Trump’s first 100 days: all the news affecting the tech industry

1 month ago 7
  • Wes Davis

    The CFPB’s headquarters are closing.

    Two days after DOGE head Elon Musk posted “CFPB RIP” on X, employees of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau headquarters in Washington, DC were told via email today to work remotely next week, as the office will be closed, reports Business Insider.

    That’s after an email last night from OMB director Russell Vought, who Trump had just made CFPB Acting Director, stopped most agency work, including “supervisory activities that ensure companies are complying with the law,” the outlet writes.

  • Wes Davis

    Federal judge blocks DOGE from accessing sensitive Treasury records

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    A federal judge temporarily blocked Elon Musk’s DOGE from accessing Treasury Department records containing personal information like Social Security numbers early this morning, reports Inner City Press.

    The order is in response to a lawsuit filed yesterday in New York’s Southern District Court. The suit alleges that the administration exceeded its authority, broke the US Administrative Procedures Act, and violated the US Constitution’s separation of powers doctrine when it granted DOGE access to the Treasury’s federal payments system.

    Read Article >

  • Lauren Feiner

    RIP CFPB?

    Elon Musk sent a somewhat cryptic message on X hours after Wired reported that his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) entered the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, where DOGE staffers were set to gain read-only access to its systems. The CFPB has long been a Republican target so it’s unsurprising it’s been on the chopping block for DOGE along with the US Agency for International Development and Department of Education.

  • Lauren Feiner

    Musk promises to reinstate DOGE staffer linked to racist account

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_F

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_F

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge

    Marko Elez, the 25-year-old staffer Department of Government Efficiency staffer linked to a social media profile with racist posts, “will be brought back,” shortly after he resigned, Elon Musk announced on X.

    Elez resigned from his role where he reportedly had the ability to rewrite code in sensitive payments systems at the US Treasury, once The Wall Street Journal inquired about his connection to a deleted account. That account, which the Journal found previously had the username “@marko_elez,” called for reinstating a “eugenic immigration policy,” repealing the Civil Rights Act, and said that “99% of Indian H1Bs will be replaced by slightly smarter LLMs.”

    Read Article >

  • Justine Calma

    FEMA’s website started deleting ‘climate change’

    FEMA Headquarters in Washington

    FEMA Headquarters in Washington

  • Lauren Feiner

    DOGE wreaked havoc on the government in just one week

    STK022_ELON_MUSK_2_CVIRGINIA_C

    STK022_ELON_MUSK_2_CVIRGINIA_C

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    Within the past week, Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)-affiliated staffers have gained unprecedented access to sensitive US financial systems with data on millions of Americans, claimed to shut down one federal agency without an act of Congress, and invaded numerous government agencies. They’ve been opposed by lawsuits, public protests, and resistance within those agencies — and the situation remains constantly in flux.

    As a deadline for workers to accept a so-called “deferred resignation” looms on Monday, here’s where the rest of Musk’s government takeover attempt stands.

    Read Article >

  • Justine Calma

    Federal employees who work to protect the environment are getting the ax.

    That includes at least 168 employees at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) who worked in its Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights. The Trump administration is following a play out of Project 2025, which calls for “eliminating” the office.

    Across the federal government, Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are targeting programs and employees that have worked to make initiatives more inclusive of communities of color and other groups that face disproportionate health and environmental risks.

  • Adi Robertson

    Mentions of trans kids scrubbed from national child safety clearinghouse website

    STK419_DEEPFAKE_CVIRGINIA_J

    STK419_DEEPFAKE_CVIRGINIA_J

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), a child safety nonprofit that works closely with the government and major tech platforms, has recently removed publications that reference queer and transgender children from its website. The removals come amid reports that NCMEC was ordered to cull mentions of LGBTQ+ issues under threat of losing government funding, part of President Donald Trump’s push to eradicate recognition of trans people in the US.

    NCMEC’s website hosts numerous reports on the state of various child endangerment issues, including data about abduction, sex trafficking, and online enticement. However, comparisons with the Wayback Machine show that at least three documents on its “NCMEC Data” page — including a report on missing children with suicidal tendencies, a report on male victims of child sex trafficking, and an overall data analysis of children missing from care — have been removed since the page’s last archived date of January 24th. Archived copies of all three reports included mentions of LGBTQ+ and particularly transgender children. The 13 remaining publications on NCMEC’s data page do not appear to contain these references.

    Read Article >

  • Richard Lawler

    The ‘custom chatbot’ DOGE is reportedly building for the GSA.

    A report from Wired looks at attempts to plug AI technology into the General Services Administration (along with other departments). According to one source, DOGE’s push is for using AI tools “to analyze huge swaths of contract and procurement data” with a custom GSAi chatbot.

    It also notes other shifting AI approaches, with coding assistant Cursor reportedly approved then retracted, and a new push to use Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot.

