Privacy Groups Mull 'Do Not Track' List for Internet
Technical Writing Geek writes with a Reuters story about a collection of privacy groups looking to set up a 'Do Not Track' list online, similar to the 'Do Not Call' list meant to dissuade telemarketing. "Computer users should be notified when their Web surfing is tracked by online advertisers and Web publishers, argue the Consumer Federation of America, the World Privacy Forum and the Center for Democracy and Technology, among other groups in a coalition promoting the idea. Rather than burying privacy policies in fine print, companies should also disclose them more fully and provide easier ways to opt out, the groups said. The organizations submitted the proposals to the Federal Trade Commission, ahead of the consumer watchdog agency's workshop on Nov. 1-2 to study the increasing use of tracking technology to target online ads.
Considering that the wonderful US Congress can't even get a reasonable anti-spam law in place and instead created one that makes the problem WORSE
You don't understand, the CAN SPAM act does exactly what it is intended to do: it makes it so that you can spam with impunity.
See, what you're forgetting is that we have the best government money can buy. Vote? HA! What's one measly vote against a ten million dollar campaign contribution (ironically from an entity that is not allowed by law to vote).
"Your" representatives don't represent you, they represent fine American corporations like Sony, BP, Shell, etc. who now can spam without fear of the law. Who do you think paid for this law, anyway?
-mcgrew
mcgrew's razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which can be explained by greedy self-interest