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Lawmakers Plan Privacy Measure Early Next Year

Kheldar   on 13 October 2001 - 16:04 · no comments & 104 views

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers said on Friday they plan to introduce legislation early next year that would provide basic privacy protections for Web surfers without burdening Internet businesses struggling in a tough business climate.

The measure is designed to set a basic standard of protection for the personal information of visitors to commercial Web sites, and to reduce fears among businesses that they could face a patchwork of conflicting state laws.

"We plan to come up with what we think is finite general information privacy, online and offline, and then we plan to offer the bill, get bipartisan support and hope the president will sign it," Rep. Cliff Stearns, a Florida Republican who is spearheading the effort, told a news conference.

The measure being developed would preempt state privacy laws and leave enforcement up to the Federal Trade Commission, preventing companies from private suits for intentional or unintentional violations, according to an outline provided by Stearns.

The measure would require companies to provide notice of where a consumer can obtain a privacy statement at the first opportunity for data collection, although small companies could be exempt, the outline said.

It would also afford the consumer the chance to limit the sale or disclosure of their personal information to a third party, Stearns said.

News source: reuters.com


Public health investigators were contacting Microsoft employees to determine who might have handled the letter, which contained pornographic material

Gov. Kenny Guinn confirmed the letter had been sent to the Microsoft Licensing Inc. office. He said Microsoft officials contacted health officials Wednesday.

Todd said the country health department and the FBI (news - web sites) were involved in the investigation, which began after one company employee got a returned letter that ``just didn't look right.''

The governor said Microsoft had sent a check in the letter to an unidentified vendor in Malaysia. The letter had been opened and returned to Microsoft, including the check. Pornographic material also was included. The contents appeared to have been moistened and dried, officials said.

Todd said the initial test on the letter's contents ``got a number of things growing, including bacillus, the genus to which anthrax belongs.'' He said that test produced results ``consistent with it being anthrax.''

The subsequent test was more specific to anthrax, but came back negative, officials said. The third test will use another approach to specifically look for anthrax, they said.

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