Survey Shows Support For New Privacy Laws 80
GovTechGuy writes "Two-thirds of consumers want the government to safeguard their privacy online and 81 percent want to add their names to a Do Not Track list, according to a May poll released Tuesday by Consumers Union. In addition, over 80 percent of respondents were concerned that companies may be sharing their personal information with third parties without their permission. The survey's release comes just one day before a Senate Commerce Committee hearing where lawmakers will hear testimony on three data privacy bills currently in front of the Senate."
Never mind consumers (Score:4, Insightful)
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Companies like facebook, google, etc. don't mine the data. They produce the data. There are a few big corporations none of us have heard of that do nothing but mine personal data. They are linked to our credit bureaus, some of which are subsidiaries. These companies sell to marketing firms, which in turn try and sell you stuff.
It's a big industry and it's not going away. Someone has to sell you something you might buy.
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I suspect that, if we can get something that appears to be quite strong; but has critical loopholes corporations will be absolutely all over it
Do you seriously suspect we might get anything else? Telemarketers don't seem too disturbed by do-not-call lists and politicians even put exclusions for "political parties" into that law.
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To hell with "do not track" and "do not call" lists, I'd like to see legislation that would make tracking and sphone spam opt-in, making it a felony with prison time for sociopathic corporations' CEOs and boards of directors who ignore the law.
County Market supermarket wants to stalk me, but at least I have to agree to it. Why is it legal for a corporation to stalk me, but a felony for a human being to?
I got phone spam on my cell phone last week; 20 calls from the same telemarketers (302-394-6964, a telemar
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I wonder how much the data companies would protest if they were required by law to inform you that they had access to your social security number?
Actually, no, they'd just shift all that data overseas, where it would be even less secure.
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How about just changing the system so that knowing a number doesn't give someone the ability to impersonate you?
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New ones doesn't.
(and 'new' here means from the recent several decades)
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See Q21:
http://www.ssa.gov/history/hfaq.html [ssa.gov]
Gotta love the internets, where countering a misconception results in yelling for citations when the answer is a relatively simple search away:
http://www.google.com/search?q=ssn+not+to+be+used+for+identification [google.com]
Perhaps you don't think of the period between 2011 and 1972 as decades?
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You got that right.
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Every single one of them will be if they get fined massively for violations. That's what laws and regulations are for. I'm sure gas stations don't like regulations preventing them from diluting their gas beyond a certain point, but they don't do it because they all know that the fine for doing so far outweighs the profit gained.
Dear Consumers, (Score:2, Troll)
Much(highly personalized) love,
-American Advertising Federation
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I wish I hadn't posted in this thread or I'd have modded you and fuzzyfuzzyfungus "funny". Got a chuckle out of both of you, thanks!
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Probably not (Score:3)
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At least in Germany just a few days ago the chief police officer of Dresden had to step down because of stretching and breaking too many privacy laws. So a privacy law done right can have some teeth even against the government.
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The difference is that, however incompetently, merchants, credit-card processors, etc. are essentially your allies without any legal pressure. They want everybody to have an easy, comfortable, time buying shit online. They don't necessarily care enough or actually manage to transform caring into not sucking; but your interests and theirs are basically aligned.
By contrast, the desire not to be relentlessly tracked, monet
What were the survey questions? (Score:2)
It seems technically infeasible to maintain such a list, plus how can they keep track of you being on the list?
I feel like the poll question was 'Do you want a way to prevent keeping track of everything about you and preventing that information to be used fort sending junk mail?
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how can they keep track of you being on the list?
Simple: They keep a list of everybody (with full names, email addresses, etc.) and give a copy to anybody who's thinking of violating the privacy laws.
Re:What were the survey questions? (Score:4, Interesting)
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We could get *really* crazy and have your *browser* stop giving out identifiable information to anyone that asks...
Is a little personal responsibility too much to ask? After all, it is your browser thats kindly storing these cookies, and kindly giving them out on request. Your browser. Yours. That falls within the scope of something you can do stuff about.
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The reality is, infrastructure and systems (like browsers) are pre-built and pre-configured. Our society works because everybody doesn't have to do their own building and configuring - the same way not everyone has to grow their own food. It's a much better, socially-aware option, to push for better builds and configurations rather than to say, "screw it I'm going to roll my own".
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"Personal responsibility" is NOT dressing in a Burqa to keep from being raped. Personal responsibility is NOT RAPING OTHER PEOPLE. Why are you calling for ME to have "personal responsibility" but not the corporations?
Cookies have many very good uses, like not having to log into slashdot every time you visit. Stalking people is NOT one of them. And most people (non-slashdotters) wouldn't have a clue how to NOT store cookies. How about making laws keeping the goddamned sociopathic corporations from stalking y
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LOL. some dimwit modded that "troll". Waste some more mod points, dipshit. Too bad they don't have the old metamoderation, you wouldn't get many more mod points.
Clicking the "no bonus" buttons even though they don't seem to work...
