Code & Conduit Podcast by Bloomberg BNA

Lydia Beyoud

Code & Conduit is a legal and policy podcast from Bloomberg Law focusing on all things tech, telecom, intellectual property and privacy. Each episode features interesting discussions about what’s happening in Congress, the economy, the courts, federal agencies and society. We cover everything from drones, competition policy, transatlantic data transfers, copyright and patent litigation and all things tech. Learn more at www.bna.com/legal.

  • 16 minutes 55 seconds
    Episode 32: Talking Blockchain Patents with Ropes & Gray
    New tech innovations usually spur a wave of companies competing to win patents for their inventions. But with budding blockchain technology, the decision to patent isn’t always easy. Blockchain was first created as the underpinning technology to crypocurrencies like bitcoin and ethereum, which use code that is free and open to anyone. Many blockchain developers still embrace this open source ethos and resist their companies’ attempts to patent their work, Ropes & Gray LLP Intellectual property litigation partner Leslie Spencer and attorney Marta Belcher told Bloomberg Law in a recent podcast episode of Code & Conduit.
    17 August 2018, 8:22 pm
  • 13 minutes 44 seconds
    Episode 31: Sen. Gary Peters Talks Self-driving Cars and Taking the Long Way on his Motorcycle
    Senators, industry and interest groups continue their negotiations over that chamber’s self-driving car bill AV START (S. 1885). Sen. Gary Peters (D-Mich.), one of the co-authors of the legislation, returned in August from a five-day motorcycle tour of Michigan where he had long stretches of road to think about how autonomous technology should be deployed. We recently sat down with Senator Peters in his Washington office where we talked about his love of motorcycles: “My view is, if I have to go from Point A to Point B, why not do that on a motorcycle?” And how riding influenced his approach to writing the AV START legislation. Peters and his co-author Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John Thune are working to push the bill through the Senate before year’s end, which Peters thinks will result in a safer testing environment. “You can still put vehicles on the road right now without any kind of regulation or oversight,” he said. His bill “will allow the testing to go through in a safer manner than it is now,” Peters said in a sit-down interview for our Code and Conduit podcast.
    17 August 2018, 7:44 pm
  • 35 minutes 48 seconds
    Episode 30: Gene Ludwig Talks FinTech, Regulation and Economic Opportunity
    In a special fintech episode of Code and Conduit, we chat with Eugene Ludwig, former Comptroller of the Currency during President Bill Clinton’s administration and now CEO of Promontory Financial Services Group, a sought-after financial regulatory advisory company. Ludwig discusses his views on why allowing fintechs to become more like banks benefits the financial system and how to boost lending and economic opportunity for low- and middle-income Americans.
    9 August 2018, 6:47 pm
  • 19 minutes 26 seconds
    Episode 29: ‘If Not Us, Who?’: Cybersecurity’s Gender Gap Requires Fixing
    America’s information security workforce faces a massive gender gap, and it hasn’t improved much in recent years. It’s a longstanding issue. Women composed 10 percent of the cybersecurity profession in 2013, and the number rose to just 14 percent in 2017. That’s according to the 2017 Global Information Security Workforce Study, a white paper by Frost & Sullivan that compiled data from more than 19,000 respondents in 170 countries. For this episode of Code & Conduit, Joyce Brocaglia, founder of the Executive Women’s Forum, which contributed to the report, and chief executive officer of Alta Associates, joined the podcast via phone. Tyrone Wilson, founder of Cover6Solutions, a veteran and minority-owned small business, and organizer of the D.C. Cyber Security Professionals meet-up, which brings together about 5,000 cybersecurity professionals each year, joined host Kyle LaHucik in the studio.
    3 August 2018, 4:34 pm
  • 17 minutes 33 seconds
    Episode 28: Rep. Bob Latta Eyes Self-Driving Car Compromise This Year
    The chief House proponent of getting self-driving cars on U.S. roads says Congress must pass a self-driving car law this year. The House, Rep. Bob Latta, R-Ohio, told a recent episode of Code & Conduit, spent a lot of time working on H. 3388, his bill directing the U.S. Department of Transportation to set up a regulatory framework for testing self-driving cars and ensuring they’re safe.
