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Search resuls for: "Amazon.com Inc"


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Amazon introduced a "smarter and more conversational" version of its Alexa voice assistant that the company hopes will bolster its position in the tech industry's artificial intelligence race. In his final keynote address at the event on Wednesday, Amazon's devices chief Dave Limp showed off a demo of an updated Alexa that's freshly equipped with features powered by generative AI. From an event space at its new second headquarters in northern Virginia, Amazon showed a montage in which Alexa users were seen asking an Echo smart speaker for information such as the "best dates to travel to Puerto Rico." Similar to ChatGPT or other generative AI applications, Alexa will be able to compose messages for users and send them on their behalf. As an example, Amazon showed an invitation that Alexa wrote to a friend, asking the person to come over for a football game.
Persons: Dave Limp, Limp, Alexa Organizations: Amazon.com Inc, Amazon Devices, Amazon, Alexa, Echo Locations: Arlington , Virginia, Virginia, Puerto Rico
[1/4] A pipeline of state-owned Petroecuador is pictured as Ecuador is preparing to shut down oil production in the Yasuni Amazon reserve, in Via Auca, Orellana province, Ecuador July 28, 2023. Ecuador is preparing to shut down block 43-ITT, which is operated by state-owned Petroecuador, after a majority of Ecuadoreans voted to close the project in August. While oil wells have been closed before, Ecuador has no experience in abandoning an entire block of this size, which includes three fields and about 230 operating wells, he said. Environmentalists and some communities nearby insist that prohibiting future oil operations and other extractive industries is the only way to take care of nature and curb climate change. While some groups have demanded the immediate cessation of operations at 43-ITT, Davalos said an orderly closure was necessary.
Persons: Karen Toro, Jose Davalos, Ecuadoreans, Guillermo Lasso, Davalos, Petroecuador, Alexandra Valencia, Chizu, Oliver Griffin Organizations: REUTERS, ITT, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Ecuador, Via Auca, Orellana province, QUITO
DuckDuckGo, Microsoft (MSFT.O) and Yahoo are among a long list of Google competitors who will be watching the trial closely. “It would be difficult to overstate the importance of this case, particularly for monopolies and companies with significant market share,” antitrust lawyer Luke Hasskamp told Reuters. The lawsuit that goes to trial was brought by former President Donald Trump's Justice Department. read moreJudge Mehta will decide if Google has broken antitrust law in this first trial, and, if so, what should be done. Reporting by Diane Bartz; additional reporting by Mike Scarcella; editing by Diane CraftOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Toby Melville, DuckDuckGo, Kamyl Bazbaz, Luke Hasskamp, , Amit Mehta, Barack Obama, Donald Trump's, Joe Biden's, Mehta, Daniel McCuaig, Cohen Milstein, Diane Bartz, Mike Scarcella, Diane Craft Organizations: Google, REUTERS, U.S . Justice, Apple Inc, Mozilla, Microsoft, Yahoo, Big Tech, Facebook, Reuters, Apple, Twitter, Big, U.S, District of Columbia, Department, Android, U.S . Justice Department's Antitrust, Thomson Locations: London, Britain, WASHINGTON, United States,
The logo of Amazon is seen on the company's logistics centre in Boves, near Amiens, France, April 8, 2022. The lawsuit will target the company's logistics program, Fulfillment by Amazon, pricing on its website by third-party sellers and will suggest "structural remedies" that could break the company up, the report said on Tuesday. Amazon and the regulator declined to comment when contacted by Reuters. Amazon has been criticized for allegedly favoring its own products and disfavoring outside sellers on its platform, among other allegations. Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru and Diane Bartz in Washington; Editing by Sriraj KalluvilaOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Christian Hartmann, Donald Trump's, Lina Khan, Akash Sriram, Diane Bartz, Sriraj Organizations: REUTERS, U.S . Federal Trade, Amazon.com, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Google, Apple, Yale, Amazon, Thomson Locations: Boves, Amiens, France, Bengaluru, Washington
