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Google, Apple Lead Massive List of Companies Supporting CISPA

redletterdave writes "TechNet, the trade association representing and led by dozens of prominent technology companies including Google, Apple and Facebook, has formally come out in support of CISPA, sending a letter to the U.S. House of Representatives. The letter said: 'We commend the committee for providing liability protections to companies participating in voluntary information-sharing and applaud the committee's efforts to work with a wide range of stakeholders to address issues such as strengthening privacy protections. As the legislative process unfolds, we look forward to continuing the dialogue with you and your colleagues on further privacy protections, including discussions on the role of a civilian interface for information sharing.'" The White House won't support the bill in its current form, but they plan to work with legislators on a compromise. The current text of the bill is available online.

5 of 153 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Google hates privacy by White+Flame · · Score: 4, Informative

    Hell, have you noticed how Google's advertisements on other sites like Slashdot change based on what you've been recently searching on Google.

    The least you could do (besides an adblocker, assuming you haven't already got one and are whitelisting slashdot) is disable all cookies, enabling exceptions for sites you want. It's scary seeing how many cookies from how many different sites a single page tries to set nowadays. By disabling all by default, I end up enabling only the one(s) required for login, and it leaves all the other tracking cookies blocked. Sure, there are non-cookie ways to track, especially by IP and browser version/feature fingerprint, but Google no longer remembers my searches with just blocked cookies.

  2. Re:Google hates privacy by Bigby · · Score: 5, Informative

    The GP is an ad itself. No need to reply to it. Notice the new ID and the posting at the same time article was posted.

  3. Re:Google hates privacy by Synerg1y · · Score: 4, Informative

    Took me under 5 seconds to put "firefox prevent google tracking" into my google toolbar and that brings up:

    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/remove-google-tracking/

    https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/gdc/

    and a hella comprehensive guide for thick tin-foil hats:

    http://www.leavegooglebehind.com/how-tos/how-to-build-a-firefox-privacy-arsenal/

  4. Re:Google hates privacy by misanthropic.mofo · · Score: 4, Informative

    have you thought for one second... to stop using google?

    Exactly, DuckDuckGo FTW.

    --
    --There are two kinds of people in this world. I don't like either of them.
  5. Re:Google hates privacy by Cederic · · Score: 4, Informative

    Running and hosting a website is not free, but IT IS NOT EXPENSIVE. It is just electrons, no trees cut down to make paper, no postage, no fat lazy postmen delivering magazines, no delivery trucks burning gas and needing repairs, no distribution centers, etc.

    I agree. I mean, it costs Google a mere $4bn a quarter to run and host their sites. If you only want reliable hosting with failover, uptime, bandwidth and performance SLAs and security patching then the costs are utterly trivial.