Obama
to propose new laws to protect consumer data, privacy
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[January 12, 2015]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Barack Obama on Monday plans to discuss three new proposed laws aimed at
protecting Americans and the trail of data they leave on smart phones,
computers and other devices.
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Congress has long wrestled with how to beef up federal laws to
protect consumers and their privacy, a struggle that intensified
after hackers stole massive amounts of credit card data from
companies like Target and Home Depot
The White House said Obama will weigh in with his legislative ideas
during a speech at the Federal Trade Commission at 11:55 a.m. ET.
The speech is part of Obama's preview of his Jan. 20 State of the
Union address in which he will seek to highlight areas of common
ground with Republicans who now control the U.S. Congress.
Obama will propose a new national standard that would require
companies to tell consumers within 30 days from the discovery of a
data breach that their personal information has been compromised,
the White House said.
The standard would need approval from Congress, where lawmakers have
struggled to come up with a way to replace a patchwork of differing
state regulations.
As part of the law, Obama will also propose to criminalize overseas
trade in stolen identities, the White House said.
Obama will also resurrect a "Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights" that
the White House created in 2012. He will ask lawmakers to codify the
bill into law.
The bill is designed to empower consumers to have a say in how
companies use "Big Data" techniques to harvest and sell data from
the digital footprints consumers leave online.
The administration will release its revised legislative proposal for
the privacy bill within 45 days, the White House said.
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A third piece of legislation is aimed at protecting students. Obama
plans to propose to ban educational software companies from selling
data they collect data from students through educational apps and
programs to third parties, or using the data for targeted ads, the
White House said.
Obama also will tout a new voluntary code of conduct for utilities
to protect consumers' energy use information.
On Tuesday, Obama will continue his focus on cybersecurity,
discussing ways that government and the private sector can share
more information about cyber threats.
Cyber attacks were put into focus after Sony Pictures was hacked, an
incident that Obama has blamed on North Korea.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton)
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