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February 9, 2012

Congress Wants Answers on Carrier IQ Privacy Issues

A team of tech-savvy lawmakers is requesting a Carrier IQ Congressional hearing about potential privacy risks facing millions of U.S. smartphone users. The call for a Carrier IQ hearing follows weeks of online and offline debate about Carrier IQ and…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Andrew Chow, JD

August 2, 2011

Google Domination: How Big Is Too Big On the Internet?

Filed under: Eric Sinrod,antitrust,senate — Tags: , , — Adam Ramirez @ 5:46 am

FindLaw columnist Eric Sinrod writes regularly in this section on legal developments surrounding technology and the internet. Once upon a time, at the dawn of the commercial Internet age, people regularly gained accessed to the Web via AOL, CompuServe,…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Adam Ramirez

June 15, 2011

DUI Checkpoint Apps Banned by Apple, not Google

Filed under: Mobile Phones / Smartphones,app,apple,appstore,duiapps,freespeech — Tags: , , — Stephanie Rabiner @ 5:43 am

Apple partially ceded to pressure by Senators Chuck Schumer and Harry Reid last week, agreeing to carefully scrutinize and ban future DUI apps from its App Store if found to encourage and enable drunk driving. This move leaves Google as…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Stephanie Rabiner

DUI Checkpoint Apps Banned by Apple, not Google

Filed under: Mobile Phones / Smartphones,apple,appstore,duiapps,freespeech — Tags: , , — Stephanie Rabiner @ 5:43 am

Apple partially ceded to pressure by Senators Chuck Schumer and Harry Reid last week, agreeing to carefully scrutinize and ban future DUI apps from its App Store if found to encourage and enable drunk driving. This move leaves Google as…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Stephanie Rabiner

May 3, 2011

Anti-Spam Law Governs Social Media Pages, Court Rules

Filed under: Eric Sinrod,antispam,canspam,email,socialmedia — Tags: , — Adam Ramirez @ 5:50 am

FindLaw columnist Eric Sinrod writes regularly in this section on legal developments surrounding technology and the internet. Once upon a time, and without a federal law in place, more than half of the states enacted their own laws to…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Adam Ramirez

March 23, 2011

‘Do Not Track Me’ Bill Would Block Internet Spying

Filed under: Internet,Internet & Online Privacy,bill,donottrackme,spying — Tags: , — Jason Beahm @ 6:47 am

The Onion recently joked that Congress forgot how to pass a law, but to the contrary, “Do Not Track Me” legislation was introduced today by Rep. Jackie Speier. The bill is designed to allow consumers to block unwanted tracking of…

Continue reading this article, and get more legal technology news and information, at FindLaw.com.

Technologist Jason Beahm

April 10, 2008

Kicking Big Brother in the Ankles

Filed under: privacy — Tags: , , , — dbatterman @ 1:37 pm

     After my post about privacy yesterday, it’s nice to know that there are entrepreneurs out there who seek to make sure that our government—which generally has little problem with how private industry treats and shares our personal information—is as transparent as possible when it comes to its own information.  According to a story in the Washington Post, congressional staffers are outraged by a website, LegiStorm, which posts public information about the financial affairs of senior congressional staffers.       

     Under federal law, congressional staff members who earn more than $110,000 per year are required to file disclosure forms which list, among other things, their detailed financial holdings.  Why shouldn’t such staffers be subject to almost as much scrutiny as their bosses?  If they have the ear of some of the most powerful politicians in the world and serve as their handlers and gatekeepers, it only seems fair that the voters know if their financial interests may perhaps be influencing how their bosses vote on certain issues.  (Like issues involving privacy, for example.)  We sometimes forget that behind any politician is a group of people who write these influential laws.     

     And therein lies the irony:  Congress wrote these disclosure laws to help prevent public corruption and instill a sense of confidence in our public officials.  All staffers are obviously aware of them when they took their jobs.  So disclosure doesn’t seem to be the issue—it is the law, after all—but the dissemination that’s problematic.  Oh well, welcome to the internet age.  If congressional staffers really live in that much of a bubble where they think that they’re somehow exempt from close scrutiny in these politically polarizing times, then perhaps they’re as out of touch as some of the people they advise.         

     But the staffers have some legitimate concerns as well.  Some of the documents, which have since been redacted by the site, reportedly contained social security and bank account numbers.  Given the prevalence and ease of identity theft, this information obviously has to be removed prior to posting.  And if there is an instance of identity theft that can actually be traced back to the site (which is very unlikely), the site could conceivably be held liable.  There is such a thing as being too transparent.  While I may want to know if a staff member for a senator on the Finance Committee has large holdings in Fidelity, I don’t need to know the account numbers.  And we don’t want to dissuade smart, talented, and motivated people from joining the government if every conceivable detail of their financial lives is made public and widely disseminated.  Beyond these obvious concerns, however, sites like LegiStorm may help to keep Big Brother from getting too big . . . at least for a little while.

   
   
 

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