Hardware Encryption Technology Market Potential Growth, Share, Demand and Analysis of Key Players- Research Forecasts to 2027 – Owned

New Jersey, United States,- The research report on Hardware Encryption Technology market comprises of insights in terms of pivotal parameters such as production as well as the consumption patterns alongside revenue estimations for the projected timeframe. Speaking of production aspects, the study offers an in-depth analysis regarding the manufacturing processes along with the gross revenue amassed by the leading producers operating in this business arena. The unit cost deployed by these producers in various regions during the estimated timeframe is also mentioned in the report.

Significant information pertaining to the product volume and consumption value is enlisted in the document. Additionally, the report contains details regarding the consumption graphs, Individual sale prices, and import & export activities. Additional information concerning the production and consumption patterns are presented in the report.

In market segmentation by manufacturers, the report covers the following companies-

Regions Covered in the Global Hardware Encryption Technology Market:

The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt)

North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada)

South America (Brazil etc.)

Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.)

Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)

Highlights of the Report:

Accurate market size and CAGR forecasts for the period 2020-2026

Identification and in-depth assessment of growth opportunities in key segments and regions

Detailed company profiling of top players of the global Hardware Encryption Technology market

Exhaustive research on innovation and other trends of the global Hardware Encryption Technology market

Reliable industry value chain and supply chain analysis

Comprehensive analysis of important growth drivers, restraints, challenges, and growth prospects

The scope of the Report:

The report offers a complete company profiling of leading players competing in the global Hardware Encryption Technology marketwith a high focus on the share, gross margin, net profit, sales, product portfolio, new applications, recent developments, and several other factors. It also throws light on the vendor landscape to help players become aware of future competitive changes in the global Hardware Encryption Technology market.

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Hardware Encryption Technology Market Potential Growth, Share, Demand and Analysis of Key Players- Research Forecasts to 2027 - Owned

On this day: July 30 – Metro Newspaper UK

Todays birthdays

Buddy Guy, blues guitarist, 84

Peter Bogdanovich, film director, 81

Sir Clive Sinclair, inventor, 80

Paul Anka, singer, 79

Frances de la Tour, actress, 76

Arnold Schwarzenegger, actor and former governor of California, 73

Jean Reno, actor, 72

Harriet Harman, Labour MP, 70

Kate Bush, singer, 62

Daley Thompson, former athlete, 62

Laurence Fishburne (pictured), actor, 59

Lisa Kudrow, actress, 57

Vivica Fox, actress, 56

Craig Gannon, former Smiths guitarist, 54

Sean Moore, Manic Street Preachers drummer, 52

Christopher Nolan, film director, 50

Hilary Swank, actress, 46

Jason Robinson, former rugby player, 46

Hope Solo, World Cup-winning footballer, 39

Aml Ameen, actor, 35

Hannah Cockroft, world record-holding wheelchair racer, 28

1718: William Penn, founder of The Quakers, died in Pennsylvania.

1818: Emily Bronte, English novelist, was born. One of the three famous sisters, she wrote her single masterpiece Wuthering Heights under the name of Ellis Bell in 1846.

1863: Henry Ford, father of the mass-produced car, was born in Dearborn, Michigan. He built his first car in his spare time in a shed behind his house in Detroit.

1898: Sculptor Henry Moore was born in Castleford, West Yorkshire

1900: London Undergrounds Central Line was opened by the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) with a flat rate of tuppence for all destinations.

1930: Uruguay won footballs first World Cup.

1935: Ariel, a life of Shelley by Andre Maurois, was the first Penguin paperback book to be published, price sixpence.

1963: Third Man Kim Philby turned up in Moscow after escaping arrest in Britain for spying.

1966: England beat West Germany 4-2 in extra time with a hat-trick from Geoff Hurst to win the World Cup.

1973: The Thalidomide Case, taken up by the Sunday Times on behalf of the victims, ended after 11 years, with compensation of 20million.

1990: Ian Gow, Conservative MP for Eastbourne, was murdered by an IRA bomb at his home in the Sussex village of Hankham.

2006: Worlds longest running music show Top of the Pops is broadcast for the last time on BBC Two after 42 years.

