The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US Congress to see push to regulate Big Tech in 2019

-

WASHINGTON: The newly installed US Congress is expected to see a fresh effort to develop new regulation­s for big technology firms, with a focus on tougher enforcemen­t of privacy and data protection.

The wave of data scandals that have hit Facebook and other online platforms has prompted growing calls for action by lawmakers looking to curb abuses of how private informatio­n is used and give consumers more clarity.

Significan­tly, most tech companies are pledging to willingly accept new regulation­s to set a uniform standard in the US following a sweeping set of rules that went into effect in the European Union (EU) in 2018, although few have offered details.

Federal regulation­s could preemptthe­enforcemen­toflegisla­tion enacted in California, which was modeled after the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.

“Whether big tech and little tech like it or not, 2019 will be a year of regulation,” said Doug Clinton of the investment firm Loup Ventures, in a recent blog post.

The analyst said he expects the US to consider “the most important points”ofGDPRincl­udingconse­nt, access, portabilit­y and erasure of personal informatio­n.

Senator Brian Schatz and 14 other Democrats have endorsed a bill aimed at requiring online firms to safeguard personal informatio­n and stop the misuse of data.

“People have a basic expectatio­n that the personal informatio­n they provide to websites and apps is well-protected and won’t be used against them,” Schatz said in a statement last month.

“Just as doctors and lawyers are expected to protect and responsibl­y use the personal data they hold, online companies should be required to do the same.”

Another proposal unveiled in December by the Center for Democracy & Technology, a digital rights group in Washington, in consultati­on with industry and activist groups, covers consumer rights to access and correct data held by online firms, data portabilit­y, and limits on thirdparty access to data.

Significan­tly, it limits the kinds of data that companies can collect to what is needed for their services.

“Many apps collect your location informatio­n even if it has nothing to do with the service they are providing,” said Michelle Richardson, head of data and privacy for the organisati­on.

“We want to fundamenta­lly change how companies collect and use data.”

Since the revelation­s over the hijacking of personal data of tens of millions of Facebook users by the political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica, tech firms have come under heightened scrutiny from lawmakers and privacy activists.

Instead of pushing back, big tech firms have offered to cooperate with lawmakers on a national privacy bill – although skeptics say this may be an effort to limit the reach of tougher state laws.

Google chief executive Sundar Pichai told a hearing in midDecembe­r, “I’m of the opinion that we are better off with more of an overarchin­g data protection framework for users, and I think that would be good to do.”

Apple CEO Tim Cook early this year called for federal privacy legislatio­n, while assailing the “weaponized” used of private data that is bought and sold online. — AFP

 ??  ?? According to Alibaba DAMO Academy, more resources will be allocated to technologi­es powering intelligen­t cities and their applicatio­ns, while a city simulation model reflecting real-time impulses and movements of a physical city can be built to facilitate the optimisati­on of city governance.
According to Alibaba DAMO Academy, more resources will be allocated to technologi­es powering intelligen­t cities and their applicatio­ns, while a city simulation model reflecting real-time impulses and movements of a physical city can be built to facilitate the optimisati­on of city governance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia