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A Promise Falls in the Forest
Mark Rasch, 2004-07-26

A federal court recently ruled that website privacy policies aren't binding, because nobody reads them. The implications are far reaching for contract law and the Internet.

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A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-26
Anonymous- Your Not Data-mining Me! (1 replies)
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous Amateur
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-26
Anonymous (1 replies)
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous
Time for an appeal ! 2004-07-27
Daniel Convissor
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-27
Anonymous
Rogue state 2004-07-28
Louis Bertrand
European and Canadian law places tough controls on how private corporations manage personal information: privacy, access to one's own record. The USA is rapidly becoming the Typhoid Mary of the international community, despite the best lobbying and arm-twisting efforts of the State Dept.

http://www.privcom.gc.ca/legislation/02_06_01_e.asp
(sorry, no links to EU legislation)

Ciao
--Louis


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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/257/27711#27711
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-28
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
L. Kelly
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-29
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-30
Anonymous
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-07-30
Anonymous
Will not apply to EULA 2004-07-31
-bildr
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-08-02
Steerpike
A Promise Falls in the Forest 2004-08-02
Anonymous







 

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