The Washington Post - 05.10.2019

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S A T U R D A Y, O C T O B E R  5 ,  2 0 1 9 .  T H E  W A S H I N G T O N  P O S T EZ RE A


Economy & Business


ENERGY


EPA to require more


ethanol in fuel mix


The Trump administration on
Friday unveiled a plan to boost
U.S. biofuels consumption
starting next year to help
struggling farmers, a move that
cheered the agriculture industry
but was likely to trigger a
backlash from Big Oil.
The plan would require a yet
unspecified increase in the
amount of ethanol that oil
refiners must add to their fuel in
2020, and would also aim to
remove further barriers to the
sale of higher ethanol blends of
gasoline such as E15, the
Environmental Protection
Agency said in a statement.
The rules, which will be
finalized after a period of public
comment, would “ensure that
more than 15 billion gallons of
conventional ethanol be blended
into the nation’s fuel supply
beginning in 2020,” the EPA said.
It did not give an exact number.
Any changes to blending volumes
mandates for 2020 must be
finalized by Nov. 30.
The Trump administration had


already provided a boost to E
this year by lifting Obama-era
seasonal restrictions that had
banned its sale during summer
months.
President Trump in August had
promised farmers a “giant
package” related to ethanol after
his administration angered the
powerful corn lobby by
exempting 31 oil refineries from
their obligations under the
renewable fuel standard
program.
— Reuters

TECHNOLOGY

HP to cut up to 9,
jobs in restructuring

HP will slash as much as
16 percent of its workforce as part
of a broad restructuring meant to
cut costs and boost sales growth
amid the company’s first change
in top leadership in four years.
The personal computer giant
said it will cut 7,000 to 9,
positions through firings and
voluntary early retirement. The
job reductions will help save
about $1 billion by the end of
fiscal 2022, the Palo Alto, Calif.-
based company said Thursday in

a statement. HP had 55,
employees as of a year ago, the
last time it disclosed the figure.
The company released the
projections as it faces a number of
uncertainties. Dion Weisler, the
chief executive who has
shepherded the company since its
2015 split with Hewlett-Packard
Enterprise Co., is stepping down
Nov. 1 because of family health
reasons. The incoming CEO,
Enrique Lores, is a longtime HP
executive.
The company’s printing
business, a major source of profit,
has seen falling sales and recently
was dubbed a “melting ice cube”
by analysts at Sanford C.
Bernstein.
— Bloomberg News

ALSO IN BUSINESS
FBI Director Christopher A.
Wray said Friday that Facebook’s
proposal to encrypt its popular
messaging program would turn
the platform into a “dream come
true for predators and child
pornographers.” Wray, addressing
a crowd of law enforcement and
child-protection officials in
Washington, said that Facebook’s
plan would produce “a lawless

space created not by the
American people or their
representatives but by the owners
of one big company.”

The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration said
Friday that it is reviewing a defect
petition that claims Tesla failed to

issue a recall when it issued a
software upgrade in 2,
Model S and Model X vehicles in
May. The vehicles from the 2012
through 2019 model years
received a battery management
software upgrade in response to a
potential defect that could result
in non-crash fires, the petition

said, adding it believes the update
reduces the driving range.

T-Mobile’s proposed merger with
Sprint has received a third “yes”
vote at the Federal
Communications Commission,
moving the deal toward agency
approval in coming days,
according to two people familiar
with the matter. All three
Republicans on the five-member
agency have voted for the deal,
setting in motion procedures that
would require agency action by
Oct. 9, or Oct. 16 if an extension is
requested by a commissioner, the
people said. Neither agency
Democrat has cast a vote; both
support a delay.

With two of its most toy-friendly
movies coming out between now
and Christmas, Walt Disney
released products tied to “Frozen
2” and “Star Wars: The Rise of
Skywalker” on Friday, hoping
parents will pick up a blue sparkly
dress and a Kylo Ren action figure
on the same trip. The double-
barreled launch is unusual but
reflects shifting buying patterns
among consumers and changes in
the marketing of the brands.
— From news services

D I G E S T

LYNN BO BO/EPA-EFE/SHUTTERSTOCK
A worker in Myanmar loads rice bags on his shoulder as he works at
a jetty of the Yangon River, which is formed by the confluence of the
Pegu and Myitmaka rivers. It is navigable by ocean-going vessels and
plays a key role in the economy of Myanmar, also known as Burma.