  • Richard Lawler

    Trump’s energy secretary bypassed legal, IT warnings against giving a DOGE rep access.

    CNN reports on a former SpaceX intern being set up in the Energy Department’s systems by Chris Wright:

    Members of the general counsel and chief information offices “said this is a bad idea” because [Luke] Farritor hadn’t had a standard background investigation needed to access the department’s system, one of the people told CNN. “He’s not cleared to be in DOE, on our systems. None of those things have been done.”

  • Alex Heath

    Mark Zuckerberg visits the White House.

    Per Meta spokesperson Andy Stone: “Mark Zuckerberg was at the White House today to discuss how Meta can help the administration defend and advance American tech leadership abroad.”

  • Lauren Feiner

    Deadline for government’s ‘Fork in the road’ mass resignation program delayed by court

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    A federal judge in Massachusetts temporarily blocked the Trump administration’s “deferred resignation” program, meant to push out career government workers as part of the Elon Musk-run Department of Government Efficiency’s alleged effort to cut federal spending, several outlets report.

    The program gave employees a deadline just before midnight on Thursday to accept the offer, which was billed by the Trump administration as a buyout. It promised to pay out employees through September if they resigned by the deadline — even though the government is not funded past March 14th. A group of unions representing federal employees sued the Office of Personnel Management and its acting director, claiming the directive violates the Administrative Procedure Act because it is “arbitrary and capricious” and promises money that hasn’t been appropriated by Congress.

    Read Article >

  • Andrew J. Hawkins

    Trump has California’s high-speed rail in his crosshairs again

    CAHSR_Train_View_01_Day

    CAHSR_Train_View_01_Day

    Image: California High-Speed Rail Authority

    President Donald Trump has set his sights on California’s high-speed rail plan, calling it “the worst-managed project” with massive cost overruns that deserve to be investigated.

    “They have hundreds of billions of dollars of cost overruns,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Tuesday, according to the Los Angeles Times. “It’s impossible that something could cost that much.”

    Read Article >

  • Alex Heath

    Head of DOGE-controlled government tech task force resigns

    STK022_ELON_MUSK_2_CVIRGINIA_D

    STK022_ELON_MUSK_2_CVIRGINIA_D

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    Ted Carstensen, the deputy administrator of the United States Digital Service (USDS) organization that has been renamed to Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), is resigning instead of taking the “Fork in the Road” deferred resignation offer for federal employees.

    “I write to let you know that I have decided to resign from USDS and today will be my last day,” Carstensen said in an internal memo to colleagues that was obtained by The Verge. “I am not taking the fork, but after discussions with my family and other trusted advisors I decided that it is time for me to pursue a different path.”

    Read Article >

  • Justine Calma

    Elon Musk’s DOGE storms federal weather forecasters’ headquarters

    STK438_CLIMATE_CHANGE_G

    STK438_CLIMATE_CHANGE_G

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images


    Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has reportedly infiltrated the headquarters of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the agency that collects and shares vital weather and climate information. Sources have told The Verge, as well as other news outlets, that they’re worried about drastic changes that could impact the public’s access to weather forecasts, jeopardize cybersecurity, and gut employee morale.

    NOAA houses the National Weather Service and National Hurricane Center, which produce forecasts and warn people about approaching storms. News that DOGE has barged into national headquarters has raised fears that the ad hoc group Musk is leading to remake the federal government is about to take a sledgehammer to NOAA — potentially hobbling the agency’s ability to keep the public safe during disasters. One current employee tells The Verge they’re staying on despite “demoralizing” changes at the agency because of how vital their work is — people rely on NOAA for accurate forecasts every day.

    Read Article >

  • Justine Calma

    Donald Trump’s data purge has begun 

    Photo collage of an image of Donald Trump behind a graphic, glitchy design.

    Photo collage of an image of Donald Trump behind a graphic, glitchy design.

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge; Getty Images

    Key resources for environmental data and public health have already been taken down from federal websites, and more could soon vanish as the Trump administration works to scrap anything that has to do with climate change, racial equity, or gender identity.

    Warnings floated on social media Friday about an impending purge at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), spurring calls to save as much data as soon as possible. The CDC shares data on a wide range of topics, from chronic diseases to traffic injuries, tobacco use, vaccinations, and pregnancies in the US — and it’s just one of the agencies in the crosshairs.

    Read Article >

  • Emma Roth

    The FDIC is “reevaluting” its approach crypto oversight.

    FDIC Acting Chairman Travis Hill has released dozens of documents that he says show how banks were “almost universally met with resistance” when making crypto-related requests. He added that the FDIC’s response “sent the message to banks that it would be extraordinarily difficult — if not impossible — to move forward” in the crypto space.

  • Richard Lawler

    “I think they’re playing a quantity game and assuming the system can’t react to all this illegality at once.”

