Pubdate: Sun, 09 Jul 2000 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2000 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: 101 North 4th Street, P.O. Box 798 Columbia, MO 65205 Feedback: http://www.showmenews.com/forms/formletter.htm Website: http://www.showmenews.com/ Author: Robert Scheer Note: Robert Scheer is a columnist with Creators Syndicate PRIVACY RIGHTS OF AMERICANS ON INTERNET NEED PROTECTION The recent admission by the White House drug office that it routinely dropped "cookies" onto the hard drives of those who accessed its Web site would have seemed, in more innocent times, like a friendly gesture. It's difficult to think of cookies as menacing. But in the brave new world of the Internet, where privacy has been sacrificed on the altar of a technologically fueled avarice, the cookies being referred to are more accurately thought of as creepy crawlers - small text files inserted surreptitiously into your computer to stalk your every movement on the Internet. In this case, the spying was done by a government agency, but it's a practice common to the way business -including The Los Angeles Times Web site - is conducted on the Internet. DoubleClick, the private company that did the Drug Enforcement Administration's snooping, routinely gathers such data for business use and already has profiles of the vital statistics, habits and tastes of 100 million Americans. The goal of the snooper industry is to use any means - cookies are one, Web bugs invisible to the naked eye embedded in the graphics of Web pages you visit are another - to pierce that shell of privacy that humans erect for their basic sense of security. Widespread paranoia can be expected to be the norm when the books you buy, the songs you hear, the medical advice you seek, your religious, political and social beliefs, and financial holdings become the stuff of common currency available to all who snoop, whether for profit or pursuits more perverse. Data on individuals have always been collected and used in marketing, but compiling and cross-filing that information was an arduous task. What is new is the alarming speed with which modern computers can profile the nation's population, combined with the Internet's ability to track consumer behavior instantly and to post that information throughout the world for all to exploit - as frightening a specter of social control as we have ever encountered. When the government drug agency wanted to know more about those who looked up information on drugs and lured them to its site, planting a cookie spy in the process, was that the better to inform or to gain evidence to arrest them later? To DoubleClick, it was a routine assignment in a world in which business even more than government feels it has an absolute right to invade your privacy for profit. And it's able to get away with this denigration of a privacy principle because the law has been bought and is on its side. We are the industrialized nation with the weakest response to this modern menace to our freedom on and off the Internet. The European Union, Canada and Australia have comprehensive and mandatory privacy protections in place and across all lines of business. But in this country, we sustain the illusion that the business community is capable of policing itself through voluntary standards of privacy protection. It isn't. The profit to be made from "mining" consumer data has proved just too lucrative for most businesses to ignore. The answer is obvious, but industry lobbyists have managed to prevent the passage of privacy legislation into law. Last year, a $300 million lobbying campaign by banks, insurance companies and stockbrokers ensured passage of the Financial Services Modernization Act, permitting them to affiliate and share intimate data contained in the massive records those companies had compiled on you. Lobbyists crushed all efforts by pro-consumer legislators to require a customer's permission, called "opt-in," before personal information could be shared. The Federal Trade Commission, the agency charged with protecting consumers, could solve all this with its proposed four-point program of consumer privacy protection that is as complete as it is simple: "Notice, Choice, Access and Security." The proposal would require anyone who gathers information on you to first notify you, give you the choice to "opt-in" and agree to have the information shared with others, give you access to the information to make certain it's accurate, and guarantee that the information will be held securely and will not be passed on to others unless you authorize them to have access to it. The FTC also added the need for enforcement to ensure that those who violate your privacy are punished just as they would be if they broke into your home. Unfortunately, the FTC has no power to impose this eminently sensible standard on an industry too greedy to comply voluntarily. Congress must face up to its responsibility and enact this consumer bill of rights to protect the privacy rights of Americans and to ban this spying on our citizens before there is no longer any privacy to protect. Robert Scheer is a columnist with Creators Syndicate. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens