Here is WISPAs filing:

http://www.wispa.org/Portals/37/Docs/Press%20Releases/Reply_to_Oppositions_to_Privacy_Petitions_for_Reconconsideration.pdf?ver=2017-03-16-184820-080

-sean


On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 5:05 PM Adam Moffett <[email protected]> wrote:

> Has anyone here been offered money for data on clients web browsing or
> other online activity?  Have you ever sought and found a company that would
> buy it?  Is there a known case of an ISP doing this?  I'm betting all 3 are
> "no".
>
> A couple of friends are going nuts on Facebook about the reversal of a law
> that would prohibit ISP's from selling or sharing various types of data.
> The law was signed under the previous administration, but never took
> effect.  Until now I'd not even heard of it.
>
> I singled out the most vehement one and told him to calm down.  I told him
> of all the types of data we'd be prohibited from sharing (Medical,
> financial, social security etc) we don't actually have most of it to begin
> with.  Of all the cited things we're allegedly "allowed" to share/sell, the
> only thing I conceivably could produce would be a web browsing history.
> Ok, so if I wanted to sell that, who's buying?  I argue that you should be
> more worried about Google and Facebook....who *really do* have access to
> a crapload of your data.  And what is so secret in your browser history
> anyway?
>
> One person brought up a case of a Verizon Wireless "Super Cookie" (X-UIDH
> header inserted into HTTP requests).  A case where incidentally the FCC
> told them people needed an opt-out option and fined them $1.3mil for not
> having it.......without any additional rules.  And the so-called super
> cookie only allowed web services to uniquely identify the device and key
> their own data around it....Verizon wasn't "sharing" anything.
>
> Ultimately I don't care whether there's such a rule or not.  It seems
> irrelevant.  It's like a rule telling me not to share my space shuttle with
> anyone.  I'm like, "Sure, no problem."
>
> If there's a reason I should be excited/alarmed, someone please educate me.
>
> -Adam
>

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