I get that Microsoft is "a for-profit company” but wondering if it might've made sense for them to eat some of the costs of implementing this logging analysis for critical government systems https://t.co/tHuFOo7VeF
— Lance Ulanoff (@LanceUlanoff) March 15, 2021
“Microsoft stands to receive nearly a quarter of Covid relief funds destined for U.S. cybersecurity defenders...angering some lawmakers who don’t want to increase funding for a company whose software was recently at the heart of two big hacks.” https://t.co/Oz1ZE992GH
— blmohr (@blmohr) March 15, 2021
Ron Wyden is not pleased with Microsoft. https://t.co/zuLQ50wWzN (by @Bing_Chris) pic.twitter.com/AIpkzhwurK
— William Turton (@WilliamTurton) March 15, 2021
Biden administration reveals probe into government security has found holes, wants more private sector collaboration as the cure https://t.co/qaCm5MYyvI
— Nicolas Krassas (@Dinosn) March 15, 2021
Ron Wyden is not pleased with Microsoft. https://t.co/zuLQ50wWzN (by @Bing_Chris) pic.twitter.com/AIpkzhwurK
— William Turton (@WilliamTurton) March 15, 2021
Should security features come standard with dominant software? Scoop today with @Bing_Chris and @razhael. https://t.co/I29OucRyYq
— Joseph Menn (@josephmenn) March 15, 2021
Exclusive: Microsoft could reap more than $150 million in new U.S. cyber spending, upsetting some lawmakers https://t.co/qTzwzNALPm
— Chris Bing (@Bing_Chris) March 15, 2021
Frustrated Lawmakers Claim Microsoft’s Faulty Software Is Making The Company More Profitable Through Cybersecurity Relief Budgets #bigdata #microsoft #cybersecurity #computerscience #dataprotection #informationsecurity #covid https://t.co/LtwjfdjKNA
— Pryvate (@PryvateApp) March 15, 2021