Category «Privacy»

TIA Losing Ground

According to this AP article, House Speaker Dennis Hastert commented on the TIA program via his spokesman, Pete Jeffries, that its fate “is questionable,” setting the stage for what appears to be an uncertain road ahead for funding of the controversial program when it reaches the conference committee in February.

Subjects: Congress, Privacy

Debut of the Alliance for Digital Progress

A new lobbying organization, the Alliance for Digital Progress, representing industry and advocacy groups, launched their website and announced their agenda yesterday via a press release and press conference presented by President Fred McClure. The group is “opposed to government-designed and mandated technology to solve the problem of digital piracy,” and seeks to create acceptable …

Subjects: Digital Rights, Privacy

More Opposition to TIA

The Association for Computing Machinery’s U.S. Public Policy Committee issued a press release “recommending a rigorous independent review of the U.S. Government’s Total Information Awareness (TIA) program.” The organization also issued a copy of a letter they sent to the Armed Services Committee, on behalf of their membership of 70,000 computer scientists, stating in part: …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, E-Government, Internet, Privacy

Diplomat States Patriot Act Not a Threat to Constitutional Rights

Ambassador David Johnson, U.S. permanent representative to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) issued a statement in response to growing international concerns that U.S. anti-terrorism legislation such as the Patriot Act was negatively impacting the exercise of civil liberties. He stated, “The First Amendment rights of libraries, and bookstores and their patrons, …

Subjects: Libraries, Patriot Act, Privacy

EU Coalition Opposes Data Retention

This recommendation to the Council of the European Union from 38 Members of Parliament from 7 political groups, conveys the groups opposition to the EU Data Directive which permits data mining, document retention and electronic surveillance programs involving citizens. The group states that these actions are “a violation of art. 8 of the European Court …

Subjects: EU Data Protection, Privacy

RIAA Wins Battle With Verizon Over Customer Data

Judge John D. Bates, United States District Court for the District of Columbia, has ruled in favor of RIAA in their high profile case against Verizon to compel the ISP to provide personal data on customers’ use and online distribution of music obtained using P2P downloading applications. See Recording Industry of America v. Verizon Internet …

Subjects: Digital Rights, E-Commerce, Internet, Privacy

TIA Activities Under Continued Scrutiny

Via AP, this article indicates that Department of Defense Inspector General Joseph E. Schmitz communicated with Sen. Charles Grassley about an audit on a joint FBI-Pentagon plan to expand the TIA data mining program. The Senator stated in a letter to Attorney General Ashcroft, “I am very concerned that DOJ and the FBI may have …

Subjects: Privacy

Privacy Groups Press For Surveillance Docs from DOJ

As a result of their October 2002 FOI lawsuit, EPIC and the ACLU obtained over 200 documents related to DOJ surveillance activities undertaken subsequent to the Patriot Act. However, this ACLU press release indicates that the documents were so heavily redacted as to provide little if any relevant information. Examples of these documents are available …

Subjects: Patriot Act, Privacy

Politicians and Spam

The current issue of the Duke Law and Technology Report (2003 Duke L. & Tech. Rev. 0001), has an article by Mark Sweet, Political E-mail: Protected Speech or Unwelcome Spam? This link comes via politechbot.com, where Declan McCullagh has been discussing Sen. Joseph Lieberman’s use of bulk e-mail to promote his recently announced 2004 Presidential …

Subjects: E-Mail, Internet, Privacy