2007: Two film directing legends die Italian Michelangelo Antonioni, aged 94, and Swedish Ingmar Bergman, 89.

2011: The Queens granddaughter Zara Phillips married England rugby star Mike Tindall in a simple private ceremony.

2013: Wikileaks discloser Bradley [later Chelsea] Manning is convicted of 17 espionage charges.

Since being a dad, without a doubt, football has become way more important to me than [it] ever used to, its really weird. Like, its changed a lot. I need to go and be amongst other guys and kind of let out a bit of steam, shout a bit. Not abuse the referee because Im the president of the FA and I cant do that but in my head I am The Duke of Cambridge on fatherhood and football

I am now quite cured of seeking pleasure in society, be it country or town. A sensible man ought to find sufficient company in himself Author Emily Bronte might well have enjoyed lockdown

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On this day: July 30 - Metro Newspaper UK

EXCLUSIVE: Fearing Trump interference, FBI agents hid copies of Russia investigation docs – CNN

In the hours after President Donald Trump suddenly fired FBI Director James Comey, on May 9, 2017, his former subordinates in the J. Edgar Hoover Building wondered if there would be more shoes to drop. Would Trump dismiss more people? Would he shut down the investigation of his campaign's ties to Russia? Would the President demand that the Bureau cease its investigation of Michael Flynn, Trump's onetime national security adviser?

In response to these concerns, the FBI took extraordinary -- and previously undisclosed -- steps to protect its investigations.

From Comey's first meetings with Trump, shortly after he won the presidency, the FBI director developed misgivings about his new boss' behavior -- about Trump's demands for "loyalty," and even more unnerving, his request that the Bureau drop its investigation of Flynn. Comey's conversations with Trump had been so distressing that the director started writing up contemporaneous summaries of their interactions and sharing them with a handful of top officials at the Bureau. Now, suddenly, Comey was out -- and the question arose of what to do with his memos about his conversations with the President.

Given the wild pace of events, McCabe couldn't be sure how long he'd last as director, so he wanted to lock down as much evidence as possible. Most important, he told the investigating agents to place Comey's memos in SENTINEL, the FBI's case management software. McCabe knew that once documents were inside the system, they were virtually impossible to remove. With Comey's memos in the system, the investigators were certain to have access to them -- even if McCabe himself would eventually be gone.

Indeed, FBI officials even went a step farther. Once McCabe became director, Bureau employees grew so concerned that Trump would try to shut down the investigation that they secreted at least three copies of key documents, including Comey's memos, in remote locations around the Bureau. This was to make sure that in the event Trump directed an end to these inquiries, the documents could always be preserved, located, and shared.

On May 17, eight days after Trump fired Comey, Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, announced that he had appointed Robert S. Mueller III, the director of the FBI from 2001 to 2013, to serve as special counsel. Rosenstein gave Mueller a broad mandate -- to investigate ties between the Trump campaign and Russia, as well as any matters that arose from his investigation. Mueller's team ultimately took possession of Comey's memos, and they proved to be important evidence in the report Mueller filed two years later. As Mueller later learned, and included in his report, Trump seriously contemplated firing the special counsel on several occasions -- so the initial suspicions at the FBI, about the President's real intentions, were well-grounded.

The truth, however, is precisely the opposite. The story of the Mueller investigation is in great measure a story of prosecutorial restraint. And this was true, too, in the satellite investigation that touched on Trump in the Southern District of New York. As both investigations were unfolding, there was a great deal of speculation that prosecutors were scrutinizing Trump's financial history, including his tax returns.

But the truth, first reported here, is that neither Mueller nor the Southern District prosecutors sought out Trump's financial records or obtained his tax returns, as they had the opportunity to do.

Why not? Why didn't prosecutors obtain this evidence? After all, it was long known that Trump had business ambitions in Russia; he had been attempting to build a tower in Moscow since the 1980s. Indeed, in 2015, while his presidential campaign was already underway, Trump signed a letter of intent to develop a building in Moscow. (The letter was non-binding, and no money changed hands, but the agreement was clear about Trump's ambitions.) At the same time, one of the core questions of the Russia investigation was why Trump was so solicitous of Vladimir Putin, the Russian leader. Trump not only praised Putin repeatedly, but he encouraged Russia's efforts to support his 2016 campaign against Hillary Clinton.

