Political Games Delay Email Privacy Amendment Once Again

Achieving email privacy will not be for anytime soon, unfortunately, as a new bill is delayed once again. Two US senators asked the bill to be pulled from the Judiciary Committee’s agenda, as some politicians aim to abuse the right to privacy for their purposes. The road ahead will be long and filled with obstacles before we can even dream of email privacy.

Political Games And Email Privacy

The email privacy bill is an amendment to a proposal that would allow the FBI to use National Security Letters to obtain information from email providers. Instead of requiring a warrant, which takes time to receive and requires the right person to sign it, NSLs are much easier to come by. It would effectively make spying on consumers easier than before.

Senators Mike Lee and Patrick Leahy are the ones who asked the entire bill be pulled from the agenda. American citizens – as well as consumers around the world – have a right to privacy in email communication. But that is not to the liking of law enforcement agencies, nor the majority of US politicians by the look of things.

Senator Mike Lee told the media:

“Unfortunately, some Senators on the committee have decided late in the day that this bill should be a vehicle to move an unrelated and controversial expansion of the use of national security letters by the FBI. Such an expansion would swallow up the protections this bill offers to the American people. While there are other concerns we had hoped to negotiate, the national security letter amendment is something I cannot in good conscience have attached to this bill.”

Related Post

It is interesting to note various technology giants are for protecting email privacy. Google and Facebook openly expressed their negative feelings towards this privacy bill. Moreover, the NTIA is supporting a proposal to move away from the US Controlled Domain Name system as well.

Unfortunately, these setbacks are not good for privacy advocates by any means. The political is slower than the average snail to begin with, and interference of political agendas will only make the fight harder. Protecting consumer privacy is not a priority for most politicians, and they will not hesitate to stall the approval of this amendment.

Source; DDW

Images credit 1,2

If you liked this article follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin and altcoin price analysis and the latest cryptocurrency news.

JP Buntinx

JP Buntinx is a FinTech and Bitcoin enthusiast living in Belgium. His passion for finance and technology made him one of the world's leading freelance Bitcoin writers, and he aims to achieve the same level of respect in the FinTech sector.

Share
Published by
JP Buntinx

Recent Posts

Supreme Court Strikes Down Trump Emergency Tariffs In Landmark Ruling Limiting Executive Trade Powers

In a landmark decision that reshapes U.S. trade policy, the Supreme Court of the United…

19 hours ago

USDT Supply Decline Marks Biggest Contraction Since FTX Era

The global stablecoin market is entering a new phase of recalibration as the circulating supply…

19 hours ago

xStocks Surpasses $25 Billion Volume As Tokenized Equities Enter New Market Phase

The tokenized equities sector is accelerating rapidly, and xStocks has now crossed a defining milestone:…

2 days ago

Base Begins Transition To Native Tech Stack In Major Layer 2 Shift

Coinbase-incubated Layer 2 network Base is entering a new phase of its development, moving toward…

2 days ago

Zora Officially Launches Its Revolutionary “Attention Market” On Solana In A Bold Multichain Expansion

Zora has officially launched its new “attention market” on the Solana blockchain, marking a bold…

3 days ago

XRP Ledger Activates Permissioned DEX With XLS-81 As Institutional Trading Model Emerges

The XRP Ledger has introduced a new on-chain trading framework that signals a notable shift…

3 days ago