Originally published: June 28, 2012
Last updated: June 28, 2012 - 6:17pm
The Federal Trade Commission is the lead agency in the government’s effort to ensure that companies do not cross the still-hazy border between acceptable and unacceptable data collection. But the agency’s ambitions are clipped by a lack of both funding and legal authority, reflecting a broader uncertainty about the role government should play in what is arguably America’s most promising new industry.
Companies like Facebook and Google are global brands for which data mining is at the core of present and future profits. How far should they go? Current laws provide few limits, mainly banning data collection from children under 13 and prohibiting the sale of personal medical data. Beyond that, it’s a digital mosh pit, and it’s likely to remain that way because more regulation tends to be regarded by politicians in both parties as meaning fewer jobs.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Rep Markey questions Justice Department on cellphone data collection
- OMB Issues Federal 'Cookies' Guidelines
- Do We Need a Data Court?
- A Casualty of the Technology Revolution: 'Locational Privacy'
- US public should know about government collection of phone, Internet records
- FTC, Commerce Welcome a New Privacy System for the Movement of Consumer Data Between the United States and Other Economies in the Asia-Pacific Region
- Data Gaps Could Hinder a Nationwide Traffic Information System, GAO Study Finds
- US, Mexico Sign Telecomm Agreement
- No mistaking how NSA story reporter feels
- PRISM data collection draws attention to consumer data tracking
- Boucher, Stearns Release Draft Privacy Bill
- Acting U.S. Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank Announces U.S. Participation in APEC's Cross Border Privacy Rules System
- Google wants to face single mega-lawsuit over WiFi snafu
- Majority Views NSA Phone Tracking as Acceptable Anti-terror Tactic
- National Coordinator Unveils New Health IT Dashboard
Location
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