As Mueller discovered, Russia went to extraordinary lengths to do just that. The Internet Research Agency, a nominally private company in St. Petersburg with close ties to Putin, conducted a social media campaign for Trump and against Clinton. And in an even more sinister and damaging way, the military intelligence wing of the Russian Army hacked emails from the Democratic Party and John Podesta, Clinton's campaign chairman. Their release, through WikiLeaks as an intermediary, greatly damaged Clinton's chances against Trump.

Trump's high regard for Putin -- and the Russian government's efforts on Trump's behalf -- raised the obvious question of whether there were financial motives at work. What were Trump's business ties to Russia? Did Russia have a financial stake in Trump's candidacy? Did Trump have financial interests in Russia? Neither Mueller nor the Southern District ever found out.

Why Mueller held back

According to members of Mueller's staff, the special counsel's main reason for forgoing a financial investigation of Trump was somewhat abstract. It concerned the legal concept of state of mind -- specifically, the difference between corrupt intent and motive. Most federal crimes, and certainly all the ones that Mueller was investigating, are what are known as "intent" crimes. In order to be found guilty of an intent crime, a defendant must know that what he's doing is wrong. For prosecutors, it's usually pretty easy to prove intent -- a defendant's attempts at secrecy, or to lie about or cover up his actions, usually suffice to prove intent.

If there was ever going to be a prosecution of Trump, the prosecutors believed, there would be no problem proving intent.

Motive is related to intent, but a much broader concept. A defendant's motive to commit a crime could include financial gain, jealous rivalry, or an unhappy childhood. When bringing a criminal case, prosecutors often find it helpful to prove a defendant's motive, but the law does not require it. It's necessary only to prove intent. Mueller's prosecutors thought Trump's financial records and tax returns went to possible motive, not intent, so they thought they didn't need the evidence.

There was another factor. As a special counsel, Mueller's jurisdiction was limited by his charter from Rosenstein. Rosenstein had directed Mueller to investigate "any links and/or coordination between the Russian government and individuals associated with" the Trump campaign. Trump's financial records were not directly relevant to that issue. In order to pursue the financial records, and especially the tax returns, Mueller would have had to ask Rosenstein to expand his jurisdiction.

Rosenstein never denied any of Mueller's requests, but Mueller couldn't be sure that he could justify this expansion to Rosenstein. Even in fraud investigations, it's unusual for Department of Justice prosecutors to seek their subjects' tax returns, especially when, as here, Mueller had no evidence that Trump had cheated on his taxes. (Of course, Trump refused to disclose his tax returns voluntarily, as all presidential candidates had done for more than a generation; this was suspicious behavior by Trump, but not actual evidence that he committed a crime.)

Mueller thought that if he tried to expand his mandate to look at Trump's possible financial misdeeds, that would look like a fishing expedition, which he was determined to avoid. So, Mueller and his team never found out the nature, if any, of Trump's financial ties to Russia.

Michael Cohen and the 'Deep State'

The Southern District of New York, the US Attorney's office in Manhattan, was only involved in the investigation because of an act of restraint by Mueller and his team.

Early in Mueller's tenure, his staff became aware of possible criminal activity by Michael Cohen, who worked as Trump's personal attorney. Shortly before the 2016 election, Cohen had orchestrated a $130,000 payment to Stormy Daniels, an adult film actress, in return for her silence about a brief relationship she had with Trump. This was a possible illegal campaign contribution. (Trump has denied the affair.)

Cohen had also engaged in questionable financial dealings on his own. Early in 2018, Mueller decided that these areas were outside his jurisdiction and shared the evidence with the Southern District of New York. The Manhattan prosecutors, in turn, went after Cohen aggressively, obtaining search warrants for his office and home in April of that year.

At that time, many news accounts suggested that the Southern District prosecutors, who have a reputation for independence and aggressiveness, presented a major threat to Trump. This was also because the Manhattan prosecutors were not limited by any sort of directive from Rosenstein. They could follow the evidence wherever it might lead.

Surely, the speculation went, the Southern District would use its investigation of Cohen to look into Trump's financial dealings, including his tax returns. Trump himself, who reacted with fury to the raid on his lawyer's properties, seemed to be worried about that very prospect.

Still, what Trump didn't know, and what the breathless news coverage of the Cohen raid didn't recognize, was that the Southern District's investigation of Michael Cohen ... was an investigation of Michael Cohen. It was not, and never would be, an investigation of Donald Trump.

The prosecutors in New York showed the same caution and restraint that Mueller's team displayed in Washington. It's almost part of the DNA of experienced prosecutors to tread carefully beyond areas where they can identify specific criminal behavior. This was why Trump's repeated invocations of the Democratic affiliations of Mueller's staff, while understandable, missed the point. (Most of Mueller's lawyers had made campaign contributions to Democrats over the years.)

More important than the political inclinations of Mueller's team was their professional training as prosecutors, and those honed instincts limited their ambitions. The same was true for the prosecutors in New York. Notwithstanding the rumors (and the hopes of Trump's political opponents), the Southern District prosecutors never sought or obtained Trump's tax returns or subpoenaed his financial records, at Deutsche Bank or anywhere else.

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EXCLUSIVE: Fearing Trump interference, FBI agents hid copies of Russia investigation docs - CNN

IBM and the University of Tokyo Unveil the Quantum Innovation Initiative – AiThority

Keio University, Toshiba, Hitachi, Mizuho, MUFG, JSR, DIC, Toyota, Mitsubishi Chemicals and IBM to expand the country-wide quantum computing research, development and education ecosystem

IBM and theUniversity of Tokyounveiled a landmark collaboration with the launch of the Quantum Innovation Initiative Consortium (QIIC). Expanding from theDecember 2019JapanIBM Quantum Partnership initiative, QIIC, aims to accelerate the collaboration between industry, academia, and government to advanceJapansleadership in quantum science, business, and education.

QIICs main goal is to strategically accelerate quantum computing R&D activities inJapanby bringing together academic talent from across the countrys universities and prominent research associations and large-scale industry. The consortium plans to further develop technology for quantum computing inJapanand build an ecosystem to improve student skills and expertise, opening doors to future scientific discoveries and practical quantum applications.

Headquartered at theUniversity of Tokyo, member organizations of QIIC will collaborate to engage students, faculty, and industry researchers with seminars, workshops, and events to foster new quantum business opportunities inJapan. Organizations in agreement to join the consortiumincludeKeio University, Toshiba, Hitachi, Mizuho,MUFG, JSR, DIC, Toyota, Mitsubishi Chemicals and IBM Japan.

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These organizations in consortium will also be part of the IBM Q Network the worlds first community of Fortune 500 companies, startups, academic institutions and research labs to advance quantum computing and the development of practical applications for it. As part of the network, they will have access to IBMs expertise and resources, and cloud development environment, as well as cloud-based access to the IBM Quantum Computation Center, which includes IBMs most-advanced quantum computers.

In addition to cloud-based access to the IBMs fleet of quantum systems, the QIIC will also have access to an IBM Q System One, a dedicated system planned for installation inJapanin 2021. The first of its kind in the region, and only the second such installation outside of the US, this system along with a separate testbed system to be part of a system technology development lab will support the consortiums goals of next-generation quantum hardware research and development, including cryogenic components, room temperature electronics, and micro-signal generators.

According to ProfessorMakoto Gonokami, President of theUniversity of Tokyo:

Society 5.0is the concept of a better future with inclusive, sustainable and a knowledge-intensive society where information and services create value underpinned by digital innovation. The key to realizing this society is to utilize real data in real-time. In order to achieve this, it is necessary to protect and nurture the global environment, an entity of physical space and cyberspace as one, by taking it as a global commons (a concept that encompasses global resources and the ecosystems) which is sustainable and reliable, while the fusion of physical space and cyberspace progresses.

Quantum technology and quantum computers are indispensable technologies to make that happen. I believe thatJapanwill play an important role in implementing quantum computing technology to society ahead of rest of the world, and that industry-academia-government collaboration is necessary for this. The QIIC will accelerate quantum technology research and its implementation to the Society 5.0 while firmlysharing each others wisdom and promoting the close sharing of information.

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Today, I am extremely excited and proud to launch this new consortium that will help foster economic growth and quantum technology leadership in Japan.The QIIC will greatly advanceJapansentire quantum computing ecosystem, bringing experts from industry, government and academia together to collaborate on researchand development, saidDario Gil, Director of IBM Research. Quantum computing has the potential totackle some of the worlds greatest challengesin the future.We expect that it will helpusaccelerate scientific discovery so that we candevelop vaccinesmore quickly and accurately,create new materials toaddressclimate changeor design better energy storage technologies. The potential is massive,andwe will only reach this future if we work together uniting the best minds from the public and private sectors. Universities, businesses and governments have to collaborate so that we can unleash the full potential of quantum computing.

QIICs members are forging a path forJapansdiscovery of practical quantum applications for the benefit of society. The cooperation between industry, academia, and government aims to create a new community for quantum computation research and use cases.

Recommended AI News: Siduri Winery Serves Up Holographic Augmented Reality Experience

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IBM and the University of Tokyo Unveil the Quantum Innovation Initiative - AiThority

2020 Election Live Updates: Trump Defends Delay the Election Tweet, Even Though He Cant Do It – The New York Times

A man accused of setting a fire to the Arizona Democratic Party headquarters this month was arrested on Wednesday, the authorities said.

The man, Matthew Egler, 29, was arrested on a charge of arson of an occupied structure, the Phoenix Police Department said. Mr. Egler, the police said, was a former volunteer at the office but had been recently barred from volunteer service.

It was not immediately clear whether he had a lawyer, or why he had been barred from volunteering.

The fire took place after midnight on July 24 at the partys offices in downtown Phoenix, causing damage but no injuries.

The Phoenix police said that Mr. Egler had posted information on social media that linked him to the fire. Investigators were also able to connect a car seen in a surveillance video from that night to a relative of Mr. Egler. The video showed a man arriving in the car and breaking glass to get into the building.

We are deeply saddened and shocked by todays news, but appreciate the swift action by law enforcement to ensure that the suspect is in custody, the Arizona Democratic Party said in a statement.

Reporting was contributed by Maggie Astor, Emily Badger, Luke Broadwater, Alexander Burns, Emily Cochrane, Nate Cohn, Johnny Diaz, Reid J. Epstein, Sydney Ember, Robert Gebeloff, Katie Glueck, Shane Goldmacher, Maggie Haberman, Annie Karni,Adam Liptak, Patricia Mazzei, Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio, Jennifer Medina, Jeremy W. Peters, Matt Stevens and Glenn Thrush.

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2020 Election Live Updates: Trump Defends Delay the Election Tweet, Even Though He Cant Do It - The New York Times

Supreme Court blocks Idaho group from gathering ballot initiative signatures online – CNN

The order concerning the ballot process in the age of Covid-19 comes as the court's conservative majority has turned away other attempts to ease voting-related restrictions because of the pandemic.

The case stems from the actions of Reclaim Idaho, a political action committee that seeks to increase funding in K-12 education. It had attempted to gather the necessary signatures for a ballot initiative, but had to suspend its campaign because it felt uncomfortable seeking signatures during the pandemic.

It claimed its First Amendment rights were violated when Idaho law was not suspended to allow the group to collect signatures electronically. A district court judge extended deadlines and ordered the state to accept electronic signatures.

Idaho Gov. Brad Little, a Republican, accused the court of seizing "control of Idaho's initiative process" and contravening "an almost century-old principle of Idaho law requiring in-person collection of petition signatures."

"No system of checks and balances can support such an arbitrary abandonment of constitutional and statutorily-assigned election responsibilities," his lawyers told the justices in court papers.

Thursday's order was unsigned. Chief Justice John Roberts, joined by Justice Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, wrote to explain their thinking as to why they voted to block the lower court order.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, joined by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, dissented.

It is unclear how the other justices voted but it would have taken the votes of five justices to block the order.

Sotomayor noted that the lower court had required Idaho to "accommodate delays and risks" introduced by the coronavirus. She noted that a federal appeals court is due to hear the case on August 11 and if it determines that the lower court's injunction was "improper" the state could still omit the initiative from the November ballot.

