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By John Borland
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 18, 2004 12:46:00 AM

A U.S. House subcommittee approved a bill on Thursday that would regulate computer "spyware," forcing software makers to notify consumers before installing some kinds of monitoring programs on their PCs.

The bill, introduced by California Republican Mary Bono and New York Democrat Ed Towns, is one of several targeting the kinds of annoying or potentially dangerous applications known as "spyware," "adware" or "malware."

"We are one step closer to restoring safety, confidence and control to consumers when using their own computers," Bono said following the bill's approval by the House Energy and Commerce Committee's Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection.

The issue of spyware has been building slowly over several years, peaking this session with several bills introduced in Congress and in a handful of state legislatures around the country.

Many lawmakers are eager to do something about an issue that has angered constituents, many of whom complain bitterly about incessant pop-up advertisements triggered by adware programs, or about the potential of software spying on their online actions.

Big companies are fearful that any legislation passed might inadvertently affect the operation of legitimate software, and are advocating against state-level laws.

Bono and Towns' H.R. 2929, now renamed the "Securely Protect Yourself Against Cyber Trespass Act," was amended in committee to bar practices such as key logging--a way of spying on computer users' actions by recording every stroke on the keyboard--and the display of advertisements that can not be closed.

Bono and Towns' bill will be heard next by the full House Energy and Commerce Committee. A similar bill has been introduced in the U.S. Senate, and is currently being reviewed by the Commerce Committee there.

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  • Most Recent of 18 Talkback(s)
Found out the real story
The Head family was sued and settled because they ran (well controlled) several small businesses in california that they used to route spam messages through. He technically ran his business out of hi... (Read the rest)
Posted by: tamuhockey Posted on: 06/22/04 You are currently: Logged In as: a Guest  | Login | Terms of Use
yes, but things that call home  V Sanders | 06/18/04
So ... use something that doesn't call home  Mike Rotch | 06/18/04
The choice of not using them  rapson | 06/18/04
does this include DVR's  V Sanders | 06/18/04
and what about two way digital cable  V Sanders | 06/18/04
i would think tht..  ryusen | 06/18/04
So will they make Microsoft change WinXP?  Xunil_Sierutuf | 06/18/04
"We are one step closer to restoring safety"  BitTwiddler | 06/18/04
Great Post!!! :o)  Mike Rotch | 06/18/04
Right on the money  Hanover Phist | 06/18/04
I agree I more ways than 1  ParadigmOdyssey | 06/18/04
What we Need Is a Privacy Law  ParadigmOdyssey | 06/18/04
Laws can't work, don't be stupid  tamuhockey | 06/21/04
Don't be so sure  Oreamnos_americanus | 06/21/04
Any more info?  tamuhockey | 06/22/04
Found out the real story  tamuhockey | 06/22/04
Giggle - Snicker - Snort  tbbrickster_z | 06/18/04
Spyware  samp_z | 06/18/04

What do you think?

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