• Have an old computer you need to get rid of? Learn how to dispose of outdated electronics in Baltimore. [Technical.ly]
• Columbia cyber company Tenable's CEO Amit Yoran died after a battle with cancer. We are working on a remembrance piece for Amit, so please hit reply if you have a statement you'd like to share. [TechCrunch]
• Thousands of longshoremen at ports on the East and Gulf coasts, including in Baltimore, are set to go on strike next week. Negotiations resumed Tuesday, with work rules still up for debate — including the question of further automating ports. [Maryland Matters]
• Maryland's Department of Commerce followed up on Gov. Moore's prior executive order by reorganizing and bringing in new leaders. One of them, Ricardo Benn, will head up the new Division of Innovation and Growth. [Commerce Department]
• A federal appeals court blocked the FCC’s efforts to enforce net neutrality, ruling that the agency needs congressional authorization to enforce the rules. [Technical.ly]
• Hellenic Cables started work at its new cable manufacturing site at Wagner’s Point. [Baltimore Banner]
• Orioles majority owner David Rubenstein received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Joe Biden. [Sports Illustrated]
• The Maryland Cannabis Administration named Alexandra Harris as its interim director. She previously worked as chief of staff for the agency. [Baltimore Biz Journal]
• The University of Maryland Medical System is a finalist in a supply chain-focused contest from the tech and research consultancy firm Gartner. UMMS' Gallion, created at the iHarbor Innovation Center, is a cloud-based platform that helps manage billing for high-cost procedures by linking with medical records and other hospital systems. [University of Maryland Medical System]