BY REED ALBERGOTTI

An app developer is accusing
Apple of patent infringement and
antitrust violations in a lawsuit
filed Friday in Delaware federal
court.
Blix, the maker of an email
client called Blue Mail, alleged
that the recently launched “Sign
in with Apple” feature infringes
on its patents.
While some developers have
complained that Apple borrows
their ideas and competes unfairly,
it’s rare for software developers to
confront Apple, much less file
suit. When they do, they are usu-
ally large corporations, like the
music-streaming service Spotify,
which complained to the Euro-
pean Union earlier this year that


Apple uses its platform to favor its
own music service.
But times are changing. The
biggest tech companies, includ-
ing Apple, are being scrutinized
by lawmakers and regulators for
how they wield their market dom-
inance. House lawmakers last
month issued sweeping docu-
ment requests to Silicon Valley
giants, including Apple, in hopes
of shedding light on their com-
petitive practices. For instance,
Apple was asked to turn over
information on how it decides
which apps and features to copy
and why.
The new scrutiny on Silicon
Valley may be emboldening some
of big tech’s smaller competitors.
Blix’s BlueMail launched in
2015 and has been installed by
about 10 million users globally,
according to the research firm
Sensor Tower. In 2017, it was
featured in a segment on NBC’S
“Today” show.
Blue Mail also offers the ability
to create and use random email
addresses. That allows Blue Mail

users to email back and forth
without the person on the other
end ever knowing the actual
email address of the person using
Blue Mail.
Apple’s new sign-in feature of-
fers a similar service. Apple cus-
tomers can create new Internet
accounts using their Apple cre-
dentials. In the process, they can
create randomly generated email
addresses instead of sharing their
actual addresses with outside
companies. Emails to the random
address are forwarded by Apple
to the real address, and custom-
ers can choose to stop receiving
mail from the random address.
For instance, if there’s too much
spam.
Blue Mail doesn’t claim to be
the first company to conceive of
masked email addresses. There
are many other services that offer
a similar feature. But it’s accusing
Apple of using its patented meth-
od for doing it, which Blue Mail
says is novel and user-friendly.
Apple spokesman Fred Sainz
declined to comment.

Blue Mail alleges in its lawsuit,
filed by law firm Quinn Emanuel
Urquhart & Sullivan, that in Au-
gust 2018, shortly after it
launched its “anonymous share”
feature, its standing in Apple’s

App Store began falling.
The lawsuit doesn’t offer any
specific evidence that Apple de-
liberately hurt its downloads.
And according to Sensor Tower,
Blue Mail’s popularity, which
peaked in 2016, was in decline by


  1. But Blue Mail does offer a
    possible motive: Apple was plan-
    ning to announce a similar fea-


ture in less than a year.
Then, in May 2019, Blue Mail
launched a desktop application
for Mac. According to the lawsuit,
the app was climbing the rank-
ings in the store before Blue Mail

received an email from Apple
informing it that the app had
violated Apple’s terms of service.
The app was spammy, or it was
too similar to other apps.
Blue Mail claims in its lawsuit
that Apple customers are less
likely to install an application on
their Mac computer if it’s not
available through Apple’s built-in

App Store. The suit cites security
warnings Apple gives to custom-
ers who try to install apps by
downloading the software out-
side the App Store.
According to correspondence
cited in the lawsuit, Blue Mail
pushed Apple for more details on
why it was being barred from the
Mac App Store. Apple responded,
citing Blue Mail’s similarity to a
different mail client called Type-
App. That one, though, was also
owned by Blue Mail’s parent com-
pany, and the company had
stopped offering it on the App
Store.
In response, Blue Mail asked
how it could be too similar to
TypeApp, when TypeApp was no
longer in the App store.
Apple still wouldn’t budge, ac-
cording to the complaint. “After
further review and consideration
we have found that your applica-
tion is still not in compliance with
our guidelines,” the company
wrote. Apple removed the app
from the store.
[email protected]