The talks are ongoing and some other potential investors are also in discussions to invest in the IPO, the sources added. SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T), which owns Britain-based Arm, is targeting a valuation between $50 billion and $55 billion, Reuters reported earlier on Friday. Arm's clients have agreed to invest in that valuation range, the sources said. Arm and SoftBank have set aside 10% of the shares to be sold in the IPO for its clients, Reuters has previously reported. The Wall Street Journal reported on Arm's valuation target earlier on Friday.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, SoftBank, Echo Wang, Anirban Sen, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: REUTERS, Arm Holdings, Apple Inc, Nvidia Corp, Inc, Devices Inc, Intel Corp, Samsung Electronics Co, Cadence Design Systems, Synopsys Inc, SoftBank Group Corp, Reuters, Apple, Nvidia, Amazon.com Inc, AMD, Intel, Samsung, Cadence, Street, Thomson Locations: Britain, New York
The talks are ongoing and some other potential investors are also in discussions to invest in the IPO, the sources added. SoftBank Group Corp (9984.T), which owns Britain-based Arm, is targeting a valuation between $50 billion and $55 billion, Reuters reported earlier on Friday. Arm's clients have agreed to invest in that valuation range, the sources said. Arm and SoftBank have set aside 10% of the shares to be sold in the IPO for its clients, Reuters has previously reported. The Wall Street Journal reported on Arm's valuation target earlier on Friday.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, SoftBank, Echo Wang, Anirban Sen, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: REUTERS, Arm Holdings, Apple Inc, Nvidia Corp, Inc, Devices Inc, Intel Corp, Samsung Electronics Co, Cadence Design Systems, Synopsys Inc, SoftBank Group Corp, Reuters, Apple, Nvidia, Amazon.com Inc, AMD, Intel, Samsung, Cadence, Street, Thomson Locations: Britain, New York
Limp regularly appeared at Amazon hardware events, which are typically held each fall but sometimes occur more than once a year, to announce new products. Amazon said Limp would remain in his role for the next few months and the company will announce his successor in the coming weeks. Amazon is set to unveil new products at its annual event Sept. 20, hosted at the company's Northern Virginia headquarters, known as HQ2. "It pains me to have to deliver this news as we know we will lose talented Amazonians from the Devices & Services org as a result." In January, Limp said Amazon remains "fully committed" to the Alexa unit despite the job cuts in the division.
Persons: David Limp, Amazon's, Limp, Andy Jassy, Jassy, , Annie Palmer Organizations: Amazon.com Inc, Amazon, CNBC, Wall Street, Devices, Services Locations: Seattle, Virginia
If the negotiations lead to a deal, the Japanese tech investor would be delivering a major, immediate windfall to VF1 investors, including Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund and Abu Dhabi's Mubadala. A big windfall for VF1 investors could boost SoftBank's chances of tapping them for capital again in the future. VF1's investment committee and SoftBank's investment advisory board, attended by fund investor representatives, are handling the negotiations, one of the sources added. SoftBank, VF1 and Arm declined to comment. SoftBank, which took Arm private for $32 billion in 2016, sold a 25% stake in the company to VF1 for $8 billion in 2017.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Abu Dhabi's Mubadala, Didi Global, VF1, SoftBank, Masayoshi Son, Raine, VF2, Son, Echo Wang, Anirban Sen, Greg Roumeliotis, Mark Porter Organizations: REUTERS, SoftBank Group Corp, Vision Fund, Nasdaq, Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund, WeWork Inc, Alibaba Group, HK, Deutsche Telekom, Mobile U.S, Amazon.com Inc, Reuters, Nvidia Corp, Thomson Locations: Arm, New York
GQG Partners adds Nvidia, Amazon, Apple in Q2
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
A view of a Nvidia logo at their headquarters in Taipei, Taiwan May 31, 2023. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File PhotoNEW YORK, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Australia-listed investment firm GQG Partners added more shares of Nvidia Corp (NVDA.O) in the second quarter, ending June with $5.9 billion invested in the chipmaker, according to regulatory filings on Friday. Shares in Nvidia are up roughly 180% year to date and reached $1 trillion in market capitalization, amid excitement over advancements in artificial intelligence. GQG held 13.9 million shares of Nvidia at the end of June, or 5.7 million more than it did on March 31. Reporting by Carolina Mandl in New York, editing by Deepa BabingtonOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Ann Wang, Rajiv Jain, GQG, Carolina Mandl, Deepa Babington Organizations: REUTERS, GQG Partners, Nvidia Corp, Nvidia, Reuters, Amazon.com Inc, Apple Inc, Microsoft Corp, Carolina, Thomson Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Australia, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, New York
