On 9/29/23, 09:29, "Rich Brown" <richb.hano...@gmail.com 
<mailto:richb.hano...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> Thank you Jonathan for this clear description of the issues and their 
> history. I wonder if there's a fourth one - privacy. 
> Rosenworcel's talk also points out that ISPs might want to monetize our 
> traffic patterns and location data. (This is less of an issue in the EU, but 
> the US remains a Wild West in this regard.) 

That reference is to mobile networks in the US - but the US-EU contrast you 
make is a good one! The EU IMO does privacy right - it is not sector-specific 
regulation but is general privacy protecting law that protects user data no 
matter the entity collecting/aggregating/sharing. In the US we seem to pursue 
sector-specific privacy law - like specific to credit cards. What we end up 
with is a real mess and I would love to see comprehensive national data privacy 
legislation - but our legislative body can’t even agree right now to keep our 
government funded past this coming Sunday. ;-)

IANAL but it seems like if the US wanted to provide comprehensive location data 
privacy then it would have a uniform law that applied not just to a MNO with 
towers that can locate a handset, but also what the apps loaded on that handset 
with access to GPS can do with the data as well - and any other party that 
might be able to collect data.

JL 


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