    26 July 2018, 8:53 pm
  • 7 minutes 26 seconds
    Episode 27: New Illinois Attorney General, Same Privacy Focus
    Privacy and data security enforcement likely will be a top priority for Illinois’ attorney general, according to the two candidates running for the office. Kwame Raoul (D) and Erika Harold (R) are battling it out to replace current AG Lisa Madigan (D), whose term ends this year after a 16-year run. And they told Bloomberg Law legal editor Dan Stoller that they plan to continue the state’s focus on data security issues. Madigan’s record of investigating and fining companies for data breaches and mishandling consumer information has helped make the state a national leader on privacy issues, Stoller said in a recent episode of Code & Conduit.
    19 July 2018, 4:35 pm
  • 7 minutes 45 seconds
    Bloomberg Law Senior Legal Editor Eleanor Tyler Discusses Sinclair-Tribune Controversy at FCC
    Bloomberg Law Senior Legal Editor Eleanor Tyler talks to Tom Keene on Bloomberg Surveillance about FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's recent decision to deal a major setback to a proposed Sinclair-Tribune merger.
    17 July 2018, 1:52 pm
  • 8 minutes 23 seconds
    Episode 26: Blockchain Could be Copyright Holders’ Friend or Foe
    Blockchain could turn out to be an ally—or trouble—for copyright holders. The underpinnings of the developing technology, which acts like an inerasable, chronological database of transactions, appear to be at odds with a 20 year-old law that protects copyright holders from infringement. The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) allows copyright holders to seek removal of infringing content and protects publishers and internet service providers from liability if they remove such content after being notified. But if the infringing content is posted on a blockchain, it would be difficult or impossible to erase, Bloomberg Law reporter Alexis Kramer said in a recent podcast episode of Code & Conduit.
    18 June 2018, 4:32 pm
  • 13 minutes 16 seconds
    Episode 25: It’s Not Easy Being a Blockchain Patent Attorney
    Blockchain tech might be poised to revolutionize how companies like Bank of America operate and cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin trade. But inventors trying to patent their ideas in the field—and stake their claim on future profits—are facing hurdles at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
    30 May 2018, 7:31 pm
  • 7 minutes 14 seconds
    Episode 24: Tech Steps-up Teardowns in Patent Fights
    When the patent infringement claims get tough, inventors are turning to teardowns. Federal courts have raised the bar for the evidence needed to file a patent infringement case in recent years. This has led inventors to increasingly disassembling physical bits of their competitors’ products or software code to see if others’ technology is infringing on their patents, Malathi Nayak, Bloomberg Law intellectual property reporter said.
    3 May 2018, 7:43 pm
  • 11 minutes 2 seconds
    Episode 23: Kraken Crypto Exchange CEO Jesse Powell Talks Regulation
    Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken is strategizing on how to face an ever-evolving regulatory landscape. Kraken CEO and co-founder Jesse Powell told Bloomberg Law April 6 the exchange—one of the largest in the world—was ready for increased scrutiny and expecting regulation this year. Powell said Kraken also believes in self-regulation and has tried to create several industry-led regulatory groups. But Kraken, legally known as Payward, Inc, and other virtual currency exchanges have come under state and federal regulators’ scrutiny in recent weeks. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman launched April 17 an inquiry into Kraken and 12 other virtual currency exchanges, asking for more information about their operations and policies. On April 18 Powell indicated on Twitter that the company did not plan to comply with the official’s request. “Ordinarily we’re happy to help government understand our business, however, this is not the way to go about it,” Powell wrote, adding that the company discontinued operating in New York three years ago because of the state’s increased regulatory regime for virtual currency.
    19 April 2018, 8:54 pm
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