The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics center in Lauwin-Planque, northern France, November 15, 2022. Amazon last year announced plans to launch the satellite pair aboard the first flight of ULA's new Vulcan rocket, moving them off previously planned rockets from launch startup ABL Space to avoid delays in ABL's rocket development. But delays with Vulcan have prompted Amazon to again switch rides as the e-commerce giant faces a 2026 regulatory deadline to deploy half of the 3,200 satellites planned for its Kuiper internet network. ULA in 2021 stopped selling the Atlas V and has 19 more missions to fly before the rocket retires, ULA spokeswoman Jessica Rye said. It was unclear whether the Atlas V launch planned for September counts as one of the nine that Amazon previously procured.
Persons: Pascal, James Watkins, ULA, Jessica Rye, Joey Roulette, Leslie Adler, Aurora Ellis Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Boeing, Lockheed, United Launch, Amazon, Vulcan, Elon Musk's SpaceX, Atlas V, NASA, Atlas, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, U.S, ULA
An artist's rendering of the Project Kuiper satellite processing facility in Florida. Amazon.com Inc plans to launch its first pair of prototype internet satellites late next month on a different rocket than previously planned, a spokesman said on Monday, again switching rides for the spacecraft to avoid mounting rocket delays. The company will launch the two satellites, the first in Amazon's Kuiper program to offer internet globally from space, aboard a dedicated Atlas V rocket from the Boeing -Lockheed , joint venture United Launch Alliance, spokesman James Watkins said. Amazon last year announced plans to launch the satellite pair aboard the first flight of ULA's new Vulcan rocket, moving them off previously planned rockets from launch startup ABL Space to avoid delays in ABL's rocket development. But delays with Vulcan have prompted Amazon to again switch rides.
Persons: James Watkins, ULA Organizations: Inc, Boeing, Lockheed, United Launch Alliance, Amazon, Vulcan Locations: Florida
The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics center in Lauwin-Planque, northern France, November 15, 2022. The company will launch the two satellites, the first in Amazon's Kuiper program to offer internet globally from space, aboard a dedicated Atlas V rocket from the Boeing-Lockheed (BA.N), (LMT.N) joint venture United Launch Alliance, spokesman James Watkins said. Amazon last year announced plans to launch the satellite pair aboard the first flight of ULA's new Vulcan rocket, moving them off previously planned rockets from launch startup ABL Space to avoid delays in ABL's rocket development. But delays with Vulcan have prompted Amazon to again switch rides. Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Leslie AdlerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Pascal, James Watkins, ULA, Joey Roulette, Leslie Adler Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Boeing, Lockheed, United Launch Alliance, Amazon, Vulcan, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France
Two measures of global corporate health flash red
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
Moller-Maersk (MAERSKb.CO) lowered its estimate for global container trade this year as companies reduce inventories and higher interest rates and recession risks in Europe and the United States drag on global economic growth. The company, one of the world's biggest container shippers, said it expects container volumes to fall by as much as 4%. Maersk controls about one-sixth of global container trade, transporting goods for retailers and consumer companies such as Walmart (WMT.N), Nike (NKE.N) and Unilever (ULVR.L). The International Monetary Fund last week said that it expects global economic growth to slow this year, led by advanced economies even as food prices have come down and the March banking turmoil has been contained. It expects the global growth to slow to 3% this year and next, from 3.5% last year.
Persons: Jon Nazca, . Moller, Mark Read, Grey, Sophie Lund, Yates, Hargreaves Lansdown, Swift, David Jackson, Josephine Mason, Catherine Evans, Deepa Babington Organizations: Triple, Majestic, REUTERS, Maersk, WPP, Walmart, Nike, Unilever, Reuters, Ogilvy, Apple, Amazon.com Inc, Companies, Global, Nissan, Caterpillar, Monetary Fund, DHL Group, Thomson Locations: Strait, Gibraltar, Algeciras, Spain, U.S, Europe, United States, Beijing, slowdowns, China
Morning Bid: Markets drift ahead of payrolls test
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Futures indicate European stocks are set for a higher open but whether they are able to hold on to the gains remains to be seen. Before the headline U.S. non-farm payroll report comes through later in the day, investor attention will be on construction PMI data from euro zone, UK and Germany. Sterling will also be in focus after getting whipsawed on Thursday after the Bank of England's modest rate hike. Investors have pinned hopes on stimulus and policy easing from Beijing to rev up the anaemic rebound in the world's second-biggest economy. Key developments that could influence markets on Friday:Economic events: UK July construction PMI, Italy June industrial production, Germany July construction PMI, Eurozone retail salesReporting by Ankur Banerjee; Editing by Sam HolmesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Ankur Banerjee, Sterling, Sam Holmes Organizations: Ankur, Bank of, Investors, Wall, Inc, Thomson Locations: Germany, China's, Beijing, Italy
Two measures of corporate health flash red
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
Moller-Maersk (MAERSKb.CO) lowered its estimate for global container trade this year as companies reduce inventories and higher interest rates and recession risks in Europe and the United States drag on global economic growth. The company, one of the world's biggest container shippers, said it expects container volumes to fall by as much as 4%. Maersk controls about one-sixth of global container trade, transporting goods for retailers and consumer companies such as Walmart (WMT.N), Nike (NKE.N) and Unilever (ULVR.L). The International Monetary Fund last week said that it expects global economic growth to slow this year, led by advanced economies even as food prices have come down and the March banking turmoil has been contained. It expects the global growth to slow to 3% this year and next, from 3.5% last year.
Persons: Jon Nazca, . Moller, Mark Read, Grey, Sophie Lund, Yates, Hargreaves Lansdown, Josephine Mason, Catherine Evans Organizations: Triple, Majestic, REUTERS, Maersk, WPP, Walmart, Nike, Unilever, Reuters, Ogilvy, Apple, Amazon.com Inc, Companies, Global, Nissan, Caterpillar, Monetary Fund, DHL Group, Thomson Locations: Strait, Gibraltar, Algeciras, Spain, U.S, Europe, United States, Beijing, slowdowns, China
And Amazon failed to ensure that injured employees received adequate treatment, the agency said. Separately on Thursday, a worker advocacy group said it had filed a complaint with OSHA on behalf of employees at an Amazon warehouse near St. Louis, Missouri. They claim the online retailer imposes excessive, unsafe work rates and that they were mistreated by Amazon's in-house medical staff. The company has said that it invests millions of dollars in worker safety and has cooperated with OSHA's nationwide investigation. Critics of Amazon have long accused the company of putting profit over safety by requiring employees to work at an unsafe pace and forgo breaks to meet demanding quotas.
