Chris Hoofnagle
Chris Hoofnagle
Chris Jay Hoofnagle is an American professor at the University of California, Berkeley who teaches information privacy law, computer crime law, regulation of online privacy, and internet law. Hoofnagle has made notable contributions to the privacy literature through a set of surveys that establish that most Americans prefer not to be targeted online for advertising and that, despite claims to the contrary, young people care about privacy and take actions to protect it. Hoofnagle is the author of Federal Trade...
cases court order phone privacy problem sue
The problem with privacy cases is that most privacy plaintiffs have to give up their privacy. In order to sue you have to show up in court and show that they used your phone records.
arguing creating id national
We're arguing that it is creating a national ID system.
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The practice will never completely disappear, but we think as it gets more attention, the number of sites doing it will be on the decline.
activities both business candidates clearly detailed gotten illegal information likely limit order parties personal political practices themselves using
In the political field, candidates and parties have gotten away with a lot of practices that would clearly be illegal if a business did them. Both parties are using detailed databases of personal information that are completely unregulated. And they're not likely to be regulated, because the politicians themselves would have to limit their activities in order to do so.
attach identity send sign
Because you have to sign in to use it, they can attach your identity to anything you send through that pipe.
computer crack easier fool giving information
It's just a lot easier to fool someone into giving you this information than to actually crack into a computer system.
credit federal step
It's the first step to federal recognition of credit freezes.
doctor keeps records system totally
No system is totally secure. If you want privacy, see a doctor who keeps his records in his office.
existing inadequate personal practices stop trade
Existing carrier practices and regulations are inadequate to stop this trade in personal information.
analyze content invites law level national secondary technology whether
A technology that can analyze content at that level invites secondary uses, whether it's law enforcement or national security.
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The Do Not Call registry is a great success, but a couple of problems exist. The main loophole is the 'established business' clause. If you go to Starbucks for coffee, technically Starbucks can call you for 18 months.
call couple great main problems starbucks
The Do Not Call registry is a great success, but a couple of problems exist, ... The main loophole is the 'established business' clause. If you go to Starbucks for coffee, technically Starbucks can call you for 18 months.
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The lawsuits are great. But a related difficulty here is that it's too easy to get telephone records.
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It clearly can be dangerous for some people to have this information. Imagine how costly exposure of these records could be for a business executive whose list of calls is obtained by a competitor. There can be real harm.