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Supreme Court blocks Idaho group from gathering ballot initiative signatures online - CNN

Rob Boston: Trump Adviser Unleashes Error-Filled Attack On Separation Of Church And State – YubaNet

July 29, 2020 During a recent campaign event, Jenna Ellis, an adviser to President Donald Trump, cut loose with the old Religious Right chestnut that separation of church and state isnt part of the Constitution.

The left is going to tell you theres this separation of church and state, and thats just nowhere in the Constitution, nowhere in American law,Ellis said during a Zoom meetinghosted by Asian Pacific Americans for Trump. Thats nothing that our founding principles ever, uh, derived whatsoever.

She added that church-state separation comes from twisting a letter from Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury Church that was simply talking about the three tiers of authority that God himself ordained the church government, the civil government, and the family government.

Ellis would have done well to actually readJeffersons letterto the Danbury, Conn., Baptist Association before popping off on it because that famous missive doesnt say what she seems to think it does. The Daily Beast helpfully pointed out what Ellis got wrong and even quoteda blog postby Americans United Assistant Director of Communications Liz Hayes making it clear that key founders like Jefferson and James Madison supported separation of church and state. (Madison, it is worth noting, was one of the primary authors of the Constitutions religious freedom protections, which were inspired by JeffersonsVirginia Statute for Religious Freedom.)

History is important, but theres another reason why the term separation of church and state came into existence: Its a convenient way of explaining what the religious freedom provisions of the First Amendment do.

The first 16 words of the First Amendment are, Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. People who work in the legal community call the first part of that the Establishment Clause and the second part the Free Exercise Clause.

These are not terms that smoothly roll off the tongues of non-lawyers, though. Even in pre-Twitter days, people often looked for shortcuts when communicating complex ideas. The phrase separation of church and state nicely summarizes the scope and effect of the First Amendment.

In his classic bookChurch, State and Freedom, eminent church-state scholar Leo Pfeffer put it well. Pfeffer noted that the literal words separation of church and state dont appear in the Constitution but added, But it was inevitable that some convenient term should come into existence to verbalize a principle so clearly and widely held by the American people.

Pfeffer pointed out that the phrases fair trial and religious liberty are found nowhere in the Constitution, yet few would doubt that our founding charter protects those principles. He wrote, The universal acceptance which all these terms, including separation of church and state, have received in America would seem to confirm rather than disparage their reality as basic American principles.

Pfeffer was right. Separation of church and state is an American principle. We pioneered it, and we should be proud of it. Its a shame to see a vital American ideal subjected to ignorant attacks and thats why Americans United defends separation every day.

Wed love to haveyour support!

Americans United for Separation of Church and State is a nonpartisan educational and advocacy organization dedicated to advancing the separation of religion and government as the only way to ensure freedom of religion, including the right to believe or not believe, for all. http://www.au.org

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Rob Boston: Trump Adviser Unleashes Error-Filled Attack On Separation Of Church And State - YubaNet

Op-ed: Censorship and higher taxes won’t create more Apples, Amazons, Facebooks and Googles – CNBC

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg testifies before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law on "Online Platforms and Market Power" in the Rayburn House office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on July 29, 2020.

Mandel Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

The House Judiciary Committee held an antitrust hearing on Wednesday with the CEOs of four of the largest U.S. technology companies Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google to determine whether they have grown too large (i.e., are "too successful"), and therefore, should be broken up.

Democrats on the Committee suggested that these companies' success threatens the free market and even democracy itself. Numerous Republicans raised concerns about their alleged political bias as well as their size.

Meanwhile, in China, the government is taking an opposite course. Instead of attacking its "national champions," China is showering them with government subsidies and discriminating against "would-be" competitors to great effect.

Ten years ago, nearly all of the top technology companies and start-ups in the world were American. Now, China has nine of the top 20 technology companies and four of the top 10 start-ups. And this trend appears likely to continue.

China recently passed the United States in the number of global patent applications and is on track to eclipse U.S. research and development spending in the next two years, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

As policymakers on the Right and Left increasingly proclaim the importance of out-innovating China in critical technologies, their comments during yesterday's hearing raise an important question which companies will they actually let play that role?