Persons: Gonzalo Fuentes, Amazon's, unionize, Daniel Wiessner Organizations: Viva Technology, Porte de, REUTERS, Inc, U.S . Department, Safety, Health Administration, OSHA, Amazon, Thomson Locations: Porte, Paris, France, U.S, Logan Township , New Jersey, St, Louis , Missouri, New York City, Albany , New York
Amazon stock rallies after blowout quarter
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( Annie Palmer | In Annierpalmer | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Amazon shares rallied 8% on Friday, a day after the company reported blowout second-quarter earnings and issued upbeat guidance. Amazon notched its biggest profit beat since 2020, boosted by CEO Andy Jassy's aggressive cost-cutting efforts. For the third quarter, Amazon said it expects sales of between $138 billion and $143 billion, topping consensus estimates of $138.25 billion, according to Refinitiv. Wall Street cheered the results, lauding the strong results for Amazon Web Services and improving retail margins. Morgan Stanley analysts characterized the shift as the "next retail flywheel" for Amazon.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Andy, Bernstein, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, CFRA Organizations: Amazon.Com Inc, Amazon, Revenue, Analysts, Amazon Web Services, Amazon executives Locations: Seattle , Washington , U.S, Refinitiv, America
For the second quarter, Amazon's revenue grew 11% to $134.4 billion, beating estimates of $131.5 billion from analysts polled by Refinitiv. In recent months, Amazon Web Services (AWS) saw its sales growth slow as wary businesses scrutinized their cloud bills. The unit beat estimates of around $21.7 billion in second-quarter cloud sales, increasing them 12% to $22.1 billion. Its rivals posted bigger jumps off smaller bases: 28% growth in Alphabet's June-quarter cloud revenue and a 26% quarterly increase for Microsoft's Azure. Longer-term, Amazon aims to turn one unit, its $35 billion in yearly gross business-to-business e-commerce sales, into $100 billion, Jassy told analysts.
Persons: Pascal Rossignol, Brian Olsavsky, Olsavsky, Andy Jassy, Arun Sundaram, Sundaram, Jassy, Thomas Monteiro, Investing.com, Monteiro, Refinitiv, Chavi Mehta, Jeffrey Dastin, Noel Randewich, Arun Koyyur, Aurora Ellis, Chris Reese Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Refinitiv, Amazon Web Services, CFRA Research, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, Alphabet's, Bengaluru, Jeffrey Dastin San Francisco
Amazon's outlook brightens on cloud, consumer sales lift
  + stars: | 2023-08-03 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Facing an array of challenges, Amazon has aimed to keep its mantle as the world's biggest cloud provider and online retailer. Despite this, Amazon sped up revenue growth in the second quarter. Sales increased 11% to $134.4 billion, compared to estimates of $131.50 billion from analysts polled by Refinitiv. AWS beat estimates of around $21.7 billion in second-quarter cloud sales, increasing them 12% to $22.1 billion. The company forecast current-quarter net sales in the range of $138 billion and $143 billion.
Persons: Pascal Rossignol, Long, Andy Jassy, Refinitiv, Chavi Mehta, Arun Koyyur, Aurora Ellis Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Refinitiv, Amazon Web Services, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, Bengaluru
Both S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures added 0.2%, following a heavy wave of selling on Wall Street overnight. In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) slipped 0.2%, having also suffered a colossal drop of 2.3% just a day earlier. U.S. 10-year yields hovered at 4.0856% in Asia, just a touch below a nine-month top of 4.1260% hit overnight. The risk-sensitive Australia dollar snapped a key support level to hover at $0.6532, just a touch above its 2023 low of $0.6459. Brent crude futures were up 0.2% at $83.33 per barrel and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 0.1% to $79.6.
Persons: Issei Kato, Fitch, Matt Simpson, nonfarm, Stella Qiu, Jacqueline Wong Organizations: REUTERS, Asia, Apple, Bank of, Nasdaq, Japan's Nikkei, Bank of Japan, Index, Inc, U.S, Bank of England, Brent, . West Texas, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, SYDNEY, Asia, Pacific, Brisbane, U.S
Fitch was the second major agency to cut the country's rating. Reaction to the news pushed major indexes lower, with the S&P 500 (.SPX) recording its biggest daily percentage drop since April 25. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File PhotoThe technology index (.SPLRCT), dropping 2.6%, was also the worst performer of the 11 major S&P sectors, with nine in total ending the day lower. With around two-thirds of the S&P 500 having already reported, 79.9% have posted earnings above analysts' expectations, per Refinitiv I/B/E/S. The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and five new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 49 new highs and 111 new lows.
