It's recess week, which means the Morning Take is going to be on hiatus until next Monday. Tune in for any breaking tech policy developments this week.

Grassley to Lift FCC Holds: As we reported Friday, Senate Judiciary ranking member Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said he plans to lift his holds on two nominees to the Federal Communications Commission but will continue his investigation into the agency's dealings with the wireless broadband startup LightSquared. CQ's Ambreen Ali has more on the move, which should pave the way for the Senate to approve the nominations of both Jessica Rosenworcel and Ajit Pai after the recess. Both nominations are considered non-controversial; Rosenworcel is generally viewed as sympathetic to the Democrats on telecom policy, while Pai is believed to lean Republican.

Grassley said he expects more than 11,000 pages of documents from the House Energy and Commerce Committee regarding the FCC's decision to issue LightSquared a conditional waiver for its proposed wireless broadband network built on satellite spectrum. The FCC eventually pulled the waiver after tests revealed LightSquared's network interfered with GPS devices. Grassley and other Republicans have accused the Obama administration of giving LightSquared favorable treatment in exchange for political considerations.

Bill Would Protect Facebook Passwords: Democratic Representatives Eliot Engel of New York and Jan Schakowsky of Illinois introduced a bill on Friday that would protect users of social networking sites from having to divulge their passwords and other personal information to employers, schools, and universities. The legislation, known as the Social Networking Online Protection Act (SNOPA), prohibits current or potential employers from requiring a username, password or other access to an employee's online content. The same restrictions would apply to educational institutions.

The legislation comes among reports of employers demanding access to applicants' Facebook accounts as part of the screening process. Several lawmakers have spoken out against what they view as an invasion of privacy, with Democratic Senators Chuck Schumer of New York and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut promising to draft their own legislation to stop the practice. The Engel bill could potentially affect how some academic institutions, such as the National Collegiate Athletic Association, monitor the social media use by students, including athletes.

Street View Report Casts Doubt on Google's Story: The Google engineer in charge of writing the code that allowed the company's Street View cars to download payload data from private WiFi networks told others at the company about his plans to do so, according to a report from the Wall Street Journal. The information came from the FCC's report on the Street View probe, which was released over the weekend. It reveals the unidentified engineer, who plead the Fifth during questioning by federal officials, told a senior manager and one other engineer that his code was collecting personal information in 2008. The report said he hoped to get a better picture of how consumers use Google's array of online services.

The report suggests Google was aware of the data collection and could have moved to stop it earlier, rather than waiting until 2010. That year Google flatly denied collecting or storing payload data, only to reverse that statement a month later and claim the collection was a mistake. The FCC report acknowledges the data collection wasn't illegal because the data moved over radio signals that weren't scrambled or encrypted, but instead elected to fine the search giant $25,000 for impeding its investigation of the incident.

ICYMI — House Passes Four Cybersecurity Bills: CQ Weekly's Charlene Carter and Tim Starks have a roundup of last week's House floor action on cybersecurity, which resulted in the passage of four bills including the controversial CISPA (HR 3523). That bill would encourage public-private information sharing on cyberthreats, but has raised significant privacy concerns and the threat of a veto from the White House. The three other measures would update federal laws and guidelines regarding cybersecurity R&D and network protections at civilian federal agencies. On the Move: The Small Business Administration has hired Eric Won to be its new chief information officer. Won succeeds his former boss Paul Christy, now SBA's chief operating officer. Amazon.com hired Intel senior policy counsel Brian Huseman to be director of federal policy on privacy and consumer policy issues, while Kristin Lee has left the Transportation Security Administration to join Microsoft as a senior public relations manager. Transcript: Last Thursday's House Homeland Security Subcommittees on Counterterrorism and Cybersecurity joint hearing on the Iranian cyberthreat to the U.S.