The Defender Children’s Health Defense News and Views
Close menu
Close menu

You must be a CHD Insider to save this article Sign Up

Already an Insider? Log in

February 6, 2025 Censorship/Surveillance

Big Brother NewsWatch

DOGE Broadens Sweep of Federal Agencies, Gains Access to Health Payment Systems + More

The Defender’s Big Brother NewsWatch brings you the latest headlines related to governments’ abuse of power, including attacks on democracy, civil liberties and use of mass surveillance. The views expressed in the excerpts from other news sources do not necessarily reflect the views of The Defender.

The Defender’s Big Brother NewsWatch brings you the latest headlines.

DOGE Broadens Sweep of Federal Agencies, Gains Access to Health Payment Systems

Washington Post reported:

Representatives of billionaire Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency fanned out across several agencies Wednesday, sending representatives to the Atlanta headquarters of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and meeting with the Labor Department, seeking access to sensitive data.

The moves came on the heels of the DOGE team gaining access to sensitive health payment systems at the Department of Health and Human Services. As federal workers braced for possible layoffs after a Thursday deadline that has led to at least 40,000 employees taking a buyout, DOGE staffers met with agencies facing sweeping cuts in a project that has gutted whole programs and given Musk’s team broad access to private data.

In a little more than two weeks, the Trump megadonor — acting as a “special government employee” while still running the companies that have made him the richest man in the world — has probed all over for cuts and begun enacting some, helping to effectively shut down the U.S. Agency for International Development and suggesting that other departments could be next.

American Family Field to Get Biometric Gates With MLB Go-Ahead Entry

Biometrics News reported:

American Family Field, home to Major League Baseball’s Milwaukee Brewers, is getting MLB’s biometric Go-Ahead Entry system at its Home Plate West and Third Base gates this season, according to a release from the league.

The facial authentication system for entry will be opt-in, and most entrances will continue traditional ticketing processes. But the team says it could add more biometric gates if the first two are popular enough. The Brewers make nine MLB teams who have deployed the selfe- and numerical token-based facial biometrics system at their home stadiums. The proprietary tech debuted at Philadelphia’s Citizens Park in 2023, and is now in use at venues for the Houston Astros, San Francisco Giants, Washington Nationals, Tampa Bay Rays, Cincinnati Reds, Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins.

NEC provides the biometric components of the Go-Ahead Entry system. Prior to launching Go-Ahead Entry, MLB ran facial recognition and biometric ticketing pilots with Clear. While the current program appears headed for widespread deployment across the league’s ballparks, and has proven to make entry up to 68% faster for fans, it has not been without critics who associate facial recognition tech with privacy risks.

Illinois Mayor Rescinds Controversial COVID-19 Vaccination Mandate

Chicago Sun-Times reported:

The Illinois Labor Relations Board has twice ruled that the city violated employees’ collective bargaining rights by failing to bargain collectively before imposing the mandate and placing employees who defied it on “non-disciplinary, no-pay status” before moving to fire them.

Mayor Brandon Johnson has rescinded a pandemic-era requirement that city employees be vaccinated against COVID-19, fueling demands for back pay to those who defied the mandate.

Fraternal Order of Police President John Catanzara led the charge against the vaccine mandate, unilaterally imposed in 2021 by then-Mayor Lori Lightfoot. Catanzara encouraged rank-and-file officers to resist the mandate and ignore the demand to report their vaccination status on the city’s data portal.

‘Pathetic Fart’ of a Bill That Bans Kids From Social Media Moves Forward

Gizmodo reported:

A bipartisan bill that would ban anyone under the age of 13 from using social media and punish schools that fail to block social media platforms cleared an initial hurdle on Wednesday.

The Senate Commerce Committee approved the Kids Off Social Media Act, or KOSMA, which has been championed by senators Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and Ted Cruz (R-Texas), despite widespread opposition from all ends of the political spectrum and powerful tech lobbying groups.

Fight for the Future, a nonprofit that advocates for free expression online, described the bill as a “pathetic fart.”

Payments and Identity Converging in Digital Wallets

Biometrics News reported:

Digital wallets tend to be designed primarily for digital IDs or online payments, but as the applications are related, applying wallets designed for one use to the other is a growing trend. The trend has some observers excited over the prospect that the advantages each capability provides to the other will spur the kind of adoption and scaling that digital wallet advocates have long been seeking.

A white paper published by the EUDI Wallet Consortium in late-2024 outlines the complexity of extending digital identity wallets to payments. Digital wallets can provide “a new defensive line against exploding payment fraud,” make customer authentication easier and more trusted, and enable the delegation of payments to other people, or soon, AI agents, Customer Futures argues.

“Undoubtedly, the digital identity wallet will become a pivotal part of our daily activities, reshaping how we manage payments and interact online,” the post says. “While our exploration has focused on the European Union’s progress and regulatory framework, it serves primarily as an illustrative case. Similar digital identity advancements are unfolding across the globe.”

Suggest A Correction

Share Options

Close menu

Republish Article

Please use the HTML above to republish this article. It is pre-formatted to follow our republication guidelines. Among other things, these require that the article not be edited; that the author’s byline is included; and that The Defender is clearly credited as the original source.

Please visit our full guidelines for more information. By republishing this article, you agree to these terms.

Woman drinking coffee looking at phone

Join hundreds of thousands of subscribers who rely on The Defender for their daily dose of critical analysis and accurate, nonpartisan reporting on Big Pharma, Big Food, Big Chemical, Big Energy, and Big Tech and
their impact on children’s health and the environment.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
    MM slash DD slash YYYY
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form