Persons: Fitch, brokerages, Quincy Krosby, Brendan McDermid, LPL's Krosby, Krosby, Emerson, Johann M Cherian, David French, Lewis Krauskopf, Saumyadeb Chakrabarty, Vinay Dwivedi, David Gregorio Our Organizations: Dow, Nasdaq, Wall, AAA, LPL Financial, Fitch, AA, Nvidia, Apple, Tech, New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Dow Jones, ADP, CVS Health Corp, Devices, Thomson Locations: States, U.S, Charlotte , North Carolina, New York City, America, Bengaluru, New York
Microsoft is set to shed about $100 billion from its market capitalization if the loses hold until close of trading. "The tech earnings season has started on a mixed note," said Mark Haefele, global wealth management chief investment officer at UBS in a client note. "The tone set by quarterly results over the next week will be crucial to the performance of tech stocks through the rest of the third quarter." Large tech companies, which rely heavily on borrowed money, have been pressured since the Fed started its tightening cycle to tame inflation. However, optimism over AI and hopes that the Fed is nearing the end of its rate hiking cycle have supported tech stocks in recent months.
Persons: Lucy Nicholson, Paul Nolte, Murphy, Sylvest, Mark Haefele, Wall, Stuart Cole, Bernstein, Mark Shmulik, Meta, enviously, Shmulik, Shreyashi Sanyal, Amruta, Lucy Raitano, Johann M Cherian, Amanda Cooper, Saumyadeb Organizations: Los Angeles , California U.S, REUTERS, Microsoft, Google, UBS, Apple Inc, Amazon.com Inc, Fed, Equiti, Federal Trade Commission, Amazon, Inc, Facebook, Thomson Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S, HK, Bengaluru, London
Companies Amazon.com Inc FollowWASHINGTON, July 19 (Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department said on Wednesday that Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O) and a subsidiary agreed to a permanent injunction and to pay a $25 million civil penalty as part of a settlement to resolve alleged violations of a children's privacy law relating to its Alexa voice assistant. Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Leslie AdlerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Kanishka Singh, Leslie Adler Organizations: WASHINGTON, U.S . Justice, Inc, Thomson Locations: Washington
[1/3] Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., July 7, 2023. Headline data for May also was revised higher to show sales gaining 0.5% instead of 0.3% as previously reported. Deutsche Bank said it was lowering its forecast for China's economic growth this year, following similar moves on Monday by J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup. Besides the Fed, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan also hold policy meetings next week. Expectations that the Fed and the ECB will diverge on rate hikes have caused the dollar to weaken recently.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Dow Industrials, Thomas Hayes, Dow, Morgan Stanley, J.P, Morgan, Fiona Cincotta, DAX, Brent, Elizabeth Howcroft, Selina Li, Chizu Nomiyama, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Reserve, U.S . Commerce Department, Treasury, Dow, Nasdaq, Microsoft Corp, Amazon.com Inc, Apple Inc, Great, Great Hill Capital, Bank of America, Dow Jones, Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, Fed, European Central Bank, Bank of, ECB, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Great Hill, New York, Europe, China, Germany, Bank of Japan, Hong Kong
WASHINGTON, July 18 (Reuters) - The White House on Tuesday along with companies such as Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O), Alphabet's Google (GOOGL.O) and Best Buy (BBY.N) will announce an initiative that allows Americans to identify devices that are less vulnerable to cyberattacks. A new certification and labeling program would raise the bar for cybersecurity across smart devices such as refrigerators, microwaves, televisions, climate control systems and fitness trackers, the White House said in a statement. Retailers and manufacturers will apply a "U.S. Cyber Trust Mark" logo to their devices and the program will be up and running in 2024. The Federal Communications Commission will seek public comment before rolling out the labeling program and register a national trademark with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the White House said. In March, the White House launched its national cyber strategy that called on software makers and companies to take far greater responsibility to ensure that their systems cannot be hacked.
Persons: Nandita Bose, Jacqueline Wong Organizations: Amazon.com Inc, Google, Cyber, Federal Communications Commission, U.S . Patent, LG Electronics, Logitech, Cisco Systems, Samsung, White House, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Defense Department, Microsoft, Thomson Locations: U.S, Washington
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