Senate voted to allow selling your browser history to advertisers
The U.S. Senate voted on Thursday to allow service providers to
sell private web browsing data to third parties, namely advertisers.
Under Democratic control the Senate voted to apply new Federal
Communications Commission rules to internet service providers (ISPs)
last October but the proposal to eliminate them has now passed the
Senate 50-48.
Once the ruling is passed, after a Republican majority in the House
votes for it, your ISP can sell your private web browsing data to third
parties without seeking acceptance from either the consumer or the
courts. Usually ISPs would sell the data to advertisers or ad networks
for them to target you more efficiently.
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) called what seems to be an inevitable reversal of the FCC rules a "crushing loss for online privacy". If the House of Representatives pass the reversal it can be only be stopped by a President's veto. Will Trump be worried about privacy of the citizens in this case? I guess we'll have to wait and see.
Ars Technica has released a new guide on explaining how this new ruling might affect you and in what ways you could fight it. This includes using HTTPS, VPN services or Tor.
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) called what seems to be an inevitable reversal of the FCC rules a "crushing loss for online privacy". If the House of Representatives pass the reversal it can be only be stopped by a President's veto. Will Trump be worried about privacy of the citizens in this case? I guess we'll have to wait and see.
Ars Technica has released a new guide on explaining how this new ruling might affect you and in what ways you could fight it. This includes using HTTPS, VPN services or Tor.
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