Ten years ago, nearly all of the top technology companies and start-ups in the world were American. Now, China has nine of the top 20 technology companies and four of the top 10 start-ups. And this trend appears likely to continue.

Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are not the only important U.S. technology companies, but they spend a disproportionate amount on research and development in key areas like artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and robotics. They are also leaders on privacy and security technology, an area where China poses a particular threat, and they provide communication alternatives to less secure Chinese competitors. Mere search engines and social networks they are not.

Moreover, all four companies are uniquely American. They were built from the ground up by hard-working middle-class entrepreneurs, they revolutionized their industries, and they provide platforms to expand American influence and ideals like free speech around the world.

So rather than tear down our most innovative and most American of companies, let's build them up and others like them to stay ahead of China. How to begin?

First, let's stop attacking success to score political points. Policymakers should always question potential monopolistic behavior and make sure that a diversity of opinions are allowed to thrive online, but much of Big Tech's recent scrutiny appears populist in nature either intended to bolster "anti-corporate" credentials or to admonish the political views of their CEOs and employees.

The consequences of this "loose talk" is real it threatens American jobs at these companies, discourages other would-be risk-takers from setting out on new ventures, and provides cover for other countries to target U.S. business. After all, if U.S. policymakers are attacking Big Tech, why shouldn't their counterparts in China and Europe do the same? Instead of needlessly hurting our most innovative companies, let's champion their ingenuity and encourage others to replicate it.

Second, let's use the size of these companies and the unique skill sets of their workers to the government's advantage. Let's harness their cross-cutting strengths through public-private partnerships and joint R&D programs in critical technologies so the United States (and the U.S. military) remains the global leader. When policymakers consider their options for a modern U.S. industrial policy, working with and further strengthening these American champions is exactly what they should be doing.

Third, let's tread carefully when it comes to circumscribing the activities of these and other U.S. companies abroad. There are areas where our companies should not be permitted to engage, such as helping China improve its military capability. But one of the best ways for America to stay ahead of its global competition is for our companies to sell more in markets like China so they can spend more on innovation in the United States.

Fourth, let's forcefully back these companies against unfair practices abroad, whether it be unacceptable pressure from China to censor their activities or opportunistic targeting from France for tax revenue. Such pressure is very difficult for companies to combat alone, and they shouldn't be criticized for trying. Rather, the U.S. government should stand by their side and help them to compete fairly in these crucial markets, not encourage them to disengage.

Finally, as we continue to push back against the unfair practices of others, let's not emulate them ourselves. Censorship and higher taxes are not the way to create more Apples, Amazons, Facebooks, and Googles. And using anti-trust tools for political purposes a trick right out of the Chinese playbook will certainly not help win the defining global competition of our time.

Clete Willems is a partner at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, the former Deputy Director of the National Economic Council (2018-2019), and proudly represents innovative U.S. tech companies.

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Op-ed: Censorship and higher taxes won't create more Apples, Amazons, Facebooks and Googles - CNBC

Encryption Software Market 2020 Global Industry Analysis, Size, Growth and Forecast Up To 2027 | IBM Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Symantec…

The Encryption Software market report by Reports and Data provides an extensive overview of the vital elements of the Encryption Software market and factors such as drivers, restraints, latest trends, regulatory scenario, competitive landscape, technological advancements, and others. An in-depth analysis of these factors is offered to understand the future growth prospects of the global Encryption Software market.

This is the latest report covering the current COVID-19 scenario. The coronavirus pandemic has greatly affected every industry worldwide. It has brought along various changes in market conditions. The rapidly changing market scenario and the initial and future assessment of the impact are covered in the research report. The report discusses all the major aspects of the market with expert opinions on the current status, along with historical data.

Get FREE Sample Copy with TOC of the Report to understand the structure of the complete report @ https://www.reportsanddata.com/sample-enquiry-form/1516

In market segmentation by manufacturers, the report covers the following companies-

IBM Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Symantec Corporation, Intel Security, EMC Corporation, Sophos Holdings Ltd, Check Point Software Technologies, McAfee, Proofpoint, and Trend Micro.

Encryption Software Market has maintained a steady growth rate in the past decade and is predicted to grow at a higher growth rate during the forecast period. The analysis offers an industry-wide evaluation of the market by looking at vital aspects like growth trends, drivers, constraints, opinions of industry experts, facts and figures, historical information, and statistically-backed and trade valid market information to predict the future market growth.

