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US toughens up on spyware

Software firms could be forced to warn all users what is being installed

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 07 Jun 2007
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The US House of Representatives has passed an anti-spyware bill that will force software distributors to seek consent before installing programs on a user's computer. 

The latest measures are much stronger than those passed by the House last month, which set out penalties for the fraudulent use of spyware but did not seek to regulate all software.

Under the new bill, companies would need to notify users of any software being installed on their computers and ask for their specific consent.

The bill was opposed by the software industry but passed by 368 votes to 48.

"Anything which helps to make life harder for cyber-criminals has to be a good thing in principle," Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, told vnunet.com

"But the security industry will be looking closely at this legislation to see whether it is workable, whether it can actually be enforced and whether it succeeds in catching those committing identity theft through spyware."

Cluley added that it is essential that legislation only hits the cyber-criminals who have malicious intent, and does not prevent legitimate businesses from using the internet innovatively to benefit customers.

The legislation now goes forward to the US Senate.

See also:

'Erroneous' police testimony against Julie Amero thrown out  07 Jun 2007
Infonetics predicts significant growth for sector  06 Jun 2007
Zango is seeking $35m in damages for 'irreparable harm'  22 May 2007
HackingSecurity firm warns of 'disturbing trends'  08 May 2007
New attack attempts to spoof WGA  07 May 2007

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