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American ISPS Are Now Fighting State Broadband Privacy Proposals (eff.org)

The EFF complains that "the very companies who spent millions of dollars lobbying in D.C. to repeal our federal broadband privacy rights are now fighting state attempts to protect consumers because they supposedly prefer a federal rule." The EFF urges Californians to phone their state senator ahead of a crucial back-to-back committee hearings on Tuesday. An anonymous reader writes: "Congress stole your online privacy. Let's seize it back," begins an email that the EFF is sending to California supporters. It warns that "Big Telecom has massive amounts of money to spend on an army of lobbyists. But if Internet users from across California unite with one voice, we can defeat their misinformation campaign... Don't let the big ISPs coopt our privacy."

The EFF's site points out that more than 83% of Americans support the privacy regulations which were repealed in March by the U.S. Congress, according to a new poll released last week. That's even more than the 77% of Americans who support keeping current net neutrality protections in place, according to the same poll. The EFF now hopes that California's newly-proposed legislation could become a model for privacy-protecting laws in other states. And back in Silicon Valley, the San Jose Mercury News writes that California "has an obligation to take a lead in establishing the basic privacy rights of consumers using the Internet. Beyond being the right thing to do for the whole country, building trust in tech products is an essential long-term business strategy for the industry that was born in this region."

The EFF has also compiled an interesting list of past instances where ISPs have already tried to exploit the personal information of their customers for profit.
Here's some of the highlights from the EFF's list:

4 of 74 comments (clear)

  1. Well of course by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Centralization works in favor of the plutocrats - only one person to bribe instead of 50.

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    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:Well of course by hord · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Theories never take into account human irrationality or the desire for inefficient outcomes. It's always assumed that pure, utilitarian goals are the norm and that actors are infallible or immediately held accountable for poor performance. Reality reflects none of these assumptions and any theory that only attempts to explain the world through simple maximums and minimums cannot be correct by definition because it complete erases individual preference and experience.

  2. Your data is a revenue stream by zifn4b · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course they would fight this. Selling your data is a revenue stream and it's very popular these days.

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    We'll make great pets
  3. Re:More EFF Scaremongering for Profit by chefmonkey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If this were true, they would have pushed for the privacy rules to be clarified rather than repealed.

    This is very much a case of "you shat that bed, now you get to lie in it." Zero sympathy for the carriers here.