FTC Raps Weak Privacy in the Cloud, Social Media | Internet News

FTC Raps Weak Privacy in the Cloud, Social Media

Written By
Kenneth Corbin
Kenneth Corbin
Mar 18, 2010
1 minute read

Federal Trade Commission officials remain adamant that the current privacy regime isn’t working and offered some harsh words for vendors like Google. The FTC wonders whether the search giant and other Web companies are collecting too much information.

Datamation takes a look at the FTC’s latest privacy concerns with Google, Facebook and a host of other Web players.


As the Federal Trade Commission concludes a series of public workshops into the privacy implications of Internet advertising and data collection, senior commission officials on Wednesday reiterated their concerns that Web companies are overreaching when it comes to collecting personally identifiable information, or PII.

“The march of technology has blurred and indeed threatens to obliterate the distinction between PII and non-personal information,” said David Vladeck, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “On the Web, at least, it is getting harder and harder to choose anonymity.”

Today’s proceeding is the last of a series of three roundtables the FTC has held since December, calling on a broad array of industry representatives, consumer advocates and others as it mulls updating its self-regulatory guidelines for behavioral targeting and online advertising.



Read the full story at Datamation:


FTC Raps Weak Privacy in the Cloud, Social Media

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