For a brief moment,Farmer’s Wife: Handle with Care! Part 1: Angel Advent the personal data you gave to Verizon, AT&T and Comcast was protected from their corporate whims. But last week, new Republican Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai suspended customer privacy protections put in place under the last FCC administration just last year.
SEE ALSO: Gmail finally doubles email attachment limit, but it means nothingThe protections required internet service providers to get customer permission before they sold off customer data including emails and browser history. The regulations also forced companies to put basic protections in place to make sure hackers can't waltz in and steal information such as social security numbers.
The industry railed against what they said was rampant government oversight, and Pai, who used to work as a lawyer for Verizon, was more than happy to swing things back in favor of the corporations.
Not everyone is happy about this, of course. “After finally gaining basic privacy protections for broadband providers last year, it’s outrageous that Chairman Pai will now remove the simple rule that internet service providers must take reasonable data security measures to protect their customers’ information," said Chris Lewis, vice president at Public Knowledge, a public interest group with a focus on the open internet, in a statement following the suspension. "This is not a controversial requirement."
Though the privacy regulations have only been suspended, they're not likely to make a comeback under Pai. The new head of the FCC has made it clear this is just the beginning of cutbacks he'd like to make on regulations favored by consumer interest groups. In fact, one of Pai's main goals appears to be the destruction of net neutrality—the idea that everyone should have equal access to what's available on the internet.
Topics AT&T Cybersecurity Privacy Verizon
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
The Best Gaming Concept Art of 2016
This rare Pokémon card just sold for more than $50,000
New 'League of Legends' champion Camille revealed
Notre Dame football team placed on probation following academic misconduct
Best Apple deal: Save $19 on AirTag 4
People are dreading Thanksgiving now more than ever
Donald Trump releases his first presidential message on YouTube
Stranger tips man $750 to help with trip back home
Best robot vacuum deal: Eufy Omni C20 robot vacuum and mop at record
People are completely horrified by this 'Hail Trump' video
Best Max streaming deal: Save 20% on annual subscriptions
Dumb dude tries to buy beer with a photocopied Rs 2,000 note in Mumbai, gets caught
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。