From the dark side of sourcing…

ÂÂ
Representative Joe Barton, the committee chairman, is one of the first Republicans getting involved in the privacy issue. The Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) first filed a complaint to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission about the practice in July, and the privacy advocacy organization says it has identified 40 Web sites that sell telephone records, particularly incoming or outgoing calls from mobile phones, and other personal information without the owners’ consent.
“The principle behind all this is simple and straightforward: Our private lives belong to us, not to either the telephone company or the con artists,” Barton said in a statement.
Barton, from Texas, said he plans to offer a bill that would make it illegal to impersonate a customer in an effort to gain access to telephone records. The practice, called pretexting, is illegal when used to gain financial records, but not when going after phone records, Barton said in a statement.
“I mean to make it very illegal,” Barton added. “It is also possible because telephone companies may not be doing enough to protect consumer privacy, and I will make it clear that companies owe their customers a duty to privacy and need to devise new ways to foil pretexters.”
Several telephone carriers have supported enforcement actions against companies that sell phone records. But some carriers have opposed regulations that would require them to improve security standards, EPIC said. For example, SBC — now called AT&T Inc. — filed comments with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) saying it has an extensive internal security policy, but it opposed a government mandate. A mandate would become obsolete quickly, AT&T said.
“Mandated security measures … are not the solution,” AT&T said in its FCC filing. “Fraudsters are inventive and always try to stay one step ahead. As soon as the carriers implement mandated security measures, these fraudsters will immediately try to figure out a way around them.”
In July, Verizon Wireless Inc. filed a lawsuit against a group of companies it accused of selling mobile phone records.
READ: Chairman promises bill prohibiting sale of phone logs
Nothing says "Thanks for posting this Jim!" like Starbucks Coffee. Click here to buy me a cup (or two).If you enjoyed this post, please consider to leave a comment or subscribe to the feed and get future articles delivered to your feed reader.




Jim,
wowsie… the heat is on for sure. Colorado and Utah passed this bill in their suprememe courts last year. NV has had it for a while, and Ca is following with many other states..
Spector and 7 other Senators have bills on the Floor some in Second stage to regulate the industry (yes recruiting and Employment was mentioned)..
People, this isn’t about Crazy KarenM being Right or wrong..
Instead maybe - let us look at Is it time we start to smell the coffee and Say YES something is abrewing..
Now is the time we should be banning togethor and say what now.. what is the best approach….