Gator CPO at the Department of Homeland Security
pcidevel writes "D. Reed Freeman, the "Chief Privacy Officer" of Claria Networks (formerly Gator), the creators of the pervasive spyware package GAIN, has been appointed to the Department of Homeland Security's "Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee"."
No not The Onion, Salon. Which isn't much better.
And I guess it's true as CNET has picked up the story too.
He is apparently a Law Professor and teaches a class on The Regulation of Advertising.
My question is how can somebody such as himself be associated with a company like Gator that tries their best to trick consumers?
- Cary
--Fairfax Underground: Where Fairfax County comes out to play
Salon.com requires a soul-sucking registration link.
Here's CNET News.com's version of the story:
Adware maker joins federal privacy board
Published: February 23, 2005, 5:19 PM PST
By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
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An executive from Claria, formerly called Gator, will be one of 20 members of the committee, the department said Wednesday.
"This committee will provide the department with important recommendations on how to further the department's mission while protecting the privacy of personally identifiable information of citizens and visitors of the United States," Nuala O'Connor Kelly, the department's chief privacy officer, said in a statement.
Claria bundles its pop-up advertising software with ad-supported networks such as Kazaa. Recently, the privately held company has been trying to seek credibility by following stricter privacy guidelines and offering behavioral profiling services to its partners.
In an e-mail message to CNET News.com, Kelly defended the inclusion of a Claria representative on the committee. "I am proud of, supportive of and grateful for those individuals in the public and private sector who are willing to take on the hard tasks, fight the good fight, and who surprise us with creative, fresh and unconventional thinking, and who make change where change is needed through their hard work and personal dedication," Kelly said.
In the past, Claria's pop-up ad software has riled some users who claimed it was annoying, installed without permission, and not easy to delete. Publishers also were irked about pop-up ads for a rival's product appearing next to their own Web sites. Catalog retailer L.L. Bean sued Gator for alleged trademark infringement.
Claria's representative on the Homeland Security privacy board is company Vice President D. Reed Freeman, a former Federal Trade Commission staff attorney. Other members include executives from Intel, Computer Associates International, IBM, Oracle and the Cato Institute.
Kelly said Freeman will "bring his courage and conviction to the board, and will contribute productively--and constructively--to the board's and the public's dialogue on privacy and homeland security."
The committee is tasked with providing "external expert advice to the secretary and the chief privacy officer on programmatic, policy, operational and technological issues that affect privacy, data integrity and data interoperability."
In February 2003, Gator settled a high-profile case brought by The Washington Post, The New York Times, Dow Jones and other media companies. Terms of that deal were quiet, but Claria appears to have stopped delivering pop-ups to those publishers' sites.
Claria did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
CNET News.com's Stefanie Olsen contributed to this report.
Just another "DOJ fascist authoritarian totalitarian bootlicker" -- Zeio
The D.H.S.'s own "chief privacy officer" used to work for DoubleClick.
oh and they do also have a section on modern newspeak not only the Orwell version.
...who this guy actually is:
http://profs.lp.findlaw.com/privacy/freeman.html
Looks like this guy is a well established lawyer with alot of FTC connections. He also specializes in privacy law, which means his job is to figure out every loophole available to help his clients exploit it thouroughly. ;)
- sigs are stupid
Members appointed for the inaugural term of the DHS Privacy Advisory Committee are:
Joseph Alhadeff, Vice President and Chief Privacy Officer, Oracle Corporation, Washington, DC
Ramon Barquin, President, Barquin International, Bethesda, MD
J. Howard Beales, Associate Professor, The George Washington University, Arlington, VA
D. Reed Freeman, Chief Privacy Officer and Vice President, Claria Corporation, Arlington, VA
James W. Harper, Editor/Executive Director, Privacilla.org & Director of Information Policy Studies, Cato Institute, Washington, DC
Kirk Herath, Chief Privacy Officer & Associate General Counsel, Nationwide, Columbus, OH
David A. Hoffman, Group Counsel and Director of Privacy, Intel Corporation, Hillsboro, OR
Lance Hoffman, Distinguished Research Professor, The George Washington University, Washington, DC
Tara Lemmey, Chief Executive Officer, Lens Ventures, San Francisco, CA
Joseph Leo, Vice President, SAIC, Vienna, VA
John Marsh, Distinguished Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law, Winchester, VA
Joanne McNabb, Chief, Office of Privacy Protection, California Department of Consumer Affairs, Sacramento, CA
Charles Palmer, Department Group Manager, Security, Networking & Privacy, IBM Corporation, Yorktown Heights, NY
Richard Purcell, Chief Executive Officer, Corporate Privacy Group, Nordland, WA
Paul Samuel Rosenzweig, Senior Legal Research Fellow, The Heritage Foundation, Washington, DC
John Thomas Sabo, Manager, Security, Privacy, and Trust Initiatives, Computer Associates, Herndon, VA
James Sheehan, General Counsel, Milton Hershey School, Hershey, PA
Lisa Sotto, Partner, Head of Regulatory Privacy & Information Management Practice Group, Hunton & Williams, New York, NY
Michael Turner, President and Senior Scholar, Information Policy Institute, New York, NY
Samuel Wright, Senior Vice President, Government Relations, Cendant Corporation, Washington, DC
I can't say I like Freeman being on the committee, but a quick glance at the rest of the list makes me feel a lot better.
