New Highs On Weaker USD

 | Nov 22, 2017 04:53AM ET

Even though the World Wide Web has been around for nearly 30 years legislation surrounding this groundbreaking technology is still in its infancy. Two laws have just been passed that could change things quite significantly.

In Europe, a new privacy law is set to go into effect on May 25th that will give users full control over who can store and access their personal data. This is a huge win for consumers but could prove very expensive for large corporations to implement the necessary changes by the deadline.

In the United States, things are going the other way. The FCC has just voted to repeal the Obama era law of net-neutrality. This is a win for large cable companies who will now be able to offer faster Internet speeds to clients using their services and smaller websites will likely be a lot slower going forward.

This ruling by the FCC is being seen by many as a slap in the face of the US constitution and citizens rights to freedom of speech. As large corporations gain the upper hand in speed they will be able to assert much tighter controls over the flow of information.

As with many things, technology has a way of fixing itself. Web 2.0, which is currently under construction with the help of blockchain and smart contracts may well render both of the above rulings useless over the next decade.

Today's Highlights

New Highs on the weaker Dollar

UK Budget

Dash Breakout!

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Market Overview

US stocks reached another all time record high yesterday for the first time in a week and a half with the S&P 500 reaching a milestone of 2,600 points.