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Browser Makers and EU Face Off Over QWACs


EU Set to Approve Revised ID Framework to Digitize Public Service Access by 2030

Browser Makers and EU Face Off Over QWACs
Quack! (Image: Shutterstock)

A European effort to wrest greater control over the infrastructure underpinning internet encryption has some security experts warning about degraded website security.

See Also: Live Webinar | Education Cybersecurity Best Practices: Devices, Ransomware, Budgets and Resources

The European Union is on the cusp of approving a revised identity framework intended to digitize access to key public services for the majority of Europeans by the start of the next decade (see: European Digital Identity Bill Heads to Final Negotiations).

A section of the nearly complete update to the electronic identification and trust services regulations – better known as eIDAS – imposes a different kind of identity requirement onto web browsers. The goal, say proponents, is to increase online trust by requiring web browsers to display the identity of the organization that owns the site. That would be done by having browsers accept web certificates issued by entities designated by European governments as qualified trust service providers.

The certificates themselves are known as qualified website authentication certificates, or more commonly, QWACs, pronounced the way a duck would say it.

Underneath the arguments of proponents and critics lies ultimately a clashing set of assumptions about the function of web certificates. Proponents say they should be able to guarantee a website is trustworthy. For critics, the icon only means the connection is encrypted.

Quack! There’s a QWAC in the Root Store

Ordinary web users rarely pause to consider web certificates, but they’re a cornerstone of online security. They’re responsible for encrypting traffic as it lurches across the internet, making it safe for e-commerce sites to…

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Computer chip makers must provide child care, other benefits if they want federal funding


The Commerce Department is opening the application process for computer chip manufacturers to access $39 billion in government support to build new factories and expand production.

All companies seeking the funds will need to show how they plan to develop a local workforce, with firms getting $150 million or more also required to provide affordable and accessible child care for their workers.

The funding is part of the CHIPS and Science Act, which President Joe Biden signed into law last August. Grants, loans and loan guarantees are meant to revive domestic production of computer chips.

Computer chip

FILE – An open smartphone lies in front of an LED wall showing a chip. (Lino Mirgeler/picture alliance via Getty Images)

It’s aimed at sharpening the U.S. edge in military technology and manufacturing while minimizing the kinds of supply disruptions that occurred in 2021, after the start of the coronavirus pandemic, when a shortage of chips shut down factory assembly lines and fueled inflation.

Gina-Raimondo.jpg

FILE – Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo speaks during the daily press briefing at the White House on Sept. 06, 2022 in Washington, DC. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

“This is fundamentally a national security initiative,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said as the application process began Tuesday. “We are not writing blank checks to any company that asks.”

The money is meant to support private investment in new factories and can be clawed back if companies use it on stock buybacks instead. Major companies such as Intel, TSMC, IBM, Micron and Texas Instruments have already launched aggressive expansions tied to the support, which will total $52 billion when coupled with funding for research.

Raimondo said that any company that receives support cannot expand its manufacturing capacity in foreign countries that are a source of national security concerns, a restriction that would appear to apply to China. Nor could recipients…

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Chinese gadget makers embrace new IoT standard to ease security concerns – South China Morning Post



Chinese gadget makers embrace new IoT standard to ease security concerns  South China Morning Post

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Shape-Shifting 'Tardigrade' Malware Hits Vaccine Makers – Threatpost



Shape-Shifting ‘Tardigrade’ Malware Hits Vaccine Makers  Threatpost

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