Want to Weigh In on Web User Rights? Proposed Law Is Being Drafted by Individuals Online
At a time when privacy and intellectual property issues often collide with the day-to-day reality of what individuals and corporations consider ordinary uses of the Internet, an effort is afoot to create a Digital Citizen’s Bill of Rights.
U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., has posted a draft on the Madison collaborative bill-editing site, and crowd revisions are ongoing, the Baltimore Sun reports.
Users are suggesting, for example, that the bill recognize both a right to privacy and a right to anonymity, and that it recognize those rights as applicable not simply to “digital citizens” but to a broader range of entities, including avatars.
A post on inSourceCode’s inSights, inTrigues, and Innovations blog provides additional details about the Madison project.
Related coverage:
ABAJournal.com: “It Isn’t Necessarily Big Brother, But Somebody Is Potentially Watching, Virtually All the Time”
ABAJournal.com: “Record $22.5M Google Pact Sparks Self-Scrutiny by Other Companies re Privacy, Data Security”
ABAJournal.com: “8th Circuit OKs $222K Award But Avoids Ruling on Key Issue in Historic RIAA File-Sharing Case”