Feds Just Itching To Regulate The Internet
from the careful-what-you-wish-for... dept
It looks like the folks in DC are looking for all sorts of ways to further regulate companies in Silicon Valley. Senator Chuck Schumer is pushing for the FTC to regulate how Facebook handles privacy issues, which has some legal experts scratching their heads noting that the FTC doesn't have the authority to do so:I have to say, in the words of my boyhood hero John McEnroe, "You cannot be serious." Schumer is asking the FTC to do his job for him. Surely Schumer -- who has been in Congress since 1991 and in the Senate since 1999 -- knows that the FTC's authority to regulate online privacy is on very shaky and politically charged ground. At a minimum, he knows that Congress has failed to act, despite calls for federal online privacy legislation for over a decade.Except... well... that may be changing. A few folks have sent over noting that "a little-known provision" in the currently debated financial overhaul bill would suddenly grant the FTC more power to regulate the internet. This comes just a few months after someone in the Commerce Department suggested that it was time for the current administration to "rescind" its "leave the internet alone" regulatory stance -- specifically including taking an active role when it comes to internet privacy (along with cybersecurity and copyright...).
If this is indeed happening, then it certainly shouldn't be a part of the financial regulatory reform bill, but should stand to be debated alone, so that there's an actual discussion of what's happening and why, and people can weigh in. As a part of a larger bill, there will likely be little if any public debate on a potentially massive policy change. Right now, what's being said is a bit scary. The article quotes FTC chair Jon Leibowitz saying:
"If we had a deterrent, a bigger stick to fine malefactors, that would be helpful."But there are pretty big questions about who should be considered malefactors and who should be allowed to fine them and for what. In the past, Leibowitz has sounded reasonable, but he's also been a bit quick to ask for additional regulatory powers in the past as well. And, for those of you worried about the question of getting power to regulate the internet over copyright, it is worth mentioning that Liebowitz worked at the MPAA for four years.
No matter what, this would be a pretty massive change in policy, and as such, it deserves a full and open debate -- something that seems increasingly rare when it comes to regulating the internet these days.
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Filed Under: chuck schumer, financial regulations, internet, jon leibowitz, larry strickling, regulations
Companies: facebook, ftc
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Indeed, it's like a Castle of Free Speech - or could be.
The more they want to 'regulate' it, the more they are looking to squash free speech.
But in reality - isn't that what most of this crap from the government has been lately?
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Yeah, but Chuck is getting scary in his dislike for free speech. Not all that surprising, seeing as he a CFR/Trilateralist stooge, but still not good....
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I've done a fair amount of reading on them as well....
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Thanks for the info, when I start respecting them I will capitalize it ...
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W. Averell Harriman (The Order, 1913)
H.P. Whitney (The Order, 1863)
Harlod Stanley (The Order, 1908)
McGeorge Bundy (The Order, 1940)
George H.W. Bush (The Order, 1949)
William F. Buckely (The Order, 1950)
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Funny that ... action leads to reaction. Its a constant in the universe and in human nature. What those wishing to implement a 1984 type system fail to comprehend is that people dont like when their lives are intruded upon. Constantly adding one more simple violation or perversion of the rules to a system, always, and with out fail, leads to the catastrophic failure of the system being manipulated. The internet is not one of these systems that can be manipulated. Every rule put in place has a work around. Ban a site in australia, use a proxy server in another nation. Someone listening in on your connection, use encryption. P2P now illegal, use a weblocker.
This game of whack-a-mole will, in the end, make the internet more secure for the end user and less secure for governments.
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opaque government
"No matter what, this would be a pretty massive change in policy, and as such, it deserves a full and open debate -- something that seems increasingly rare."
There....that's more consistent with the current "transparent" regime.
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:S
Guess the FBI's 'tap' (Carnivore incarnate) is not good enough.
If any reg. is passed it should be Pro Internet Autonomy / Net. Neutrality
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Re: :S
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Obama W. Bush
LOL, welcome to reality SUCKERS
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The magic negro..
And yes the gummermint will eventually try to lock down the internet and will lock up tens of thousands of people for some new class of crime.
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Later, the results got so spammy and crap-filled, I wouldn't dare click on any link in a Yahoo! targeted search. The ads also became heavy with sound, video, animation and flash, which bogged down my high-speed internet connection. Everyone else I knew was still using dial-up internet, and they dumped Yahoo as soon as Google became better known.
At one point, Yahoo was truly my internet link for everything. My first online auctions were through Yahoo - Ebay was around in those days but Yahoo did it better. They also had a free online photo storage service, which wasn't all that impressive in the days when digital cameras still cost thousands of dollars. I was buying books and other stuff via Yahoo shopping years before I bothered to check out Amazon. The ads on Yahoo became spammier, and the links in internet searches turned into useless junk. Amazon started their own online auction service (they don't have this service today), which was better than Yahoo's, and of course, Amazon became the king of online shopping, the first place I went for books and music.
And then I met Google. The first smart thing Google did - which seemed almost counterintuitive at the time - was stepping away from those flashing, video and sound-based target ads. The text-based click ads seemed so quaint, but when Google started, most people didn't have high-speed internet connections, and this was a brilliant move backwards that actually worked. Yahoo started charging for things Google was offering for free, including POP access (where you can read your email via Outlook or on a mobile device). On my very first smart phone I was able to easily d/l my Google email, back in 2002.
The branding of the G1 was another brilliant move on Google's part. If Yahoo had been on the forefront of this kind of package deal, maybe they might still be king of the internet world.
Today the only thing I use Yahoo for is to check my two email accounts I've had since 1994 - just to delete the spam. I do this once a month, just for old times sake.
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There, fixed it for you.
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SELFISH POLITICIANS
And I don't think this is a democrat or republican issue as both of them are in cahoots and just care about temporary power advantage.
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re: Feds Just Itching To Regulate The Internet
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if you think this is bad..
http://www.dailypaul.com/node/138051
hmm libowitz and liberman ,2 jews trying to take control of ,or give control of, to the government,the largest mega media medium on the planet
yea figures this guy was mpaa
lets not forget bout the bill purposed by these 2 douce bags
orin hatch and christopher dodd,COICA,(google it if dont know)
this plus the super dmca laws and the new eff laws being purposed,plus i live in mass and they are already going to force out of stste online retailers to collect taxes on all products sent to mass,not sure if its just for the slaes tax holiday of permenant but the fact that this involves the ftc makes me even more suspicious
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