Search Results for keywords:"countries of concern"

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Search Results: keywords:"countries of concern"

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 1636
    Reading Time:about 9 hours

    The Department of Justice has issued a final rule to implement Executive Order 14117, which aims to prevent certain countries or individuals from accessing sensitive personal and government-related data of Americans. This rule identifies specific data transactions that are either prohibited or restricted due to national security risks posed by foreign interests. The regulation outlines prohibited data transactions and establishes procedures to authorize or restrict them through licensing. It aims to protect U.S. national security by limiting access to sensitive data by countries considered to be a threat.

    Simple Explanation

    The rule is like a new, super-strong lock that the U.S. is putting on important personal and government secrets to stop certain countries or people that might be dangerous from sneaking a peek. This lock has special rules about who can look at these secrets and how they can do it.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:90 FR 16466
    Reading Time:about a minute or two

    The Department of Justice's National Security Division issued a correction to a rule that limits certain data transactions with specific countries or individuals. Initially published on January 8, 2025, the rule contained an incorrect reference, which this document aims to fix. The correction involves changing a cross-reference in section 202.401 of the regulations to ensure accuracy. This amendment takes effect on April 18, 2025, and aims to support national security by accurately addressing access to sensitive data.

    Simple Explanation

    The Department of Justice found a mistake in a rule about who can look at or buy certain important information. They fixed the mistake by changing a number, so the rule works better to keep everyone's information safe.

  • Type:Rule
    Citation:89 FR 103677
    Reading Time:about 94 minutes

    The Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) has finalized a rule to implement the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, specifically its section 22425. This rule amends the Freight Car Safety Standards to enforce restrictions on new freight cars introduced in the U.S. It prohibits using sensitive technology and components originating from countries of concern or state-owned enterprises, as well as materials that infringe on U.S. intellectual property rights. From January 21, 2025, freight car manufacturers must certify compliance with these standards to operate their vehicles in the United States.

    Simple Explanation

    The government made a new rule to make sure that train parts used in the U.S. don’t come from places that might not be safe and that these parts don’t use secret stuff from other countries. From early 2025, companies must show they’re following these rules before their trains can be used.

  • Type:Notice
    Citation:90 FR 1528
    Reading Time:about 48 minutes

    CISA has published finalized security requirements for restricted transactions in line with Executive Order 14117, aimed at preventing countries of concern from accessing sensitive U.S. personal and government-related data. These requirements are designed to protect the national security by setting standards for how organizations handle data in certain transactions deemed at risk by the DOJ. Public feedback was considered in finalizing these requirements, leading to clarifications and adjustments to ensure they are effective yet not overly burdensome to implement. The document details both organizational/system-level and data-level security measures that organizations must adhere to.

    Simple Explanation

    CISA made rules to keep countries we don't trust from getting our important data, like our personal and government secrets, so they asked people for ideas and made changes to make the rules better and not too hard to follow.