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Microsoft Government Privacy United States Technology

Microsoft Calls For Federal Regulation of the Tech Industry (techspot.com) 76

In a blog post, Microsoft Corporate Vice President and Deputy General Counsel Julie Brill says the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has been very effective in changing the way that tech companies handle personal data, and feels the U.S. should enact something similar at the federal level. TechSpot reports: "[Companies] have adapted, putting new systems and processes in place to ensure that individuals understand what data is collected about them and can correct it if it is inaccurate and delete it or move it somewhere else if they choose," she wrote. Brill points out that the GDPR has inspired other countries to adopt similar regulations. She also pats her company on the back for being "the first company to provide the data control rights at the heart of GDPR to our customers around the globe, not just in Europe."

However, such self-regulation is not good enough. While some states such as California and Illinois have strong data protection laws in place, Brill feels the US needs something similar to the GDPR at the federal level. "No matter how much work companies like Microsoft do to help organizations secure sensitive data and empower individuals to manage their own data, preserving a strong right to privacy will always fundamentally be a matter of law that falls to governments," Brill states. "Despite the high level of interest in exercising control over personal data from U.S. consumers, the United States has yet to join the EU and other nations around the world in passing national legislation that accounts for how people use technology in their lives today."
Brill suggests the federal government should enact regulation that models the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), which goes into effect next year.

"Brill says that consumers have the right to control their information and that companies need to be held to a higher degree of accountability and transparency with how they collect and use customer data," reports TechSpot. "The new laws also need to have teeth."
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Microsoft Calls For Federal Regulation of the Tech Industry

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  • by dbett_slightreprise ( 5975582 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2019 @06:45PM (#58633036)
    It raises the cost barriers to new entrants/competitors. The large companies can more easily afford the cost of the regulations. Plus, the large companies are more likely to control and influence the regulatory system (regulatory capture) and thereby help create regulations that favor themselves.
    • They know some regulation is (probably) coming. They want to get out in front of it and have their lobbyists and political protection money result in it being written for their benefit (it worked fabulously well [opensecrets.org] in getting the antitrust charges dismissed [wired.com] in the early 2000s). Standard stuff for any large company. If it harms competitors, well who could foreseen those unintended consequences? Certainly not the elite IQ lawyers, accountants and MBAs at the company.

    • by rimugu ( 701444 )
      In economy that concept is called a moat. With more regulation, they remain on top as new competitors have it harder to enter the field.
      • In economy that concept is called a moat. With more regulation, they remain on top as new competitors have it harder to enter the field.

        What's wrong with that? Something as critical as data privacy shouldn't be a free-for-all, it's hard to start up a pharmaceutical business too but that doesn't mean we should allow companies to play fast and loose with people's health just for the benefit of new market entrants.

    • Depends on the regulations. The kind Microsoft favors and will push for through their army of lobbyists would probably achieve that.

      But to many people favoring regulation of the tech industry, it means helping new entrants, stopping consolidation and preventing overreach. And most and foremost, any such regulation needs to be accompanied by real, significant trustbusting. Not this chicago school bullshit about ‘consumer harm’ but actually stopping corporations from becoming too big and breaking

    • by ISayWeOnlyToBePolite ( 721679 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2019 @08:23PM (#58633478)

      It raises the cost barriers to new entrants/competitors. The large companies can more easily afford the cost of the regulations. Plus, the large companies are more likely to control and influence the regulatory system (regulatory capture) and thereby help create regulations that favor themselves.

      Living under and being affected by GDPR, I have the opposite experience. Changing the old routines of handeling data is cumbersome, costly an disruptive. Building systems and organisations with the regulation already in place from scratch cannot possibly be harder than turning existing organizations on its head.

      • It raises the cost barriers to new entrants/competitors. The large companies can more easily afford the cost of the regulations. Plus, the large companies are more likely to control and influence the regulatory system (regulatory capture) and thereby help create regulations that favor themselves.

