president is declining to assert it — is an unsettled area of law.

Cannon’s order requires the special master to examine the documents based on “executive privilege” concerns, making the job more expansive than the attorney-client privilege review that happens typically when a special master is appointed. (Documents potentially covered by attorney-client privilege will be part of this special master’s review as well, according to Cannon’s order.)

She did not elaborate on the parameters the special master should be considering.

In her ruling, Cannon said that the Supreme Court had not ruled out “the possibility of a former President overcoming an incumbent President on executive privilege matters.” She quoted from a 1977 Supreme Court case concerning documents from President Richard Nixon’s White House, as well as from a Supreme Court order earlier this year that allowed the release of Trump White House documents to House January 6 investigators.

Cannon quoted the Supreme Court saying in the recent case that the questions are “unprecedented and raise serious and substantial concerns” when it comes to scenarios where a former president is claiming to assert executive privilege over materials for which that privilege has been waived by the incumbent.

She also drew from a separate statement from Justice Brett Kavanaugh in that case in which Kavanaugh said it would “eviscerate the executive privilege for Presidential communications” if courts were to conclude that a former president could not “invoke the Presidential communications privilege for communications that occurred during his Presidency, even if the current President does not support the privilege claim.”

Cannon conceded that, when all is said and done, Trump’s assertions of executive privilege might fail, but she said that “does not negate a former President’s ability to raise the privilege as an initial matter.”

Intelligence review will continue

The judge is not stopping the US intelligence community’s from continuing to examine the documents as part of its damage assessment into the potential risk to national security.

Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines told Congress last month that the intelligence community would be conducting an assessment “of the potential risk to national security that would result from the disclosure of the relevant documents.” The intelligence community has also been working with the FBI since mid-May to examine some of the documents taken from Mar-a-Lago, CNN previously reported.

While the FBI investigation is related to at least three potential crimes — violations of the Espionage Act, obstruction of justice and criminal handling of government records — the intelligence review is primarily concerned with determining whether the disclosure of the material that was housed at Trump’s resort and residence could place sensitive intelligence sources at risk.

Trump got special consideration as ex-president

The judge repeatedly pointed to the “extraordinary circumstances” present in the special master dispute, given that it involved the “unprecedented” search of a former president’s home. She also said there was a risk of “stigma” that would come with a prosecution that was brought wrongfully and said that the threat was greater in this scenario because Trump is a former president.

“As a function of Plaintiff’s former position as President of the United States, the stigma associated with the subject seizure is in a league of its own,” she wrote. “A future indictment, based to any degree on property that ought to be returned, would result in reputational harm of a decidedly different order of magnitude.”

There were other examples in the order of Cannon putting Trump, as a former president, in a special class of defendants. She said that Trump’s reliance on “cooperation between former and incumbent administrations regarding” the exchange of documents also cut in favor of her intervening. (The Justice Department has pointed to several examples in the litigation of Trump’s team slow-walking that negotiation).

In a footnote rebutting the DOJ’s arguments that special masters are usually appointed to review searches of an attorneys’ offices, Cannon wrote that she did “not see why these concerns would not apply, at least to a considerable degree, to the office and home of a former president.”

What can the Justice Department do now?

The ruling does not shut down the Justice Department’s criminal investigation. Trump still has potential legal jeopardy. But the ruling will limit what investigators can do, and may slow things down a bit, while the special master review is underway.

A Justice Department spokesman said Monday that officials are “examining the opinion” and considering “appropriate next steps.” The one-sentence statement did not explicitly reference an appeal, though that is the obvious next possible option for prosecutors.

If prosecutors appeal, those proceedings would be handled by the 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals, which is based in Atlanta. The court has four full-time judges appointed by Democratic presidents, and seven by Republican presidents, including six by Trump.

A three-judge panel would be randomly selected to hear the appeal. Whichever side loses that round would get an opportunity to ask the entire 11-member court to rehear the appeal “en banc.” The losing side also could appeal to the Supreme Court, which has a conservative majority.

DOJ officials might choose to only appeal a portion of Cannon’s multi-pronged ruling.

Andrew Weissmann — a venerated ex-DOJ official, former Robert Mueller team prosecutor and prominent Trump critic — tweeted that the Justice Department should “appeal immediately” the part of the ruling that blocks investigators from doing anything with the seized materials, which he called “precedent that is too wrong to not appeal.”

Judge Cannon is a Trump nominee — does that matter?