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Is a little personal responsibility too much to ask? After all, it is your browser thats kindly storing these cookies, and kindly giving them out on request. Your browser. Yours. That falls within the scope of something you can do stuff about.
That's only half right. Yes you can control who your browser gives cookies to - I use Cookie Safe Lite [mozilla.org] which is fantasticly easy to use, but keeping it working with each release of firefox is getting harder.
However, that's just the low-hanging fruit. There are lots of other methods that corporate stalkers use besides cookies, like so-called "browser fingerprinting" techniques that, when combined with your IP address, are just as problematic as cookies but donn't practically fall under the rubric of "pers
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We could get *really* crazy and have your *browser* stop giving out identifiable information to anyone that asks...
It's not that easy, since the browser itself may be identifiable.
http://panopticlick.eff.org/ [eff.org]
The same 81% want free money (Score:2)
...and 99.999% of people asked if life is sacred, the answer was "yes." (81% followed up to ask "whose life?")
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Are you badanalogyguy's new account? Walmart can only use the money I spend ONCE. Once they spend it, it's gone forever.
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I'm less worried about that ... if I actually used your product, and you have my information on file because I gave it to you, I can at least understand how you have it.
It's the people who I have never had a business dealing with, who have managed to get my information that I have a big problem with. who the hell are you, and why do I care?
A tiny glint of hope (Score:1)
It's encouraging that this has even made a blip on the public radar, but unfortunately, a public clueless enough to think that a "Do Not Track" list would help the situation is also clueless enough to immediately forget about this issue after seeing the latest high-budget presentation on the mass media about the current political candidates.
Without their permission? (Score:2)
Easier to Pollute Data than Erase It? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:False Positives (Score:3)
Good try, but False Positives are deadly. Reason: you can't deny them!
"Retroworks is a terrorist! Prove you're not." The whole Security Theater adventure is fueled by false positives.
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That sounds like a great idea to me.
I have a friend that would consistently give the people at Best Buy, Sears, etc, bogus info re his address, etc. And it's fun trying to be as imaginative as possible like including that a person has just purchased 10 bovine insemination kits or 5 Bradley M2 fighting vehicles.
This could become a whole new form of social discourse and entertainment.
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That may have worked in the snail mail age, but in the electronic age, I think you're just setting yourself up to get spammed while not helping anyone. All they'd think is that you have a broad swath of interests, and it doesn't cost them anything more to track them all, since it only exists in a database anyway. Until you have a critical mass of people following your plan, companies would be more than happy to provide you with as much information as you want about your "interests", and you'd be potentially
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A significant portion of the world's Internet users would need to spend time creating false positives list for it to work, since a few false positives doesn't affect those who intrude on our privacy. It's also possible they'd quickly learn to see the difference between "genuine" Internet behaviour and when someone tries to obfuscate.
Terrifying (Score:1)
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"Two-thirds of consumers want the government to safeguard their privacy..."
In other news, two-thirds of consumers don't mind if the government tracks them, as long as evil corporations don't.
I'm sure the Government is more than happy to oblige in helping protect the consumer from "the big bad Corporations" all the while slowly raping us of our own freedoms. Government to the rescue, yay! While this a nice and noble gesture, how far will this extend, come on. I think we know that Government and big business have been in bed for awhile now. Even if it does get passed, there will always be loopholes.
Besides, I wonder how many of these people that worry about being tracked are "liking" every group
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Well really....its more like they don't understand how the whole thing works, they like how the "do not call" list works, and think that they want the same here... because they don't realize what the real technical differences that make it impossible to really work are.
Bottom line though, they want to not be tracked.
Why not a "Track" list (Score:2)
Oh yeah, that makes far too much sense.
This just provides a new way to track people (Score:2)
How are they going to implement this scheme.? Put everyone's name and information on a list then distribute it to Internet companies?
People will have to identify themselves first for this thing to work which defeats the purpose.
There's more to privacy than just selling data (Score:1)
The level of tracking that advertisements and such take isn't really personally identifiable information -- they don't try to take your identity but more keep tabs on what other websites you've visited that have ads. If a company collects data from you, it should be, at the very least, for some sort of technical purpose like showing relevant ads based on the "Likes" you have on facebook.
That said, I wouldn't want anyone selling this kind of information to data miners for the pure purpose of stalking your o
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The obvious answer - to get you to give up that information to begin with!
Facebook knows th
Yes Minister (Score:3)
You can get a survey to get any result - Check a href="http://users.aims.ac.za/~mackay/probability/survey.html"
If your survey question is "Do you support Privacy Laws" - the answer will be Yes. "Do you want the Govt to prevent terrorism or protect the children" - the answer will again be Yes.
Correct Link (Score:2)
Link [aims.ac.za] to the Yes Minister dialogue
Outlaws (Score:1)
Giving information to the government (Score:1)
Each consumer will then (Score:2)
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make personally identifiable info joint property (Score:1)
Then, the holder of personal info will need your explicit consent in order to legally sell your info. You would need to voluntarily sell your ownership interest in the info to loose legal control of it. All of the normal property laws would take effect.