Search Results for keywords:"America's Datahub Consortium"

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Search Results: keywords:"America's Datahub Consortium"

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 8943
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    America's Datahub Consortium (ADC), under the National Cooperative Research and Production Act of 1993, has notified the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission about changes in its membership as of December 10, 2024. New members added to ADC include Optimal Solutions Group LLC, Radiance Technologies, Revelo LLC, and the University of Southern California. The group remains open to new members, and ADC plans to continue updating its membership list. The initial notification of ADC’s activity was filed in 2021, and previous updates were recorded in October 2024.

    Simple Explanation

    America's Datahub Consortium is a group that works together on research projects, and they've told the government that they have some new members, like a university and some companies. They're open to even more people joining their team in the future to keep working on cool projects together.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 16702
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    America's DataHub Consortium (ADC) has submitted notifications to the Attorney General and the Federal Trade Commission to report changes to its membership, as required under the National Cooperative Research and Production Act of 1993. Alluvionic, Inc. from Melbourne, FL, has joined the consortium, while NanoVMs, Inc. from San Francisco, CA, has left. ADC maintains an open membership policy and plans to continue updating authorities about any further membership changes. The notice emphasizes limiting antitrust plaintiffs' recovery to actual damages under specific conditions.

    Simple Explanation

    America's DataHub Consortium, a group working together to share and use data, had one company join and another leave the group and wants the government to know about it. They also tell people that if there's ever a problem with them following fair rules, any fines they might face would be small and only cover real damages.