    Said a law professor quoted by The Washington Post in an article about government officials raising internal legal objections to the actions of Elon Musk’s DOGE team. These messages have surfaced from departments like USAID, the Treasury, GSA, OPM, and others:

    “I swore an oath to the Constitution of the United States and the Commission serves the people of the United States,” an administrative judge at the agency wrote to EEOC acting chair Andrea R. Lucas, in a previously unreported message. “If you want to continue following the illegal and unethical orders of our president and the unelected leader of ‘doge’ that’s on you.”

  • Adi Robertson

    DOGE (reportedly) has full access to a major US payment system.

    Contrary to earlier reports, Wired (in a story since confirmed by other reporters) says that a member of Elon Musk’s pseudo-department has:

    “the ability not just to read but to write code on two of the most sensitive systems in the US government: The Payment Automation Manager (PAM) and Secure Payment System (SPS) at the Bureau of the Fiscal Service (BFS). Housed on a top-secret mainframe, these systems control, on a granular level, government payments that in their totality amount to more than a fifth of the US economy.”

    In other words, a budget passed by democratically elected US lawmakers could — reportedly, in theory — be overruled by a Big Tech lackey.

  • Justine Calma

    ‘Scared and betrayed’ — workers are reeling from chaos at federal agencies

    STK175_STK022_DONALD_TRUMP_ELON_MUSK_CVIRGINIA_A

    STK175_STK022_DONALD_TRUMP_ELON_MUSK_CVIRGINIA_A

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    As the third week of Donald Trump’s presidency begins, workers across federal agencies are scrambling to find their footing among the chaos.

    From the US Agency for International Development and the Department of Agriculture, to the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Labor, federal workers are facing an onslaught of changes that threaten to upend their work and the systems that keep the country running. Sweeping orders from the White House threatened to freeze funding for basic grants and programs, before being blocked by a judge and walked back by Trump. Using a made up meme agency, unelected billionaire Elon Musk is attempting to stage a takeover reminiscent of his remaking of Twitter, now X, except this time hollowing out the US government.

    Read Article >

  • Gaby Del Valle

    Treasury Department sued over DOGE takeover

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    STKS486_DOGE_DEPARTMENT_Elon Musk_STK022_C

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    President Donald Trump’s administration is being sued over Elon Musk’s alleged “massive and unprecedented” intrusion into the American government’s payment systems. The suit, filed in a Washington, DC federal court Monday evening by the advocacy group Public Citizen, calls for the court to stop the “unlawful, ongoing, systematic, and continuous disclosure of personal and financial information … to Elon Musk and other members of the so-called ‘Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), or to any other person.”

    Public Citizen filed the suit against the Treasury Department on behalf of the Alliance for Retired Americans, American Federation of Government Employees, and the Service Employees International Union days after reports emerged that Musk and DOGE had gained access to federal payment systems — and to millions of Americans’ Social Security numbers. The suit claims that the Treasury Department, led by recently appointed Secretary Scott Bessent, violated the Privacy Act of 1974 and the Internal Revenue Code’s regulations surrounding taxpayer information by letting Musk and DOGE access these systems.

    Read Article >

  • Jay Peters

    An “AI-first” GSA.

    Wired reports that an Elon Musk ally outlined an “AI-first strategy” to General Services Administration workers on Monday. “Throughout the meeting, [Thomas] Shedd shared his vision for a GSA that operates like a ‘startup software company,’ automating different internal tasks and centralizing data from across the federal government,” according to Wired.

  • Elizabeth Lopatto

    “There is not one single entity holding Musk accountable.”

    Elon Musk, running amok in American government, is attempting to dismantle USAID, taking an interest in federal real estate, and “reveling in the trappings of the opulent Secretary of War Suite in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building.” His goons are also attempting to access Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services systems.

  • Wes Davis

    CBS is preparing to give Harris interview materials to the FCC.

    FCC chairman Brendan Carr said he expects CBS News to submit a transcript of a 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris by the end of the day, writes The Wrap.

    This submission is related to a complaint from rightwing group Center for American Rights over the episode’s editing. The Wrap notes that former FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel had previously dismissed the filing, accusing the group of “seeking to weaponize” the regulator.

  • Wes Davis

    Trump agrees to a one-month pause on Mexico, Canada tariffs

    STKS488_TARIFFS_CVirginia_A

    STKS488_TARIFFS_CVirginia_A

    Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images

    On Monday morning, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum and US President Donald Trump announced the US is pausing tariffs against Mexico for one month, as previously reported by Bloomberg. In the afternoon, a similar deal was announced by Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to pause proposed tariffs for 30 days. Trudeau cited Canada’s $1.3 billion border plan and said it would also make new commitments, including a joint strike force and an intelligence directive aimed at organized crime.

    There’s no word yet on any kind of delay in implementing a pause for tariffs on China.

    Read Article >

More Stories
Read Entire Article