Component Type Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

Usages type Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

Deployment type Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

Application areaType Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

End-use Type Outlook (Revenue, USD Billion; 2016-2026)

The report includes accurately drawn facts and figures, along with graphical representations of vital market data. The research report sheds light on the emerging market segments and significant factors influencing the growth of the industry to help investors capitalize on the existing growth opportunities.

Geographically, the report coversNorth America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East & Africa.

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Manufacturing Analysis of the Encryption Software Market

The report dedicates a section to inspect the manufacturing process of Encryption Software s. It includes a detailed analysis of the key feedstock required, cost and suppliers of the feedstock, cost analysis, pricing volatility, labor cost, and manufacturing process analysis of the Encryption Software market.

Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributor Analysis of the Encryption Software Market

Different marketing channels comprising of both direct and indirect channels have been assessed in detail in the Encryption Software market report. Crucial data pertaining to the marketing strategies adopted by companies, marketing channels, growth trends, pricing strategy, market standing, targeted consumers, and the distributors and traders operating in the market have also been included in the assessment.

The Encryption Software market research covers a detailed analysis of the following data:

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Key Questions Answered:

Inconclusion, the Encryption Software Market report is a reliable source for accessing the Market data that will exponentially accelerate your business. The report provides the principal locale, economic scenarios with the item value, benefit, supply, limit, generation, request, Market development rate, and figure and so on. Besides, the report presents a new task SWOT analysis, speculation attainability investigation, and venture return investigation.

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Encryption Software Market 2020 Global Industry Analysis, Size, Growth and Forecast Up To 2027 | IBM Corporation, Microsoft Corporation, Symantec...

Global Encryption Software Market 2020 Global Industry Brief Analysis by Top Countries Data with Market Size, Growth Drivers, Investment Opportunity…

The New Report Titled as Encryption Software Market published by Reportspedia, covers the market landscape and its evolution predictions during the forecast period. The report objectives to provide an overview of global Encryption Software Market with detailed market segmentation by solution, security type, application and geography. The Encryption Software Market is anticipated to eyewitness high growth during the forecast period. The report delivers key statistics on the market status of the leading market players and deals key trends and opportunities in the market.

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This research report also includes profiles of major companies operating in the global market. Some of the prominent players operating in the Global Encryption Software Market are:

East-TecHewlett PackardEntrustIBMInterCryptoBloombaseCiscoSymantecCheck Point Software TechnologieTrend Micro

The Encryption Software Market for the regions covers North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Middle East & Africa. Regional breakdown has been done based on the current and forthcoming trends in the global Encryption Software Market along with the discrete application segment across all the projecting region.

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The Type Coverage in the Market are:

Symmetric EncryptionAsymmetric EncryptionHashing

Market Segment by Applications, covers:

Whole DiskSingle-user File/folder LevelMulti-user File/folder LevelDatabaseApplication LevelEmail MessagesNetwork Traffic

Some Major TOC Points:

Chapter 1. Encryption Software Market Report Overview

Chapter 2. Global Encryption Software Market Growth Trends

Chapter 3. Market Share by Key Players

Chapter 4. Encryption Software Market Breakdown Data by Type and Application

Chapter 5. Market by End Users/Application

Chapter 6. COVID-19 Outbreak: Encryption Software Industry Impact

Chapter 7. Opportunity Analysis in Covid-19 Crisis

Chapter 9. Market Driving Force

Continue for TOC

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Key questions Answered in this Encryption Software Market Report:

What will be the Encryption Software Market growth rate and value in 2020?

What are the key market predictions?

What is the major factors of driving this sector?

What are the situations to market growth?

Major factors covered in the report:

Global Encryption Software Market summary

Economic Impact on the Industry

Encryption Software Market Competition in terms of Manufacturers

Encryption Software Market Analysis by Application

Marketing Strategy comprehension, Distributors and Traders

Study on Market Research Factors

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Global Encryption Software Market 2020 Global Industry Brief Analysis by Top Countries Data with Market Size, Growth Drivers, Investment Opportunity...