Consumer Watchdog

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Consumer Watchdog

Privacy

D.C. Lobbying Over Self-Driving Autos Revs Up

D.C. Lobbying Over Self-Driving Autos Revs Up

<p><i>Washington</i> — Ford, Volvo, Google, Uber and Lyft are stepping up their lobbying efforts on Capitol Hill as lawmakers begin to craft regulations for self-driving cars, and they have hired a former National Highway Transportation Safety Administration chief to be their frontman.</p>
How Los Angeles Officials Want To Regulate Your Airbnb

How Los Angeles Officials Want To Regulate Your Airbnb

<p>As the sharing economy continues to grow, bureaucrats across the country are making sure they don’t miss out on the chance to get in the way of innovation. San Francisco passed tough regulations on home-sharing <a href="http://www.sfexaminer.com/sf-legislators-approve-tougher-rules-airbnb/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">last week</a>, but another California city is jumping on the anti-Airbnb bandwagon.</p>
Consumer Groups Say AT&T, Comcast Violate Privacy Law By Hoovering Up Cable Box Data Without Full User Consent

Consumer Groups Say AT&T, Comcast Violate Privacy Law By Hoovering Up Cable Box Data Without Full User Consent

<p>In addition to the $21 billion made annually by cable set top box rental fees, cable companies make untold billions from monetizing the user viewing data these boxes help collect. That captive revenue alone is the driving force behind the pay TV sectors <a href="https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20160505/07462134350/congress-scolds-fcc-making-cable-set-top-box-market-more-competitive.shtml">histrionic opposition</a> to the FCC's plan to open the sector up to third-party hardware competition.
Facebook Rolls Out Suicide-Prevention Tools Globally

Facebook Rolls Out Suicide-Prevention Tools Globally

<p class="bodytext"><span id="mn_Global"><span id="mn_print">MENLO PARK -- The dark thoughts that flow through the minds of people contemplating suicide might find their way to a social media site, and Facebook wants to make it easier for friends and family to help.</span></span></p>
Comcast, Cablevision and AT&T Violating Privacy Through Addressable Advertising, Groups Say

Comcast, Cablevision and AT&T Violating Privacy Through Addressable Advertising, Groups Say

<p>A group of consumer watchdogs has filed a complaint with the FCC, alleging that Comcast (<a href="http://www.fiercecable.com/tags/comcast">NASDAQ: CMCSA</a>), AT&T (<a href="http://www.fiercewireless.com/tags/att-0">NYSE: T</a>) and Cablevision (<a href="http://www.fiercecable.com/tags/cablevision">NYSE: CVC</a>) are violating customer privacy through addressable advertising schemes on pay-TV set-tops. </p> <p>For its part, AT&T responded by calling the complaint, "bogus."</p>
Groups File FCC Complaint Over MVPD Set-Top Privacy

Groups File FCC Complaint Over MVPD Set-Top Privacy

<p><strong><span class="brief">Say opt-in, not just notification, needed for sharing customer data; AT&T calls complaint 'bogus'</span></strong></p> <p>Public Knowledge, the Center for Digital Democracy and Consumer Watchdog have petitioned the FCC to enforce cable set-top privacy rules against Comcast, AT&T and Cablevision in particular, and the industry more generally, and argue that means mandating an opt-in regime for use of set-top data for marketing purposes.</p>
Consumer Watchdog: FCC Should Regulate Edge Privacy

Consumer Watchdog: FCC Should Regulate Edge Privacy

<div class="content clearfix"> <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"> <div class="field-items"> <div class="field-item even"> <p>Representatives of Consumer Watchdog have talked with top counselors to FCC chairman Tom Wheeler to warn that the FCC's set-top proposal does not contain sufficient teeth to protect consumer privacy from mass data collection and monetizing by Google and others.</p>
FCC Should Bar ‘Pay For Privacy’ Schemes

FCC Should Bar ‘Pay For Privacy’ Schemes

<p>As the Federal Communications Commission considers restricting what broadband providers can do with our personal surfing data, the agency is weighing whether it should outright ban a practice that’s come to be known as “pay for privacy.”</p> <p>Certain broadband service providers, most notably AT&T, have begun charging a premium to customers who opt out of having those companies to track their online activities. Privacy and consumer rights advocates are blasting the practice and some are calling for the FCC to outlaw it.</p>
FCC Offers Hope For Consumers Seeking Online Privacy Protections

FCC Offers Hope For Consumers Seeking Online Privacy Protections

<p class="bodytextragright"><span id="mn_Global"><span id="MNGiSection">I think most of us can agree that the internet poses some unique and wide-scale risks to our privacy.</span></span></p> <p><span id="mn_Global"><span id="MNGiSection">Our every move online can be -- and often is -- tracked. In the past, it might have been hard for companies or the government to know your interests, political leanings, religious affiliation or health problems. But they can glean all that and more by simply watching what you do on the internet.</span></span></p>