Federal judges routinely handle matters that involve the president who put them on the bench. The fact that Cannon was appointed by Trump, and that Trump filed this lawsuit, is not grounds for Cannon to recuse herself from the case, though she could if she thinks it creates a perception of unfairness.

For his part, Trump has a history of politicizing the judicial branch, by attacking “Obama judges” and openly saying that he expects his appointees to do his legal bidding. But this twisted view toward judicial loyalty seems to be pretty one-sided, with Trump expecting political fealty while most judges try to ignore his out-of-court rhetoric and focus on the facts.

How does DOJ’s so-called “60-day rule” for investigations come into play?

A question lingering over this and other investigations that touch on the former president is how the Justice Department will view the so-called “60-day rule” as applying to investigations connected to Trump.

The “rule” is an internal DOJ policy that discourages public investigative steps that could influence an election 60 days before Election Day. Trump’s allies have argued the department’s Trump documents investigation stands to run afoul of this principle, even though Trump himself is not a candidate.

It’s not clear if DOJ was calibrating its approach to the documents probe with that rule in mind, and if prosecutors are doing so, it’s also not clear whether the appointment of a special master affects those plans.

The investigation appears to be in its very early stages. Prosecutors have described it as such in public court proceedings. And the types of attorneys publicly involved in the probe — mainly coming from the DOJ’s National Security Division — also suggest the probe is at an early phase, former agency officials have said.



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Iowa governor signs law granting unemployment benefits to those fired for not being vaccinated

The measure states that “an individual who is discharged from employment for refusing to receive a vaccination against COVID-19” shall not be “disqualified for benefits.”
After signing the legislation, Reynolds said in a statement that the new law allows Iowans “freedoms and their abilities to make healthcare decisions based on what’s best for themselves and their families.”
President Joe Biden imposed stringent new vaccine rules on federal workers, large employers and health care staff in September in a sweeping attempt to contain the coronavirus. The new rules included an executive order requiring all government employees to be vaccinated against Covid-19, with no option of being regularly tested to opt out, and an accompanying order directing that the same standard be applied to employees of contractors who do business with the federal government. The requirements have received pushback and legislative action from a handful of Republican governors, with Reynolds the most recent.

“As I’ve stated publicly numerous times, I believe the vaccine is the best defense against COVID-19 and we’ve provided Iowans with the information they need to determine what’s best for themselves and their families, but no Iowan should be forced to lose their job or livelihood over the COVID-19 vaccine,” Reynolds said.

About 55% of Iowans are fully vaccinated, according to data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The new law also states that an employer requiring a vaccine “must waive the requirement if the employee, or, if the employee is a minor, the employee’s parent or legal guardian, requests a waiver and makes either of two submissions to the employer.” Those submissions include being unable to take the vaccine for health or religious reasons.

The bill passed the Iowa House by 68-27, then went to the state Senate, which advanced it to the governor’s desk for approval after a 45-4 vote.

Reynolds is the latest Republican governor to push back against the federal vaccine mandates, joining Govs. Kay Ivey of Alabama, Greg Abbott of Texas and Ron DeSantis of Florida.

Ivey on Monday signed an executive order instructing state executive branch agencies to cooperate with the Alabama attorney general’s office as it challenges the Biden administration’s vaccine mandates and, when possible, to not comply with the federal effort.
DeSantis announced on Thursday that a new lawsuit against the Biden administration over the President’s order imposing a vaccine mandate on federal contractors had been officially filed. Abbott issued an executive order earlier this month banning all state entities, including private employers, from enforcing vaccine mandates.
Reynolds said Friday that the new Iowa law was just the “first step.”

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EA Disables FIFA Discretionary Content Granting Indefinitely Amidst ‘EA Gate’ Scandal

EA has halted all FIFA discretionary content granting for an indefinite period of time as it investigates allegations that an employee, or at least someone involved with EA FIFA, has been selling rare FIFA 21 Ultimate Team items on a makeshift black market for real money.EA gave an update on this scandal, which the community has dubbed “EA Gate,” and explained how it has launched a “rigorous investigation” on how this could have happened and how it is narrowing down which accounts received content through this “illicit method.”The company has also made clear that any accounts that have received items that were “transferred nefariously” will be permanently banned.

These items, which are meant to be earned through gameplay or other engagement (i.e. a Twitch broadcast), were granted to other accounts by one or more EA accounts, which were “either compromised or being used inappropriately by someone within EA.”