App developer sues Apple, alleges patent infringement with email feature


Plaintiff also contends its
treatment by App Store
was antitrust violation

BY ELI ROSENBERG

The U.S. economy added a
modest 136,000 jobs in Septem-
ber, sending the unemployment
rate to a nearly 50-year low, a
mixed bag that some economists
said was more evidence the coun-
try could be headed for a slow-
down.
The pace was well below last
year’s average monthly growth,
though the unemployment rate,
3.5 percent, was the country’s
lowest since 1969. Consumer
spending continues to help pace
the economy, even as business
investment has pulled back.
“It’s kind of a mixed picture,”
said Douglas Kruse, an economist
at Rutgers University and a for-
mer White House adviser under
President Barack Obama. “The
job growth was less than what
Wall Street and economists were
expecting, but the drop in the
unemployment rate was unex-
pected.”
Manufacturing has already en-
tered a decline. The new report,
issued by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, showed that the econo-
my lost 2,000 manufacturing jobs
in September, something that is
expected to be a focus for presi-
dential candidates next year as
both parties try to appeal to
blue-collar workers.
The National Retail Federation
warned Thursday that economic
uncertainty, new tariffs and fluc-
tuations in the stock market
could derail Americans’ spending
plans in the run-up to the holi-
days. Retail lost about 11,
jobs, driven by employment de-
clines at clothing stores. Some
other sectors performed much
better, however, as health-care
and business services added
more than 70,000 jobs combined.
Nick Bunker, an economist at
the jobs site Indeed, said that the
lower unemployment rate was a
good sign but that other eco-


nomic indicators complicated the
picture. Of particular note, he
said, was that wage growth
slowed from 3.2 percent to
2.9 percent in September.
“You would expect wage
growth to be much stronger given
this unemployment rate,” he said.
Economists have puzzled over
why wage growth has remained
modest since the recession de-
spite the falling jobless rate.

“There’s just been a large pool
of people out there who are avail-
able to be employed without rais-
ing wages, but that just can’t keep
going on,” Kruse said. “We’re hit-
ting the point where we’re going
to have to see wage growth, or
employers aren’t going to find
workers they need.”
Bunker said the slowing wage
and payroll growth made for a
concerning picture.

“Those two trends are a sign
that this is a labor market that is
slowing down,” he said. “Not be-
cause we’re hitting full employ-
ment, but rather this is a slow-
down for employers and a slack-
ening in economic growth.”
The employment rate for
prime working-age Americans is
strong, but it is still lower than
levels in the late 1990s, Bunker
noted.

Economists also point to other
signs, including a manufacturing
recession, that are affecting em-
ployers as they struggle to find
workers in a tight job market.
President Trump is focusing
part of his 2020 reelection cam-
paign on the strength of the econ-
omy, and he immediately cheered
the low unemployment rate.
“Breaking News: Unemploy-
ment Rate, at 3.5%, drops to a 50

YEAR LOW,” he wrote on Twitter.
Then he added, with apparent
sarcasm, “Wow America, lets im-
peach your President (even
though he did nothing wrong!).”
Democrats, however, pointed
out aspects of the report that
seemed more troubling.
“Today’s jobs report... shows a
continuing slump in the manu-
facturing sector and that wage
growth was flat, further evidence
that the Trump-GOP economic
policies, which the president
promised would revitalize both,
are failing,” Senate Minority
Leader Charles E. Schumer
(D.-N.Y.) said in a statement.
As the unemployment rate has
fallen to historic lows, econo-
mists have watched wage data
closely to see whether a tight
labor market would eventually
lead to higher income levels. A
prime focus, both for business
leaders and political leaders, con-
tinues to be the slump in manu-
facturing.
September was the worst
month for U.S. manufacturing
since June 2009, according to a
closely watched industry index.
And concerns have grown that
the manufacturing contraction
could spill over into other indus-
tries. Economists have begun
warning about a significant risk
of recession.
The labor force participation
rate — the percentage of people
older than 16 who are working or
actively looking for work — re-
mained steady at 63.2 percent, a
number that is below historic
averages and prerecession levels.
Monthly job growth averaged
223,000 in 2018 but has fallen this
year to 161,000. The economy is a
subject of particularly intense
scrutiny heading into an election
year.
[email protected]

Heather Long contributed to this
report.

‘Mixed picture’ as unemployment rate hits 50-year low


With U.S. adding jobs at a slower pace last month, some economists see indicators of weakness


JAHI CHIKWENDIU/THE WASHINGTON POST
Job-seekers line up for Amazon Career Day in Arlington, Va., last month. The economy added 136,000 jobs in September.


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Blue Mail doesn’t claim to be the first


company to conceive of masked email addresses.


But it’s accusing Apple of using its patented method


for doing it, which Blue Mail says is novel


and user-friendly.

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