Law
New laws and the legal issues surroinding them.

 


















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  Thursday, March 15, 2007


JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Residents tired of getting junk ads in the mail could get a slight reprieve after action by the Senate on Wednesday night.

The Department of Revenue last year began sending out advertisements along with license plate renewal notices. The state contracted with a company to handle the printing of vehicle registration notices in exchange for the right to sell and insert commercial ads in the packets. Senate Transportation Committee chairman Bill Stouffer, R-Napton, said the decision saves the state about $750,000.

Missouri signed up partly because of the savings and partly in response to privacy concerns after it began mailing renewal notices on postcards in another budget-cutting move, the Revenue Department said at the time.

The Senate was debating a wide-ranging bill to change motor vehicle laws, and Sen. Tim Green, D-St. Louis, offered an amendment preventing the state from including ads in the vehicle renewal notices.

"The state has become a marketing agent," Green said. "It's just not the right of the state to use a requirement you have to fulfill to sell a product."


3:22:18 PM    

Chertoff: Security and privacy not at odds. Calling privacy groups "Luddites," DHS head Michael Chertoff defends the Real I.D. Act. He claims that the data-chipped drivers licenses, which will be linked to a numbers of databases around the country, will actually protect privacy  Editor:And down is up, black is white, and I have a bridge I'd like to sell you.

[...]

The head of the Department of Homeland Security on Thursday downplayed privacy concerns raised by the government's efforts to create standardized, data-chipped drivers licenses across the country.

The same technology that makes information on identification cards more reliable can also protect privacy, DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff said during a speech to the Northern Virginia Technology Council. "It's my contention that properly used technology ... actually protects privacy," he said. "We should not allow folks to be captivated by the argument that every time we do something with a computer, it invades privacy."

Chertoff was referring to privacy concerns surrounding the Real ID Act, a law passed by Congress in 2005 that would require states to create machine-readable ID cards containing the name of the holder, the data of birth, a digital photograph and other information.

Privacy groups, including the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), have said that the DHS hasn't come up with rules on how the information on the cards should be protected. DHS has made only "vague" plans for card security and for restricting which state motor vehicle agency employees would have access to the information, EPIC says.

"On security and privacy standards for the card, state motor vehicle facilities, and the personal data and documents collected in state motor vehicle databases, DHS shows little interest," EPIC says on its Web site.

But Chertoff said those raising privacy concerns about the use of IT in the U.S. government's domestic security efforts create a false tension between security and privacy. "This kind of Luddite attitude ... is exactly wrong," he said. "Security and privacy are very much the same type of value. I don't think they're mutually exclusive, they're mutually reinforced."

Chertoff also talked about how DHS is using IT. Technology plays a part in nearly all the agency's efforts, including machines that read fingerprints at border crossings, databases that link law enforcement investigations and scanning technologies for containers coming into the U.S.

[Computerworld Privacy News]
3:12:44 PM    

Spyware Legislation Could Aid Enforcement, CDT Testifies. An anti-spyware measure pending in Congress contains important provisions that could strengthen enforcement against spyware scammers, but broad consumer privacy legislation is still needed to address the larger issues associated with spyware, CDT Deputy Director Ari Schwartz told a congressional panel today. Testifying before the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Commerce Trade and Consumer Protection, Schwartz applauded language in the Spy Act (H.R. 964) that bolsters the Federal Trade Commission's enforcement capabilities. But Schwartz also noted that the longtime practice of addressing privacy concerns sector-by-sector, rather than as part of a broader initiative would not get to the root of the problem. [Center for Democracy and Technology]
2:45:50 PM    


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