Content granting or purchasing player items in exchange for money is in no way condoned by EA, as it “runs counter to the game’s competitive integrity, is a violation of EA’s User Agreement, and is not something we tolerate.”

While EA’s initial investigation uncovered that this questionable activity only involved a small number of accounts and items, it is still unacceptable to the team.

Every IGN FIFA Game Review Ever

Following the investigation, EA will take action against any employee found guilty and any items that have been granted through this manner will be removed from the FUT ecosystem and the accounts that had these items will be permanently banned.

“Regardless of these actions, we appreciate how concerning this is to all of our players, and we apologize for the impact of these improper grants within the community,” EA wrote. “We also appreciate how extremely annoying and frustrating it is that this practice might have come from within EA. We’re angry too. We know that the trust of our communities is hard-earned, and is based on principles of Fair Play. This illicit activity shakes that trust. We’ve also been clear since the creation of Ultimate Team that items cannot be exchanged outside our game, and that’s key to how we keep our game safe from manipulation and bad actors. This is a breach of that principle, as well — and we won’t let it stand.”

For those who are unfamiliar with content granting, it is a process in which certain in-game items are directly distributed to a specific account. In FIFA, these items can be a player, a kit, or a consumable.

The three most prevalent ways content granting occurs is through Worldwide Customer Experience, Testing & QV, and Discretionary Content Granting (Athletes, Partners, & Employees).A Worldwide Customer Experience granting is for when a player accidentally deletes content, content goes missing due to a technical glitch, or a mistake was made by EA and a player is given to them as a make-good.

Testing & QV is for when content is granted for testing and quality verification. This usually occurs on dedicated test servers and isn’t seen by the global player base, but sometimes these tests must occur in the live environment to ensure all is working as it should.

Discretionary Content Granting is for when EA wants to “recognize contributions that have been made by certain Pro Footballers, celebrity partners, or even our [EA’s] own employees.” These items are always non-tradeable and can only be used by the account to which it was given.These items only account for 0.0006% of the total player items in the FIFA 21 ecosystem and have no impact on the odds of any account receiving a specific player or item through normal means.

Have a tip for us? Want to discuss a possible story? Please send an email to newstips@ign.com.

Adam Bankhurst is a news writer for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @AdamBankhurst and on Twitch.



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EA suspends all discretionary FIFA Ultimate Team content granting indefinitely amid “EA Gate” scandal • Eurogamer.net

EA has suspended all discretionary content granting indefinitely amid the ongoing “EA Gate” scandal that has rocked the FIFA series.

Earlier this week Eurogamer reported on how the FIFA community had unearthed direct messages that appeared to show an EA employee selling coveted Ultimate Team cards for thousands of pounds on the black market.

These direct messages mentioned FUT Icon cards in packages priced 750-1000 euros. In one WhatsApp message, three Prime Icon Moments cards were offered for 1700 euros.

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Icon cards are among the most sought after in FIFA Ultimate Team. They include legendary players such as Brazilian Ronaldo, Pele, Ronaldinho, Zinedine Zidane and Ruud Gullit, and are near impossible to obtain through the mode’s controversial loot boxes.

Even rarer are Prime Icon Moments – special versions of Icon cards that mark one game or tournament that was special for the players.

EA launched an investigation in response, and overnight provided an update:

“Earlier this week, we were made aware of suspicious activity relating to highly rated content in FIFA Ultimate Team,” EA said.

“We learned that FUT items were granted to individual accounts that did not earn them through gameplay – i.e. by opening a pack, purchasing through the transfer market, completing a reward challenge (e.g. an SBC completion) or other engagement (e.g. viewing a Twitch Broadcast).

“It appears that one or more EA accounts, which were either compromised or being used inappropriately by someone within EA, directly entitled items to these individual accounts.

“The alleged behaviour is unacceptable and in no way do we condone granting or purchasing player items in exchange for money. This practice runs counter to the game’s competitive integrity, is a violation of EA’s User Agreement, and is not something we tolerate. We do not allow the trade or sale of items outside our game for many reasons, including that it would create an unequal playing field for our community.”

Of course, EA does grant purchasing player items in exchange for money – via loot boxes.

Eurogamer news cast: what Xbox’s Bethesda exclusives mean for the future.

EA insisted its initial investigation has shown questionable activity involving “a very small number of accounts and items”, but despite this, called the alleged activity “unacceptable”.

