Sharing economy labors over lawsuits, paradigm shift for cyber security law

March 17, 2016  |  Kat Hungerford

Regional Roundup

Here’s this week’s dish on the sharing economy, the issues with backdoor encryption, and corporate-to-startup collaboration. Check out more in this series here.


 

AustinInno – The gig economy is at a crossroads as lawsuits, innovative benefits expand

As the sharing or “gig” economy expands with companies like Uber and Lyft, it’s not just permit regulations that need to catch up with the times. It’s labor laws, too.

While independent contractor status legally might apply to most people “working for” sharing economy companies, it’s keeping workers from accessing basic full-time benefits at a low cost. The new economy needs to revamp traditional benefits to make them portable, according to the piece.

Portable benefits allow workers to transfer vacation time, health insurance, retirement planning and other perks of traditional full-time employment from job to job as they work with multiple employers. The effort to create a portable benefit program or law, however, has been stalled by ongoing lawsuit. And legislators’ idea that slight changes to decades-old laws will fix the issue hasn’t helped.

While Kansas City has been able to model Uber regulations after cities already using the service, it’s like other cities in that portable benefits are still a pie-in-the-sky idea.

Silicon Prairie News – Former White House CIO on encryption: ‘Backdoors are not architecturally sound’

Cyber security is priority one for most companies these days (or at least, it should be). Enter Uncle Sam, who says customer privacy is only paramount when he isn’t knocking on the door.

The issue has blown up in a giant kerfuffle between Apple and the FBI over the company’s refusal to unlock a mass shooter’s iPhone under court order. Doing so would in effect create a precedent of must-have backdoors or weaker encryption, which are absolutely security risks, according to Theresa Payton, who served as a CIO for the White House from 2006 to 2008.

The solution shouldn’t just revise regulation, she argues. What we need is a brand new design, an evolution in technology and case-by-case data sharing.

“We need the brightest minds in the room to create something that protects your and my privacy that doesn’t allow for weaker encryption,” Payton said. “And at the same time, if there’s a court order, there’s an opportunity … for that data to be produced.”

EQ – Give and take: How St. Louis’ community drives collaboration between startups and banks

Startups often aim to be disrupters of established businesses and industries. So what’s St. Louis fintech startup Fluent doing with its UMB partnership? Answer: building a win-win solution.

As a startup, Fluent is more agile and less hamstrung by regulations. Developing, testing and ultimately launching fintech happens faster than Kansas City-based UMB could hope to accomplish on its own. Meanwhile, UMB brings a host of resources, contacts and experience.

Partnerships like this can only happen in a closely collaborative community — one with open lines of communication between corporate and startup worlds, according to the article.

 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        MCPL tools

        Not just for students: MCPL expands digital tool set for entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2017

        Editor’s note: The following content is sponsored by Mid-Continent Public Library but independently produced by Startland News. Dusty books. Tedious silence. Cranky shushers. Many stereotypes come to mind when one thinks of a library. But for those who haven’t recently visited these sanctums of knowledge, you might be surprised to see their transformations from canvas…

        Mayor Sly

        Children’s book turns KC’s Mayor Sly into time-traveling history buff

        By Tommy Felts | December 5, 2017

        Kansas City’s colorful mayor was made for the pages of a children’s book, Audrey Masoner said. He gets his hand-drawn debut in “Mayor Sly and the Magic Bow Tie,” a project co-authored by Masoner and Mayor Sly James’ daughter, Aja James. The book is featured in Startland News’ 2017 Made in Kansas City Gift Guide.…

        Jasur Rakhimov, Sibukop

        Storyteller sketches path from former Soviet Union to KC-based Sibukop

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2017

        The teeth marks on Jasur Rakhimov’s Apple Pencil aren’t his own. They belong to his young daughter, Jasmira, who — despite a new protective pencil box — still loves to chew on the tools of his trade, he said. “Everybody and everything has its own story,” reflected Rakhimov, running his fingers across the indentions from…

        MTC renews 2018 support for LaunchKC grant contest

        By Tommy Felts | December 1, 2017

        Despite the government program’s uncertain financial future, the Missouri Technology Corporation will inject $250,000 into the popular grants contest LaunchKC for 2018. After having its budget slashed from nearly $23 million in 2017 to $3.4 million in 2018, the MTC announced Friday that it will once again support the Kansas City-based grant contest, which has…