CastleCops, Internet Crime Fighters
Need help? Click here to register for free! Absolutely zero advertisements on this site!

Donation/Premium
spacer
block bottom
Security Central
spacer
· Home
· PIRT/Fried Phish
· MIRT
· SIRT
· Deutsch
· Wiki
· Newsletter
· O16/ActiveX
· CLSID List
· Contest2007
· Downloads
· Feedback (send)
· Forums
· HijackThis
· Hijacktrend
· LSPs
· My Downloads
· O18
· O20
· O21
· O22
· O23
· O9
· Premium
· Private Messages
· Proxomitron
· Reviews
· Search
· StartupList
· Stories Archive
· Submit News
· WsIRT
· Your Account
· Acceptable Use Policy
block bottom
spacer spacer
image The Legislature: Lawmakers Mull Tougher Spyware Bill image
SPAM
Lawmakers Mull Tougher Spyware Bill
By Caron Carlson

Legislators plan to launch early next year a revised version of anti-spyware legislation. Perhaps rivaled only by spam, privacy-invading software, or spyware, has pushed lawmakers to consider harsher legislation.

Early next year, legislators, including U.S. Reps. Mary Bono, R-Calif., and Edolphus Towns, D-N.Y., plan to launch a revised version of anti-spyware legislation known as the SPI (Safeguard against Privacy Invasions) Act. Lawmakers are working with industry and the privacy rights community to refine the bill to avoid stunting innovation or leaving loopholes, sources with both camps said.

We're concerned that security updates could be considered advertising under the bill, said Morgan Reed, vice president for public affairs at the Association for Competitive Technology, in Washington. In a lot of ways, spyware isn't that different from a product that goes out, retrieves information and brings it back to the end user.

The Center for Democracy and Technology is seeking more comprehensive privacy legislation, ideally establishing base-line rules that treat all applications the same, said Ari Schwartz, associate director of the CDT, also in Washington. The CDT plans to duplicate some of the most egregious cases and file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission.

Not only is spyware a tool for personal identity theft, but it's also a growing threat to businesses, according to officials at Websense Inc., in San Diego. Malicious snoopware applications can capture passwords and confidential information through such things as keystroke loggers and remote microphones; less insidious forms of spyware can put corporations in violation of federal privacy laws.

Users at a company might feel it is in their personal interest to download something that's spyware, but that might be against the corporate policy or IT policy, said Mike Newman, vice president and general counsel at Websense. Security at the enterprise level is designed to keep things from coming in [rather than going out].

Of the nearly 16 million desktops at Websense's 20,000 customer organizations, 30 to 40 percent are infected with spyware, said Kian Saneii, vice president of business development at Websense.


Source: eWeek
Posted on Thursday, 27 November 2003 @ 04:45:00 UTC by phoenix22 (888 reads)
[ Trackback ]
image

"The Legislature: Lawmakers Mull Tougher Spyware Bill" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
Threshold
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register
 
Login
spacer
Nickname

Password

Security Code: Type Security Code: Usage signifies AUP acceptance
· New User? · Click here to create a registered account.
block bottom
Related Links
spacer
· del.icio.us!
· digg it!
· reddit!
· TrackBack (0)
· HotScripts
· W3 Consortium
· Spam Cop
· More about SPAM
· News by phoenix22


Most read story about SPAM:
Messenger Pop-up Spam makes us sick

block bottom
Article Rating
spacer
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Bad
Regular
Good
Very Good
Excellent


block bottom
Options
spacer

Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

block bottom
spacer spacer