WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Google Inc has told a senior Republican lawmaker concerned
about privacy that the Internet search and advertising company supports
a federal privacy law.
Privacy advocates object to the amount of information that Google,
Yahoo and other online companies collect about users. Google, in
particular, has been under pressure to post a link on its home page to
its privacy policy.
Texas Rep. Joe Barton, the senior Republican on the House Energy and
Commerce Committee, wrote to Google in May asking for details about the
search engine's privacy practices since it acquired competitor
DoubleClick.
Google told Barton in a letter dated June 6 that it would support
creation of a federal Internet privacy law. A copy of the letter was
obtained by Reuters on Tuesday.
"Google supports the adoption of a comprehensive federal privacy law
that would accomplish several goals such as building consumer trust and
protections; creating a uniform framework for privacy, which would
create consistent levels of privacy from one jurisdiction to another;
and putting penalties in place to punish and dissuade bad actors," the
letter said. It was signed by Alan Davidson, Google's chief lobbyist.
Google's Chief Executive Eric Schmidt and Barton met last November,
and two of Barton's aides went to Google headquarters in Mountain View,
California in December to discuss privacy.
Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy
Information Center, was skeptical of Google's endorsement of a federal
privacy law. Rotenberg said that when companies push for a
"comprehensive" law, they often want something that would preempt more
stringent state laws.
"We do not want the states to have their hands tied," he said
Rotenberg, citing California and New York as examples of states with
tough privacy laws.
(Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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