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    Entries in privacy (2)

    Friday
    Jan272012

    The Digital Divide

    Digital freedom and privacy are surging onto political platforms, legislative agendas and court dockets, with sometimes overlapping impacts.

    In the wake of a massive online protest against the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect IP Act (PIPA) last week, U.S. congressional leaders shoved the "online piracy" legislation favored by traditional media interests into a broom closet. Protecting the intellectual property of movie makers and book publishers was trumped by cries for Internet freedom.

    Meanwhile, many of the same online giants who backed last week's Internet blackout protest may be looking at tougher online user privacy legislation in the European Union. The New York Times reports the EU will introduce a measure requiring Amazon, Facebook, Google and others to obtain explicit approval from their users before sharing personal data with advertisers. They must also scrub personal data permanently from their databases at a user request or face heavy fines in what one EU official called a move toward "online transparency."

    The U.S. Supreme Court weighed in with a narrow ruling, with vast implications, indicating law enforcement officers must obtain a warrant before placing a GPS device on a suspect's vehicle. Justices hinted it may be time for Congress to act to clarify just how much privacy citizens can expect in an age when banks, retailers and social media sites routinely mine online data. The court's ruling pumped new life into legislation Oregon Senator Ron Wyden introduced last summer to clarify privacy protection involving police use of electronic surveillance equipment.

    The specter of Big Brother tracking your whereabouts by tapping into your smartphone signal is scary. But it is in some ways just a police app for FourSquare, which allows a user to note where they are so friends can find them. Yes, the intent is different, but not a 180-degree difference.

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    Thursday
    Sep222011

    Euro-Style Online Privacy Protection

    Update on Tuesday, September 27, 2011 at 1:00PM by CFM team

    Privacy Rules Urged on Supercookies

    September 27, 2011 –A bipartisan House privacy caucus has urged the Federal Trade Commission to look into the use of "supercookies" by websites such as Hulu.com and MSN.com.

    Congressmen Ed Markey, (D-Mass) and Joe Barton (R-Texas), who co-chair the privacy caucus, told the FTC they believe supercookies, which recreate online user's profile information even after the user has deleted traditional cookies, may constitute an unfair and deceptive trade practice. Barton said, "I think supercookies should be outlawed because their existence eats away at consumer choice and privacy." Concern about supercookies was fueled by findings from research conducted at Standard University and the University of California, Berkeley, and reported recently by the Wall Street Journal.

    —End Update—

    Concern is growing over online privacy, but don't expect Congress to import Euro-style, comprehensive privacy regulation.A U.S. House Energy and Commerce subcommittee is examining Europe's comprehensive approach to privacy protection, but some legal experts doubt whether Euro-style privacy regulation could win support in the United States.

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