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Home » CONSUMER ISSUES » Privacy Protection
Silicon Valley readies for privacy battle
by Mike Swift, San Jose Mercury News
June 15th, 2010
In the wake of a series of privacy missteps by Google, Facebook and other companies, a growing chorus on Capitol Hill is calling for major online privacy legislation and Silicon Valley companies are girding for the battle.
Unfriendly Facebook
by Editorial, San Francisco Chronicle
May 20th, 2010
It's ironic that Facebook initially branded itself as the "safe" choice for people who wanted to stay in touch...After an endless series of changes to its privacy policy very little about Facebook seems safe at all.
PG&E details technical problems with SmartMeters
by Dana Hull , San Jose Mercury News
April 27th, 2010
"...PG&E's basic message has been 'We are 100 percent right, and our customers are 100 percent wrong,'" said Mark Toney...of...TURN. "Today they acknowledged some widespread technology problems, which is what they should have done in the first place."
The fight against full-body scanners at airports
by David G. Savage, Los Angeles Times
January 13th, 2010
"We continue to think the American people are being sold a bill of goods with these body scanners. Giving the government the authority to scrutinize your body is a tremendous invasion of privacy, and the benefits are questionable," said Jay Stanley, a privacy expert in the ACLU's Washington office.
Experts hack new power meters
by Eric Wolff, North County Times
As California's utilities roll out millions of "smart meters" in the coming years, they're creating, for the first time, the possibility that the electricity infrastructure could be hacked through a home...
CFC Releases 2009 Interim Scorecard for California Legislators
by Consumer Federation of California
August 10th, 2009
CFC's Interim Consumer Scorecard provides a snapshot of lawmakers' votes on several key consumer protection bills. The scorecard includes votes cast before the legislature adjourned for the summer recess.
Bank clients' privacy shield survives challenge
by Bob Egelko, San Francisco Chronicle
June 30th, 2009
A California law that lets customers keep banks from sharing information with affiliated companies about their savings accounts and buying habits survived a final legal challenge Monday...The California privacy law, the broadest of its kind in the nation, allows customers to veto a bank's attempt to share certain types of information with affiliated companies.
The audacity of American bankers
by John Diaz, San Francisco Chronicle
March 15th, 2009
It's bad enough that the American banking industry is getting trillions of dollars in taxpayer relief for its colossal misjudgments...the industry is pressing the U.S. Supreme Court to scuttle a landmark California law that allows consumers to control the use of their personal financial information.
California's data breach law may get an update
by Robert McMillan, Networld
March 9th, 2009
Simitian...has proposed a new bill, SB 20, that would spell out what companies must tell customers in their data breach letters and require that breaches affecting more than 500 people be reported to the state's attorney general.
Privacy groups ask Obama for stronger FTC
by Stephanie Condon , CNET News
December 17th, 2008
About a dozen leading privacy and consumer groups met with members of President-elect Barack Obama's transition team Tuesday to discuss the Federal Trade Commission's role in protecting consumer privacy.
California Makes It a Crime to 'skim' RFID Tags
by Nancy Gohring, PC World
This week, California became the second state to pass a law making it illegal to steal data from RFID (radio frequency identification) cards. The law sets a penalty that includes a maximum fine of US$1,500 and up to a year in prison...
Part of state's financial privacy law upheld
by Bob Egelko, Chronicle Staff Writer
September 5th, 2008
A federal appeals court reinstated part of California's financial privacy law Thursday, allowing consumers to prevent banks from sharing information with affiliated companies about a customer's savings account or buying habits.
Drug reminder bill raises privacy concerns
by Aurelio Rojas , Sacramento Bee
June 11th, 2008
Privacy concerns have been raised about a bill moving through the California Legislature that would let pharmacies partner with drug companies to send out letters reminding patients to refill their prescriptions.
Why your privacy still comes at a cost
by David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times
June 4th, 2008
In case you missed it, your elected representatives bowed to intense pressure from phone companies last week and voted to allow them to keep charging whatever they want to protect your privacy.
California Senate Approves Bill To Outlaw Skimming RFID Tags
by K.C. Jones , Information Week
March 1st, 2008
The California State Senate voted to make it a crime to skim information stored on RFID tags. The Senate voted 36 to 3 to pass the bill, introduced by State Sen. Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto). The bill, SB 31, goes to the California State Assembly.
House Leaves Surveillance Law to Expire
by CARL HULSE, New York Times
February 15th, 2008
The House broke for a week¿s recess Thursday without renewing terrorist surveillance authority demanded by President Bush, leading him to warn of risky intelligence gaps while Democrats accused him of reckless fear mongering.
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