(Interesting and inarguably well-intentioned, and possibly even sound, idea 
snipped, but noted.)

There are a handful of reasons that this will never happen (well, I'm 98% 
certain it will never happen, nothing is every 100% sure when it comes to the 
law, and legislation)... among them the manufacturer's lobby is much more 
well-girded than is the   'home internet security' lobby;  the cyber-security 
concerns of the Federal government are focussed on other things (whether they 
should be or not, they are);  and for the most part legislators are still 
fairly unsavvy about tech in general, and these things make their eyes glaze 
over.

That said, there are already tort (negligence, etc.) laws and precedents under 
which such manufacturers can be sued, along with things like breach of contract 
between the manufacturer and consumer, and breach of implied warranty of 
fitness for a particular purpose and breach of implied warranty of 
merchantability.

A couple of winning lawsuits against manufacturers under these laws and 
theories - which judges *already understand* - is, I think, not only a more 
likely, but a much faster, route to industry reform.

All that said, much of this faces the same issues that spam lawsuits faced - 
the people who care the most about it are not the ones who can afford to 
finance such lawsuits.

Anne

Anne P. Mitchell, 
Attorney at Law
Legislative Consultant
CEO/President, Institute for Social Internet Public Policy
Member, Cal. Bar Cyberspace Law Committee
Member, Colorado Cyber Committee
Member, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop Committee
Author: Section 6 of the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003 (the Federal anti-spam law)
Ret. Professor of Law, Lincoln Law School of San Jose
Ret. Chair, Asilomar Microcomputer Workshop

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