“Andrew has a proven record of standing up to Big Tech censorship, and protecting Freedom of Speech in our Great Country,” Trump wrote Tuesday on Truth Social. “Andrew will be the most America First, and pro-innovation FTC Chair in our Country’s History.”
Americans can see the price of live event tickets upfront as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) banned "junk fees."
Andrew Ferguson, the incoming president’s pick to lead the Federal Trade Commission, published a dissent to the agency’s new rule.
Donald Trump announced two picks for placements on the Federal Trade Commission: Commissioner Andrew Ferguson for Chair
President-elect Donald Trump’s pick to run the Federal Trade Commission wants to zero in on alleged censorship by Big Tech and promote innovation in the AI market—offering competing enforcement priorities for the agency’s tech policy.
President-elect Donald Trump has picked Republican lawyer Andrew Ferguson as his nominee for the next chair of the FTC. He would succeed Lina Khan, who has been tough on approving mergers—and has been cracking down on Big Tech.
Ferguson said he will roll back the FTC's "anti-business agenda" while going after Big Tech companies for what he sees as censoring conservatives.
President-elect Donald Trump’s recent appointments and Cabinet nominees are pointing to a four-year stint of deregulation in the tech industry, and lots of potential for competitive growth within the industry and globally,
That's why Trump's recent announcement that he will replace President Joe Biden's Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Lina Khan with Andrew Ferguson is fantastic news for Nvidia ( NVDA -1.14%) investors.
The Federal Trade Commission has announced a game-changing ban on junk fees for things like hotels and concert tickets.
Many businesses and organizations are in the unique position of having already observed four years of antitrust enforcement under
Billy Long worked with Lifetime Advisors, a company that solicited clients to claim a pandemic-era tax credit that the I.R.S. said became a magnet for fraud.