The Big Story: EARN IT Act moves forward despite concerns from lawmakers, advocates, and industry. A bill moving through the Senate would amend critical Internet legal frameworks that startups rely on to host user-generated content and disincentivize startups from using privacy and security-enhancing measures like encryption.
Startup News Digest 02/04/22
The Big Story: The startup policy priorities for 2022. This week, Engine released its 2022 Startup Agenda, highlighting the policy priorities of the U.S. startup ecosystem and featuring startups across the country explaining the ways policy can support them. As we explain in the agenda, there are startups in every state and every congressional district. There are startups that have all kinds of business models and rely on all types of funding. There are startups that operate in every sector of U.S. industry. And all of them will be impacted by policymakers' decisions across a range of issues.
Startup News Digest 01/28/22
The Big Story: America COMPETES is a mixed bag for startups. The new sweeping House package aimed at boosting American competitiveness and innovation has several provisions that would dramatically improve the startup ecosystem, but the bill also includes an unrelated bill that would harm e-commerce startups.
Startup News Digest 01/21/22
The Big Story: 10 years later, SOPA has lessons for startup policy. This week, we’re reflecting on copyright policy’s past as well as the impact it will continue to have on innovation, and what that all means for high-tech, high-growth startups and the Internet users and creators that depend on them. Engine, alongside many organizations, remembered and commemorated the 10 year anniversary of the defeat of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) with conversations of what balanced, innovation-friendly copyright policy looks like for startups and small businesses.
Startup News Digest 01/14/22
Startup News Digest 01/07/22
The Big Story: Changes to copyright rules would hurt news, commentary startups, and free expression. As a few countries adopt or consider laws that would require websites to pay whenever they—or their users—link to or quote a news article, the U.S. Copyright Office is studying what those sorts of laws would mean here. In comments this week, Engine emphasized the substantial unintended consequences of such policies, which would not just alter how information is shared and communicated online, but cause problems for startups and innovation.
Startup News Digest 12/17/21
Startup News Digest 12/10/21
The Big Story: Congress talks online content, but startups are sidelined. As Congress continues the drumbeat of complaints about user-generated content on the Internet, the conversation misses the realities of content moderation and the role content moderation plays for startups.
Startup News Digest 12/3/21
The Big Story: Startups watch as Congress considers tech nominees. This week, Senate committees weighed in on several individuals President Joe Biden nominated to key tech leadership roles, shedding some light on the direction the nominees might take to support startup innovators. In a series of hearings, Senators considered acting Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chair Jessica Rosenworcel and FCC nominee Gigi Sohn, as well as Alan Davidson, who was nominated to lead the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), Federal Trade Commission nominee Alvaro Bedoya, and Kathi Vidal, who was nominated to lead the Patent and Trademark Office.
Startup News Digest 11/19/21
The Big Story: Making the startup ecosystem more equitable. Startup founders with innovative ideas should have the chance to succeed, no matter where they’re located or what they look like. But too often, underrepresented founders—including women and founders of color—are denied the opportunity to get investments, launch, and grow. This week, Engine released an assessment of barriers that underrepresented founders face as well as policy proposals to alleviate those barriers.
Startup News Digest 11/5/21
The Big Story: Immigration in play in reconciliation bill, but path unclear. As the House eyes a path forward on the reconciliation bill, newly-added language would create temporary protections for millions of undocumented immigrants, which could make it easier for foreign-born innovators, founders, and STEM talent to stay and work in the U.S.
Startup News Digest 10/29/21
The Big Story: Biden puts up key tech, telecom nominees. This week, President Biden announced several long-awaited nominations that, if confirmed, will serve key roles in setting technology and telecom policies that impact the startup ecosystem.
Startup News Digest 10/22/21
The Big Story: Policymakers turn attention to patent policy. Over the past weeks, there have been several indications policymakers across D.C. are thinking about the various roles patents play in innovation policy—both recognizing their potential to support innovators but also seeking to understand how low-quality patents hurt startups and small businesses.
Startup News Digest 10/15/21
The Big Story: New tax deal could impact global startup ecosystem. Officials from around the world are moving forward with a new tax deal that would shift current tax laws and stands to impact both large companies and startups. G20 Finance Ministers this Wednesday endorsed the agreement that 136 countries agreed on last week, which would tax businesses based on where their goods and services are consumed—a shift from taxation based on physical presence. The deal would also set a new global minimum tax of 15 percent.
Startup News Digest 10/08/21
The Big Story: Congress hears about startups’ need for clear data rules. Lawmakers have turned back to discussions of a federal privacy framework, including at a hearing this week on data security, which featured testimony from Engine focused on how startups need clarity and certainty around data security practices.
Startup News Digest 10/01/21
The Big Story: SHOP SAFE bill advances despite potential to harm e-commerce startups and small businesses. In a first vote this week, the House Judiciary Committee advanced the SHOP SAFE Act, a bill that would create substantial costs and risks for e-commerce startups—making it harder for them to compete—and erect new barriers for entrepreneurs and small businesses who want to sell goods online.
Startup News Digest 09/24/21
The Big Story: Congress hits roadblock on immigration reform
A potential pathway to citizenship for Dreamers—a group critical to the startup ecosystem—was derailed this week when the Senate Parliamentarian blocked Democrats’ efforts to include immigration reform in the $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill. Many Dreamers are entrepreneurs, and, as a group, they employ over 86,000 individuals across the country. Legislators are now considering alternative proposals to ensure immigration provisions remain a priority.
Startup News Digest 06/11/21
The Big Story: G7 tax deal reached, but faces uncertainty in U.S. Congress. This week, the finance leaders of the G7 countries came to an agreement on a global minimum corporate tax rate of at least 15 percent, which could hinge on the withdrawal of unilateral digital services taxes that disproportionately impact U.S. tech firms. The deal, which comes after years of negotiations in an effort to revamp international taxation, represents a first step in redrafting the rules in how multinational corporations are taxed.
Startup News Digest 06/04/21
The Big Story: Transatlantic data deal a priority ahead of U.S.-EU summit. Ahead of the U.S.-European Union summit later this month, President Joe Biden is renewing the administration’s focus on negotiating a new deal to let U.S. companies, especially startups, that operate in Europe store and process EU users’ data in the U.S. The two governments must address policy-related obstacles to transatlantic digital trade, including the invalidation of the last data flow deal as well as likely impacts from other EU proposals around digital taxes, artificial intelligence, and online platforms and marketplaces.
Startup News Digest 03/05/21
The Big Story: States push ahead on privacy in lieu of federal action. Virginia officially became the second state in the nation—following California—to implement its own comprehensive data privacy law last week. The passage of Virginia’s privacy law comes as other states—including Minnesota, New York, Oklahoma, Utah, and Washington—consider implementing their own sweeping data privacy measures.