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paularoid
08-04-2011, 02:27 PM
http://boingboing.net/2011/07/29/house-of-reps-passes-bill-requiring-your-isp-to-spy-on-every-click-and-keystroke-you-make-online-and-retain-for-12-months.html

House Committee passes bill requiring your ISP to spy on every click and keystroke you make online and retain for 12 months
Posted by Cory Doctorow on Friday, Jul 29th at 8:12am

Yesterday, the House Judiciary Committee voted 19-10 for H.R. 1981, a data-retention bill that will require your ISP to spy on everything you do online and save records of it for 12 months. California Rep Zoe Lofgren, one of the Democrats who opposed the bill, called it a "data bank of every digital act by every American" that would "let us find out where every single American visited Web sites." Here's commentary from the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who've got a form for contacting your rep to ask her or him to kill this:



The data retention mandate in this bill would treat every Internet user like a criminal and threaten the online privacy and free speech rights of every American, as lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have recognized. Requiring Internet companies to redesign and reconfigure their systems to facilitate government surveillance of Americans' expressive activities is simply un-American. Such a scheme would be as objectionable to our Founders as the requiring of licenses for printing presses or the banning of anonymous pamphlets. Today's vote is therefore very disappointing, but we are especially thankful to GOP Representatives Sensenbrenner, Issa and Chaffetz, who chose principle over party-line in opposing this dangerous tech mandate. We hope that bipartisan opposition will grow as the bill makes its way to the House floor and more lawmakers are educated about this anti-privacy, anti-free speech, anti-innovation proposal.


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http://lifehacker.com/5825746/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-internet-snooping-bill-and-what-you-can-do-about-it?utm_source=Lifehacker+Newsletter&utm_campaign=7b7079387f-UA-142218-1&utm_medium=email

What You Need to Know About the Internet Snooping Bill (and How You Can Protect Yourself)

http://lifehacker.com/5825746/what-you-need-to-know-about-the-internet-snooping-bill-and-what-you-can-do-about-it?utm_source=Lifehacker+Newsletter&utm_campaign=7b7079387f-UA-142218-1&utm_medium=email

richthelandlord
08-04-2011, 04:20 PM
And then they can't understand why the antisec movement is growing in strength day by day.

The revolution is coming, and it won't involve guns.

It'll involve mass civil disobedience online once 'Joe Public' wakes up and realises what the corporations who own the government are doing to your constitution... and that it matters.

DaveM
08-04-2011, 08:30 PM
I suspect this has been going on since the early days of the Internet. Steps have just been taken to make it "legal".

I make a point of visiting a few radical (keeping in mind that the definition changes every so often) web sites on a daily basis and also running a few searches for "loaded" keywords or phrases. I highly encourage all to do so. If sufficient "suspicious" information turns up on a regular process that there is no longer a sufficient human element available to do anything about them, this sort of thing will stop or at least become useless.

Meanwhile, we slouch toward revolution. Remembering always, that "revolution" in the 21st century generally consists of thinking for oneself.

paularoid
08-06-2011, 06:47 PM
Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Wendy Seltzer, Fellow at Princeton University's Center for Information Technology Policy, talks with Bloomberg Law's Lee Pacchia about a new approach between Internet Service Providers and content providers to curb online copyright infringement.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6KVOBYhvfOc&feature=player_embedded

DaveM
08-07-2011, 01:42 PM
I got a nastygram from my ISP some months ago accusing me of downloading a TV show and threatening termination of my service unless I stopped it, removed any downloading software from my machine, and also deleted "any and all files that may be copyrighted". As I was roughly 100 miles away behind the wheel of my car when the alleged downloading occurred, I remain mystified. However, I have not deleted and will not delete any files from my computer (which for the record do not include the aforementioned TV show). If my ISP has a problem with that, they have competitors now....will be happy to take my business elsewhere.