Despite Hacking Charges, US Tech Industry Fought To Keep Ties To Russia Spy Service (reuters.com)
The U.S. tech sector pushed the government to keep ties with Russia's spy agency, despite reports that Moscow meddled in the U.S. presidential election, Reuters reported Friday. The sanctions imposed on Russia by the Obama administration last December outlawed U.S. companies from having relationships with Russia's spy agency, the Federal Security Service (FSB), which presented a dilemma to Western tech companies. Reuters says, the FSB also acts as a regulator that approves the importing of technology to Russia that contains encryption, which is used in products such as cellphones and laptops. Joel Schectman, Dustin Volz and Jack Stubbs, reporting for Reuters: Worried about the sales impact, business industry groups, including the U.S.-Russia Business Council and the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, contacted U.S. officials at the American embassy in Moscow and the Treasury, State and Commerce departments, according to five people with direct knowledge of the lobbying effort. The campaign, which began in January and proved successful in a matter of weeks, has not been previously reported. [...] The sanctions would have meant the Russian market was "dead for U.S. electronics" said Alexis Rodzianko, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, who argued against the new restrictions. "Every second Russian has an iPhone, iPad, so they would all switch to Samsungs," he said. [...] The lobbyists argued the sanction could have stopped the sale of cars, medical devices and heavy equipment, all of which also often contain encrypted software, according to a person involved in the lobbying effort. The goal of the sanctions was to sever U.S. business dealings with the FSB -- not end American technology exports to Russia entirely, the industry groups argued. "The sanction was against a government agency that has many functions, only one of them being hacking the U.S. elections," said Rodzianko.
Once again politics tries to divide us and make US-Russia relations worse, while commerce tries to keep us together because it turns out it doesn't matter what country you are from, we ALL want to MAKE MONEY!
It could just be that buying the elections from the Russians is cheaper than buying the politicians directly.
Nae king! Nae laird! Nae yurrupiean pressedent! We willna be fooled again!
Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer.
When Reuters finally publishes independent verifiable evidence that the Russian government hacked one voting machine. As such there is no evidence. Even the US government admits no one voting machine was hacked, regardless of who the hacker may be.
But it's nice to know that Reuters peddlers in fake news.
Did you see how quickly they backed off on their fake news narrative?
Sure, now you only see Trump calling the press fakes news, but the whole country was calling the press fake news that moment when the press was actively trying to label youtube and facebook as fake news. I seem to recall the press pushed the narrative for a little under a week before switching to Jill Stein and Gary Johnson.
Make no mistake, the press wants the power to decide elections. The internet stole it from them.
"His name was James Damore."