Congress Addresses Spyware!

Discussion in 'Malware Help (A Specialist Will Reply)' started by ANHEDONIC, May 24, 2005.

  1. ANHEDONIC

    ANHEDONIC Will Title For Food

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20050524/pl_nm/tech_spyware_dc


    "

    By Andy Sullivan Tue May 24, 1:20 AM ET

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives on Monday voted to establish new penalties for purveyors of Internet "spyware" that disables users' computers and secretly monitors their activities.
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    By overwhelming majorities, the House passed two bills that stiffen jail sentences and establish multimillion-dollar fines for those who use secret surveillance programs to steal credit-card numbers, sell software or commit other crimes.

    Spyware has emerged as a major headache for computer users over the last several years.

    It can sap computing power, crash machines and bury users under a blizzard of unwanted ads. Scam artists use spyware to capture passwords, account numbers and other sensitive data.

    Spyware can end up on users' computers through a virus or when they download games or other free programs off the Internet.

    "Consumers have a right to know and have a right to decide who has access to their highly personal information that spyware can collect," said California Republican Rep. Mary Bono (news, bio, voting record), who sponsored one of the bills.

    The bills prohibit a number of practices often associated with spyware, such as reprograming the start page on a user's Web browser, logging keystrokes to capture passwords and other sensitive data, or launching pop-up ads that can't be closed without shutting down the computer.

    The practice known as "phishing" -- in which scam artists pose as banks or other businesses in an attempt to trick consumers into divulging account information -- would also be outlawed.

    The House voted 395 to 1 to impose jail sentences of up to 2 years. Violators could face fines up to $3 million per incident. Those who use spyware to commit other crimes, such as identity theft, could have an additional 5 years tacked on to their sentences.

    Both bills passed the House last year but the Senate adjourned before taking action. Similar legislation has been introduced in the Senate this year.

    Most spyware practices are already illegal under deceptive-business laws but federal and state law enforcers have only sued two spyware purveyors so far, one expert said.

    "We know that there are literally hundreds of these cases out there. Unless there's a push for enforcement, passing a new law is really only going to help after the fact," said Ari Schwartz, associate director at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a consumer-advocacy group.

    The bill gives the
    Justice Department an additional $10 million per year through 2009 to fight spyware."
     
  2. Major Attitude

    Major Attitude Co-Owner MajorGeeks.Com Staff Member

    Awesome! It worked so well for spam, I guess spyware will be gone in weeks. What a bunch of morons, we should stop them from legislating ANYTHING relating to computers because they have no jurisdiction as a lot of troubles like spyware, viruses, even gambling are done from overseas or in countries where the laws are non-existant or lax. If they wanted to make a difference, they need to work out deals with these countries one at a time. Trust me, the end game here is to tax the internet and purchases to line their wallets even more and they will have actually accomplished nothing except charging you more taxes.
     
  3. jeff6303j

    jeff6303j Private E-2

    agreed, never gonna work. It will just move all componies to international countries outside our boarders, and we still stuck w/ crap :p
     
  4. Major Attitude

    Major Attitude Co-Owner MajorGeeks.Com Staff Member

    How about those of us who have a permit, but not a concealed carry? :)
     
  5. Major Attitude

    Major Attitude Co-Owner MajorGeeks.Com Staff Member

    Great, the forever in beta program with a Tea Timer thats always broken.
     
  6. Shadow_Puter_Dude

    Shadow_Puter_Dude MG Authorized Malware Fighter

    I don't maybe 10 or so years ago when the term "Information Super Highway" was the catch phrase of the day, one of our illustrious Congressman or maybe it was a Senator asked in all seriousness if "You could get a DUI on the Information Super Highway." Told me everything I needed to know about their understanding of computers, and the internet.
     
  7. ANHEDONIC

    ANHEDONIC Will Title For Food

    well at least it's a step in the right direction... i'm sure there have to be some U.S. based spyware companies that will be affected by this... hopefully this will act as a precedent and influence other countries into adopting similar harsh sanctions against spyware companies...
     

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