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In today's ExchangeWire news digest: a former Twitter manager has been found guilty of spying for Saudi Arabia; the FTC has opened invited public comment on commercial surveillance to inform legislation; and Egyptian start-up Homzmart has raised USD$23m (£18.9m) in a pre-series B funding round.
A former Twitter employee has been convicted over charges of spying and accessing users’ private data. Ahmad Abouammo, formerly a manager for Twitter’s Middle East activities, was found guilty of failing to register as an agent of Saudi Arabia with the US government. Additional charges against Abouammo included conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering, and working with another Twitter employee, Ali Alzabarah, to access confidential Twitter data about users, their email addresses, phone numbers and IP addresses.
The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has invited public comment on commercial surveillance to inform new legislation. In a press release published on Thursday (11th August), the FTC announced its Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeks US citizens’ perspectives on the “harms stemming from commercial surveillance and whether new rules are needed to protect people’s privacy and information.”
Homzmart, an online retailer specialising in homeware and furniture, has raised USD$23m (£18.9m) in a highly successful funding round.
The pre-series B round, which saw participation from NUWA Capital, Outliers Ventures, Impact46, Rise Capital, and STV, brought the Cairo-based start-up’s total funding to around USD$40m (£32.9m).
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