FCC Proposal: Internet Providers Must Ask To Share Your Data (foxnews.com)
The FCC has unveiled a new privacy proposal Thursday that is sure to appeal to millions of internet users. Internet service providers? Not so much. The proposal would require ISPs like Verizon and Comcast to get your permission before sharing your precious info with advertisers. Fox News reports: The Federal Communication Commission has changed its broadband-privacy plan since it was initially proposed in March. The wireless and cable industries had complained that under the initial plan, they would be more heavily regulated than digital-ad behemoths like Google and Facebook, who are monitored by a different agency, the Federal Trade Commission. The FCC explained its new approach Thursday and plans to vote on it Oct. 27. The revised proposal says broadband providers don't have to get permission from customers ahead of time to use some information deemed "non-sensitive," like names and addresses. The previous plan called for customers to expressly approve the use of more of their information. This time around, customers still need to OK broadband providers' using and sharing a slew of their data, like a phone's physical location, websites browses and apps used, and what's in emails. And customers must be told what types of information is kept and how it will be used, and agency officials said they can still say no to internet service providers using other data, like names and addresses.
Does it allow them to refuse to sell internet to people if they don't agree to this?
if so it doesnt matter, jut another line in the EULA that no one reads
Your data will be out there.
Well if the ISP were smart they would come up with a fee, the amount they get from selling the data, and then change that fee to customer that don't want to share their data.
Simple win win for everyone. We know their business model is not so great, but it is currently part of the income they make, to prevent ISP resistance to this proposal they just enable a fee, I know I would be happy to pay a little more for my privacy. Similar to how I will pay for a phone app that doesn't collect/have ads/etc instead of use a free one with data collection/ads/etc.
This is the year of the trifecta:
1) Linux on the desktop
2) Cubs win the World Series
3) President Trump!
I have this theory that in the reality I experienced 15 years ago, that this was already in effect. My theory is that somehow in a Jobbsian-esque reality distortion field Snowden and/or the NSA somehow reversed this effect without a single stroke of Law.
like a phone's physical location, websites browses and apps used, and what's in emails
That's nice and all, but it isn't so hard for me to tunnel past my ISP so all they see is encrypted traffic.
Avoiding Google's tracking is much much much harder, because they are embedded in the very fabric of the web now. Their scripts are loaded from most web sites, their tracking shit is everywhere, their captcha system is needed to sign up for many web forums, 95% of the email you send ends up on a gmail system and is mined by them for personal data, and so on. Even if YOU try to block all that other people will give your data to google behind your back.
I'm about 100X as fucking outraged at Google as I am at my ISP, and I have 100X less chance at avoiding their data collection. And I have a chance of changing my ISP. Google is everywhere.
Let's start with the big problems, and THEN worry about the little ones.
I mean seriously, are we to believe that 20 years ago no businesspeople at the large ISPs could have come up with these ways to snoop on their customer's traffic and $$profit$$ from the intel? 20 years ago, before 9/11 and Snowden, any cableco businessperson who would have suggested such a thing would have been laughed out of their job. Orwell would be proud of U.S. In Soviet America, Internet Learns From You.
if they sold it or not? Pinky swear??!! You will opt out and they will sell it anyway. How fucking stupid do they think we are? Liars. The system is already automated to collect and sell. They gonna re-patch it? No way.
You want service? You authorize data collection and dissemination as ISP desires. It'll be right there in the TOS if it's not (like MS for Windows) there already. The Privacy Policy *might* place some limits on that but usually minor if any - it's limited generally to what's required in the law of the jurisdiction they do business in and occasionally where service is provided. Normally, there's not even an opt-out for any part of it, let alone opt-in. Theoretically, FCC will require that it be opt-in for some things, but the AT&T/Comcastish lawyers will work around that easily enough. Business as usual. Profit!!
ISPs should be treated like common carriers, and prohibited from collecting any data from the content which flows through the network in the first place.
Thing is, they want to have their cake and eat it, too. They want immunity from responsibility for their customer's content, but also want to monitor it.
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
Jeebus Christo, it should have been the default all along.
While we protecting people's privacy and everything, how about we include government?
Sounds like the FCC agents are just asking for another round of bribes again.
I hate advertisers as much as (more) than anyone but can we calm the fuck down a bit? It's just your fucking browser history.
It's more like the surprise joy that came when the government of Oceania raised the chocolate rations to 20g. It is exactly like that. Historically there was an expectation of privacy. Then 9/11 and Snowden happened. The ISPs realized they could literally get away with anything. Imagine the leverage they have against the government that asks them to keep gag secrets...
They already know everybody will click ok on terms of service.
Congratulations! You just agreed that the company can share your data.
Companies: "Don't like it? Don't use our service."
Me: "Well I don't really have a choice, since you forced all of your competitors out of business."
Companies: "Come on. You know you want to click 'Agree' -- everyone is doing it!"
I'd like to refuse, but not having service at all destroys my business.
I'd like to refuse sharing with the FBI and NSA completely.
I'd like to force Google to have to ask as well, even if I'm not a direct user of their services, seems 50% of websites ARE thanks to analytics and 50% of my friends are thanks to gmail.
I do not give permission for my emails to be scanned. That applies triply to yahoo.
Used to charge $30 USD for this. but recently dropped it.
the days of ISPs should be over and done with.
Careful what you wish for.
Because prostituting customers is just business: Anyone see the flaw in US policy? Privacy is privacy, you enforce it or don't.
It's ridiculous that one US government agency allows customers to be prostituted mercilessly, while another protects your online history. That creates an internet (privacy) czar controlled by corporations.
Not to share!
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
Just offer $5 discount upon agreement to allow them to share your data.
now considered "non-sensitive"
what.the.fuck.
I am not your product. I am your customer. And don't call me a consumer. I have taken those CD coasters and fried them, baked, bar-b-que, and boiled them. They are still tough and chewy. I consume and transform steak and potatoes.
Fuck the FCC. My data is all my intellectual property anyway and I don't care what the government wants or says.
I was kinda hoping it would include the NSA, CIA, FBI, etc.
Golly, I was so disappointed to have my hopes dashed.
There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.