Source |
Network World |
Identifiant |
348128 |
Date de publication |
2017-03-28 16:09:19 (vue: 2017-03-28 16:09:19) |
Titre |
US House votes to undo broadband privacy rules |
Texte |
The U.S. House of Representatives has followed the Senate in voting to repeal privacy rules that can prevent broadband providers from selling customers' internet-browsing histories and other data without their permission.On Tuesday, the House voted 215-205 to do away with the privacy rules that the U.S. Federal Communications Commission passed last year. The rules had yet to come into effect.They require broadband carriers to first obtain opt-in approval from customers before using and sharing their sensitive personal information, such as web browsing history, geo-location data and what applications they've used.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here |
Envoyé |
Oui |
Condensat |
205 215 applications approval article away before broadband browsing can carriers click come comment commission communications customers data effect federal first followed from full geo had has here histories history house information internet last leave location obtain opt other passed permission personal please prevent privacy providers read repeal representatives require rules selling senate sensitive sharing such they tuesday undo used using voted votes voting web what without year yet |
Tags |
|
Stories |
|
Notes |
|
Move |
|