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                Date: 2002-01-01
                 
                 
                Qwest und die Verbindungsdaten
                
                 
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      Nicht nur für Law Enforcement sind die Verbindungsadten wertvoll,  auch die  
Verbinder selbst können damit Added Value lukrieren, wenn sie an  
Tochterfirmen weitergeben, wer mit wem wann und vor allem wo verbunden  
war. 
 
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Some customers of Qwest Communications are angry over a pamphlet from  
the company describing the ways that Qwest will use the customer's  
personal data. 
[...] 
 
The company recently sent its customers a pamphlet similar to those  
distributed last year by financial institutions, describing the ways that Qwest  
will use the customer's personal data. Other telephone carriers will be  
sending out notices as well, according to the Federal Communications  
Commission.  
 
But the breadth of the Qwest statement has privacy advocates upset. It says  
that unless customers contact the company to prohibit the practice, Qwest  
will share with its several subsidiaries such data as telephone services used,  
billing information and places called.  
 
"Friends and neighbors to whom I've spoken are simply incredulous about the  
idea that what Qwest is doing could possibly be legal," said Brett Glass, a  
technology consultant and author in Wyoming. He said the notice led him to  
imagine invasions of privacy, like new floods of junk mail from travel agents  
offering fares to the places that he calls. He said he was especially bothered  
by passages in the notice that said that the company might share account  
information with other companies "that have marketing agreements with us." 
 
A Qwest spokesman explained that the privacy statement simply lays out  
existing policies, and that the disclosures have all been approved by federal  
courts. In 1999, the United States Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, in  
Denver, overruled the Federal Communications Commission, which would  
have only allowed such information to be shared if customers had given  
explicit approval beforehand. "We went the extra mile" to inform consumers  
of possible future moves by the company, said Taylor Gronbach, a  
spokesman. He added that the company had not shared such information  
with other businesses "and we have no plans to do it now." David L. Sobel,  
general counsel for the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington,  
said he was surprised by the Qwest move. He said his organization favored  
the commission's original "opt in" approach, which would have prohibited  
companies from using consumers' data without their express permission. 
 
Mehr  
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nyt/20020101/tc/qwest_plan_stirs_protest_over
                   
_privacy_1.html 
 
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edited by Harkank 
published on: 2002-01-01 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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