Consumer’s having confidence that their personal information, confidential communications and sensitive data should be a given. The revelations about the collection of meta data as well specific data by government agencies (and a data brokers) has caused disqueit by consumers, privacy specialists and, as importantly, technology companies. Technology companies don’t want to be part of a data storage program against their will. This has been highlighted in the he New York Times article Technology Companies Are Pressing Congress to Bolster Privacy Protections.
The article provides:
WASHINGTON — A law that allows the government to read email and cloud-stored data over six months old without a search warrant is under attack from technology companies, trade associations and lobbying groups, which are pressing Congress to tighten privacy protections. Federal investigators have used the law to view content hosted by third-party providers for civil and criminal lawsuits, in some cases without giving notice to the individual being investigated.
Nearly 30 years after Congress passed the law, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, which government officials have interpreted to cover newer technologies, cloud computing companies are scrambling to reassure their customers, and some clients are taking their business to other countries.
Ben Young, the general counsel for Peer 1, a web hosting company based in Vancouver, British Columbia, said his customers were keeping their business out of the United States because the country “has a serious branding problem.”
“We’ve enjoyed a competitive advantage in Canada,” he said, “because the public perception in the business community is that American law enforcement has more access to data than in other parts of the world.”
Places such as Germany, Iceland and Switzerland are trading on a reputation of stronger protections for companies, but such safeguards are not universally tighter than those in the United States. “Some countries are stricter on privacy, and some of them are not,” said Mark Jaycox, a legislative analyst at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a technology advocacy group.
Privacy has been an increasing concern since Read the rest of this entry »