Minnesota bill lets Internet Users Block Disclosure
Tux Racer writes "A KMSP article is reporting that 'Internet users in Minnesota would get unprecedented control over their personal information under a bill moving through the Legislature. The bill would give customers control over whether their service providers disclose or sell their personal information, including their e-mail addresses and what Web sites they visited...'"
Until they install Java of course.
Can they just sort of pass this in the US congress? Or perhaps if enough states pass bills like this, the ISPs will be locked into following these laws....Now, I wonder.....how hard would it be for a bunch of people in an area to start their own ISP with a T1 line and modems to make it easy. Are there co-op ISPs out there? Perhaps I should start one...
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House of Representatives
Senate
If you live in MN and want to talk to your reps (I know I do), find out who represents you.
You can't get a blue screen on a black and white monitor.
Maybe its time that some hard laws are laid down concerning privacy. Everything I've seen indicates that its meerly implied rather than stated.
scott
The headline attempts to lure us into the mistaken idea that: Minnesota bill lets Internet Users Block Disclosure
Hmm... it looks like whoever wrote this headline is unclear on either English grammar or American law.
In no sense can it be said that a bill "lets" something happen. At most, the bill proposes that something happen. Only when the bill is passed and becomes law does it have any effect.
A trivial difference? Ask anyone who has received a gerjillion SPAMs that contain the embedded lie that a US bill, never passed, allows them to crap in our in-boxes.
How can one take advantage of this law when much of the software and people that steals and deals personal information is being based in countries with weak laws against this sort of thing (like russia)
GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
See this earlier post.