• Nine student ventures in and around Baltimore won $50,000 as part of a new awards program enabled by state funds. Startups include a firm developing an alternative energy storage solution that draws from tree sap and a device to treat obstructive sleep apnea. [Technical.ly]
• Federal employees are suing the feds over the Office of Personnel Management's new email system. [Washingtonian]
• Trump moved to freeze federal spending on government grants and loans, but a judge temporarily blocked the move and he later rescinded the action. Officials in Baltimore, whose current $4.2 billion budget includes $299 million received directly from the feds, are pursuing a lawsuit. [Maryland Matters/Technical.ly/Baltimore Banner]
• Maryland's investment organization TEDCO invested in the Baltimore firm ReBokeh, which builds assistive devices for individuals with vision impairments. The startup also landed a deal to provide the tech at the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery. [TEDCO/ReBokeh]
• An incident at a Maryland high school spurred a new bill that would make it illegal to disseminate a “forged digital likeness” with the intention to deceive people. [Baltimore Banner]
• Tickets are live for Technical.ly's Builders Conference in May. Attend to meet fellow technologists and entrepreneurs across the Mid-Atlantic. [Technical.ly]
• Government contracts can be a tough get for small businesses. It's important to plan ahead and partner with fellow local firms. [Technical.ly]
• Fulton-based cyber foundry DataTribe in Fulton led a $3.88 million financing round for the Charlotte security platform Frenos. [DataTribe]
• Eliot Pearson, Baltimore County's former chief of enterprise applications, has joined the Digital Harbor Foundation as its new CTO. [Technical.ly/Digital Harbor]