        Living under and being affected by GDPR, I have the opposite experience. Changing the old routines of handeling data is cumbersome, costly an disruptive. Building systems and organisations with the regulation already in place from scratch cannot possibly be harder than turning existing organizations on its head.

        While that's possible (a GDPR-a-like might or might not prove to be be an exception in its effects), MS's motive is almost certainly the usual, that big businesses love regulation because it is expensive and difficult for upstarts, while MS has vast resources to handle it, and also to engage in capture of the regulators and regulation process.

      • ... an excellent example of grassroots lobbying. It does have a few loopholes, but the interesting part is that the authorities can fine and/or sue you for a hefty fine if you are sloppy with data and don't give a damn. Which right up to the GDPR most people did. The very nice and neat important is that they can *also* sue and fine internet megacorps into next wednesday and have those fines make a real visible blip on Facebooks anual balance sheet. That's a novelty. And I like it.

    • Microsoft isn't the leader any more. as more and more of what people do moves from the desktop to a web browser, Microsoft becomes less and less relevant. Sure, they are a cloud provider, but they are both completely replaceable, and also not permitted to grab data from clients' virtual machines. Consequently, they are in the position of assisting others with collecting data that they don't even have access to, and this makes them mad.

      In addition, as users continue to abandon desktops for Chromebooks, table

  • by meglon ( 1001833 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2019 @07:01PM (#58633108)
    It shouldn't be just tech companies. Consumer data has been sucked up for decades, stored, sold as lists, and used to abuse privacy; tech companies are merely the "newer" kids on the block doing it. Level the playing field and make all consumer databases opt-in only, with massive fines for failure to heed that, as well as for any breaches... with the ability for anyone to opt out of any database anytime they want.
  • Another transparentt distraction.

    Let's demand open protocols on all public communications to prevent lock in.

  • And will Microsoft document the protocol they are using to send data to their servers, in order to allow people to actually verify what Windows sends there?

    If not, then all this is just bullshit-PR.
    • It has been documented, there is a link in this discussion. But so what? You can't trust the documentation without source access for verification, and you can't trust source unless you build it yourself with your own compiler.

  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Tuesday May 21, 2019 @07:45PM (#58633320)

    preserving a strong right to privacy will always fundamentally be a matter of law that falls to governments,

    The law says you may not collect any data in any form from anyone without them explicitly authorizing such collection. That means no tracking of where you are, what you're looking at, what buttons you're clicking, how you move about on your computer, what web pages you go to, and any and everything else that people do with technology.

    There. A simple law. It can be written up in two or three sentences, voted on, and enacted in about an hour.

    What? What are you laughing at? Stop it!

  • It's interesting that Microsoft favors this approach, when they have in the past been selectively predatory in how they deploy their OS's and the way they apply site license costs for their products. While that has nothing to do with privacy and wanting to emulate the GDPR, the flip side of privacy is security and Microsoft has an interesting long term stance on security and digital compliance:

    MSFT still thinks in this day and age that they are the central arbiter when it comes to permitting and aggregating

  • I had the (mis)fortune of being born and growing up through 1990's and 2000's when Microsoft was spelled as "M$" and was generally reflected upon as being about the most evil tech company around...

    Today, so much as changed in such a short amount of time... Older tech-heads around here must have their collective heads spinning over these kinds of statements and developments.

    Between a (slightly) more stable Windows, a Subsystem for Linux (WSL), and actually *wanting* to be regulated... it's probably reality-b

  • by zarmanto ( 884704 ) on Wednesday May 22, 2019 @09:57AM (#58635576) Journal
    Microsoft is basically saying, "Hey, we spent a huge sum of money to meet these insane European requirements! We'd just love to monetize that situation, and recoup some of our costs by selling the tools we were forced to develop to the rest of the industry players in this country... or failing that, at least make everyone else feel that same pain, too!"

Remember, UNIX spelled backwards is XINU. -- Mt.

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