"The newly born animals are then whisked off for a quick run through a giant baking oven." --heard on Food Network
So, for those who would like to take the initiative to tell these fuckers something: Email: privacy@dhs.gov Phone: 202-772-9848 Fax: 202-772-5036 It might matter, it might not. But writing an email and picking up the phone is easy as hell. I'll take both, thank you.
Freeman is an expert in privacy law, was only recently appointed to his VP spot at Claria (less than 1 year ago), and it makes sense to have representation from this segment of the market on this 20 person panel. Claria and other similar companies have a legal business, as annoying as we may find it, so it makes sense to include them in the discussion. If they're view isn't understood early on, then it's likely that once any legislation is implemented they'll sue and tie the whole thing up in the courts. This should raise some eyebrows, but that's about it.
Until government is held to strict limits on power, there will be a permanant line of crooks waiting for their turn to exploit that power (both inside and outside the political circle). That's not theory -- that's simple reality. If you favor big government, give yourself a pat on the back, because this is it.
You took his stuff. You pound him.
I don't like registration screens either, but I've never had to register to read Salon ... I just have to look at an ad for 20 seconds then I get to read all I want on their site for free.
Have you ever even gone to Salon.com?
As the sibling post points out, you've mistaken Salon.com with the "Mandatory Free Registration" sites of the likes that bugmenot complains about. Salon.com is a pay-for-content service and the only free option is to watch a small animated ad for a free "day pass". This is not the same at all. There's no personal information needed (at least not the last time I was there).
For what it's worth, she's long gone. Thank god.
If all the Slashdot readers called or filled out a form, we might make a difference. Even if nothing changes, at least DHS will know people are aware of this ridiculous act.
From the FA, it is made clear that this guy is just one of twenty people appointed to be on a committee.
Hopefully it will be an opportunity for the bastard to be allowed just enough rope to hang himself. In other words, the more visible he is while being an idiot, the more people know he is an idiot.
Contact your elected representatives
Ooohh! (temporarily removing tinfoil hat to put
on the beefier 3.0 mil copper skullcap w/ground)
And what makes you think that the great bargain
that MSFT got from the Ashcroft DoJ didn't already
have secret provisions for a law enforcement back-
door into their OS(es)? When the regime changed
hands in 2001, MSFT got off with a slap on the
wrist that they practically wrote themselves. And
when the DHS was formed, MSFT was rewarded with
a huge contract with DHS (in spite of warnings
from independent security experts to the contrary).
The appointment of the Gator CPO to their (DHS)
security commission merely underlines the melding
of government and corporate America into the same
mindset - spy on everyone, colate data, and share
all datasets between government and industry.
CARNIVORE has (reportedly) gone away, replaced
with COTS software (from where?). Dubya and the
"neo-cons" in Congress have repeatedly supported
large corporate interests over "free enterprise",
as well as the greater public good. The United
States Supreme Court basically overturned the
USA's democratic (by/of/for the people) republic
in 2000 in favor of corporate interests - its
called Corporate National Socialism (by/of the
corporation, for the people).
A new revolution at the voting booth (presuming
they're not all Diebold electronic voting
machines by the time the people wake up to the
danger), is the only way to turn this "ship of
state" back on course.
But I'm not particularly hopeful.
Meehh! (adjusts anti-DHS 3 mil copper skullcap
to fit the original tinfoil hat on top...)
On that topic, have you seen The Power of Nightmares? Great BBC documentary, which is available on many torrent sites. According to the documentary, the "terrorist threat" is mostly a hoax dreamed up by American neo-conservatives. Leo Strauss, who inspired the neo-con movement, said governments should give people something to fear if they want to bring them together.
Geez, that's like appointing Gale "mining & timber" Norton Secretary of the Interior, John "no nickname needed" Ashcroft as Attorney General followed by Albert "what Geneva Conventions?" Gonzales, Condoleeza "lies to Congress" Rice as Secretary of State, a bunch of oilmen in charge of energy policy, topped off by someone as smart as George W. Bush as the President.
Wow, that would be one crazy, mixed-up dreamworld!
I wouldn't mind having any long-run successful CEO like Bill Gates become president. I do however mind having an unsuccesful CEO as the current president.
$8.95/mo web hosting
... and you're forgetting the fact that the iq test was created to test the level of retardation in mentally handicapped people... never to measure intelligence, because we don't even have a definition of intelligence we can agree on. so shut up, already.
Actually, the Benet IQ tests were made by an educator in France to test whether students actually learned the knowledge and skills that they were expected to know at a given age level. Later it was adopted by a somewhat xenophopic social darwinists in 19th century America who wanted to use it to test potential immigrants for mental retardation, to use as grounds to deny them immigration.