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Privacy The Internet Technology Your Rights Online

FTC Proposes Do Not Track List For the Web 173

An anonymous reader writes "The Federal Trade Commission proposed allowing consumers to opt out of having their online activities tracked on Wednesday as part of the agency's preliminary report on consumer privacy. FTC chairman Jon Leibowitz said he would prefer for the makers of popular web browsers to come up with a setting on their own that would allow consumers to opt out of having their browsing and search habits tracked."
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FTC Proposes Do Not Track List For the Web

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  • It's called P3P (Score:5, Informative)

    by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Wednesday December 01, 2010 @04:14PM (#34409078)

    P3P [w3.org]

    The Platform for Privacy Preferences Project (P3P) enables Websites to express their privacy practices in a standard format that can be retrieved automatically and interpreted easily by user agents. P3P user agents will allow users to be informed of site practices (in both machine- and human-readable formats) and to automate decision-making based on these practices when appropriate. Thus users need not read the privacy policies at every site they visit.

  • Re:*sigh* (Score:5, Informative)

    by TheRealFixer ( 552803 ) on Wednesday December 01, 2010 @04:17PM (#34409106)
    In my personal experience, the FTC's Do Not Call list has actually worked pretty well. I used to get considerable numbers of telemarketing calls every night, but about 6 months after adding all my numbers to the list, they've almost completely stopped. And on the very, very rare occasion that I do get one, a quick mention that this number is on the Federal Do Not Call list sends them into a near panic state, scrambling to hang up.

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