EA then vowed to take action against any employee found to have been engaging in this activity, to remove any items granted from the FUT ecosystem, and permanently ban any player known to have bought them.

EA then apologised to the FIFA community: “Regardless of these actions, we appreciate how concerning this is to all of our players, and we apologise for the impact of these improper grants within the community.

“We also appreciate how extremely annoying and frustrating it is that this practice might have come from within EA. We’re angry too. We know that the trust of our communities is hard-earned, and is based on principles of Fair Play. This illicit activity shakes that trust. We’ve also been clear since the creation of Ultimate Team that items cannot be exchanged outside our game, and that’s key to how we keep our game safe from manipulation and bad actors. This is a breach of that principle, as well – and we won’t let it stand.”

EA goes on to discuss content granting – something it rarely does. This is when EA gives Ultimate Team content to player accounts. EA said that unless these items are issued to replace lost content, they are usually non-tradeable items, which means they have no exchange value in the game, cannot be sold on the transfer market and cannot be shared with other players. Examples include items used in testing and quality verification, and discretionary content granting to athletes, EA’s partners and employees.

Every now and then the community will discover a famous footballer’s Ultimate Team because they’ve run up against them online, and you’ll sometimes see the footballers use a special 99-rated version of themselves in-game. That’s discretionary content granting to athletes.

“The items granted on a discretionary basis to these partners or employees are always non-tradeable and can be used only by the account to which they were originally granted,” EA insisted. “We do not use this discretionary process to grant content to professional video game influencers.”

Of course, this content can be used in Ultimate Team’s competitive, pay-to-win multiplayer against other players online – a balance issue EA does not address in its statement.

EA said the sum of items granted through these three scenarios (customer experience, testing and partners) combined is less than 0.0006 per cent of the total player items in the FIFA 21 ecosystem. EA insisted these grants have no impact on the odds of any player in the ecosystem acquiring these players, they have no bearing on the overall volume of available content, and all content that is granted is untradeable, with no associated coin value.

“Obviously, the actions being alleged in this case fall far outside of these legitimate scenarios for granting content,” EA said.

EA’s investigation is ongoing, but the company said it has narrowed how this happened and identified the accounts that have received the content. Meanwhile, EA has suspended all discretionary content granting for an indefinite period.

“Once again, we highly value and appreciate the commitment and support of the FIFA community in helping identify this issue and will continue to provide updates as the investigation progresses towards conclusion,” EA said.

One of the many issues with Ultimate Team the “EA Gate” scandal highlights is the artificial scarcity of these highly-coveted items. Some of the most powerful and most sought after cards in the game – the Prime Icon Moments versions of Ronaldo, Pele, Ronaldinho, Zinedine Zidane and Ruud Gullit, for example – have a below one per cent chance of dropping from a loot box. The exact probability of getting an Icon from a pack is unknown, because EA does not disclose exact percentage chances below one percent – a lack of transparency that has been criticised for some time.

EA is already facing two other lawsuits connected to Ultimate Team, one in the United States alleging the mode breaks California state gambling laws, and one in Canada accusing EA of running “an unlicensed, illegal gaming system through their loot boxes”.

Loot boxes have come under increased scrutiny from government authorities in recent years, too, particularly in relation to their impact on young people. In January 2019, EA stopped selling FIFA Points in Belgium following government pressure over loot boxes. The Netherlands Gambling Authority has also declared loot boxes illegal because they are considered a game of chance, and therefore violate the country’s Gambling Act. The Dutch authorities ended up issuing EA with a fine of up to €10m over loot boxes in FIFA.

FIFA loot boxes are currently not considered a form of gambling in the UK, although the government is taking a close look at them in that context. In July, the House of Lords gambling committee urged the government to “act immediately” to regulate them. The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport launched a consultation on loot boxes in September and a review of the Gambling Act 2005 in December last year. It is due to publish a white paper before the end of this year.

FIFA hit the mainstream headlines last weekend with a Sunday Times investigation titled “FIFA’s ugly game lures teens to gamble”.

EA has called FIFA loot boxes “surprise mechanics”, and in a statement given to the Sunday Times, likened them to Kinder eggs. A spokeswoman told the paper there was “no advantage to purchasing Ultimate Team packs rather than earning them”, and that the majority of player packs were awarded through in-game accomplishments. She said users could track or limit their spend through FIFA Playtime, a new in-game tool, and said access to online gameplay could be restricted using parental controls on consoles.

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