Lee Tien
Lee Tien
customers expect follow law private protect reasonably trusted
AT&T's customers reasonably expect that their communications are private and have long trusted AT&T to follow the law and protect that privacy.
customers expect follow law private protect reasonably trusted
AT&T customers reasonably expect that their communications are private and have long trusted AT&T to follow the law and protect their privacy.
accused anybody bottom careful computer laws line security
I think the bottom line is that anybody that does disclosures of security vulnerabilities has to be very careful (so as to) not be accused of being a hacker. The computer trespass laws are very, very tricky.
attempt breaking capability decision exclude functions provided replace service stretched
The FCC's overreach is an attempt to overrule Congress's decision to exclude 'information services,' ... By mandating backdoors in any service that has the capability to replace functions provided by a telephone, the FCC has stretched the statute to the breaking point.
bad design free government less privacy simply speech
It's simply a very bad idea for privacy and for free speech for the government to design any technology, much less the Internet, to be surveillance-friendly.
act affect available bad commission concerns credit data direct election eligible evidence factor federal forcing history id inadequate instantly law licenses likelihood link monitor mortgage national personal range shown states turns tying voter voting wide
Tying voter ID requirements to the REAL ID Act is bad for voting and for privacy, ... There's scant evidence that inadequate voter ID is a factor in election fraud. And the Commission admits to concerns that voter ID requirements could disenfranchise eligible voters, adversely affect minorities, or be used to monitor voting behaviors are 'serious and legitimate.' Moreover, the REAL ID Act turns drivers' licenses into de facto national IDs by forcing states to link their DMV databases so that drivers' personal data will instantly be available to a wide range of state, local, and federal officials. Once created, history has shown that law enforcement, employers, landlords, credit agencies, mortgage brokers, and direct mailers will find a way to access, and in all likelihood abuse, those databases.