U.S.
tech firms urge presidential candidates to embrace trade, high-tech
visas
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[May 05, 2016]
By Dustin Volz
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Thirteen U.S.
industry groups representing technology companies Amazon.com Inc
<AMZN.O>, Uber Technologies Inc, Apple Inc <AAPL.O>, Facebook Inc <FB.O>
and others are pushing for the next U.S. president to support the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal and to make it easier to hire
high-tech workers from abroad, according to a joint letter seen by
Reuters.
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Ahead of the Republican and Democratic conventions in July, the
tech industry plans to issue on Wednesday an open letter charting a
dozen policy recommendations for the candidates running in the Nov.
8 presidential election. The groups are not aligning themselves with
either of the two major political parties.
Backing for the TPP runs counter to positions taken by presumptive
Republican candidate Donald Trump and Democratic front-runner
Hillary Clinton. Trump has made criticism of international trade
agreements and a call for tougher immigration policies central
themes of his campaign.
In a Republican debate in March the billionaire real estate
developer shied away from arguing against more H-1B visas for
skilled foreign workers, saying he was "softening the position
because we need to have talented people in this country."
Clinton has not said if she would try to renegotiate TPP, which was
signed in February but has not yet got congressional approval. She
has said she supports expanding the number of visas for high-skilled
workers.
Silicon Valley has struggled to notch policy wins in recent years on
its legislative priorities, including immigration and patent reform,
though the tech industry has succeeded in strengthening net
neutrality protections and curtailing some government surveillance
programs.
The coalition letter, signed by groups including the Internet
Association, Telecommunications Industry Association and Information
Technology Industry Council, is the first time a wide range of
technology trade organizations have staked out a common platform
during a presidential campaign, according to a person familiar with
its writing.
The platform also calls for "narrowly targeted government access to
user data" and recognition of encryption as a "critical security
tool."
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Trump has urged the restoration of the National Security Agency’s
(NSA) bulk collection of U.S. phone records, saying that U.S.
authorities should err on the side of protecting national security
over privacy concerns.
Trump also urged a boycott of Apple during the company’s
high-profile clash earlier this year with the U.S. Federal Bureau of
Investigation over unlocking an encrypted iPhone linked to a San
Bernardino, California gunman.
Clinton has supported some reforms to the NSA and has said a balance
needs to be found between privacy and security in the encryption
debate.
The letter also calls for preventing censorship online by limiting
unreasonable third-party liability for speech, support for the
sharing economy, and an updated and simplified tax code, among other
issues.
Signatories also include Allied for Startups, BSA The Software
Alliance, Computer Technology Industry Association, Computer &
Communications Industry Association, Consumer Technology
Association, Semiconductor Industry Association, Silicon Valley
Leadership Group, Software & Information Industry Association,
Technology CEO Council and TechNet.
(Reporting by Dustin Volz; Editing by Caren Bohan and Bill Rigby)
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