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House Again Shoots For Spyware Law

Rep. Mary Bono (R-Calif.) reintroduced her anti-spyware bill as the 109th Congress convened earlier this week.
Rep. Mary Bono (R-Calif.) reintroduced her anti-spyware bill as the 109th Congress convened earlier this week. Last year's edition of the bill made it through the House, but was stymied by the Senate.

Dubbed the "Securely Protect Yourself Against Cyber Trespass Act" (SPY ACT), Bono's bill would prohibit a wide range of spyware- and adware-style activities, including keyboard logging, home page hijacking, and persistent on-screen ads. SPY ACT would also forbid practices such as collecting information without the user's consent or intentionally diverting a browser from its intended destination, and requires software to offer up a "no thanks" dialog so installation can't be done without consumers' knowledge. Programs must also have an easy-to-find uninstall option.

Violators could face civil fines up to $3 million.

Although the bill passed the House in October by a vote of 399-1, the Senate's anti-spyware bill, called SPYBLOCK (for Software Principles Yielding Better Levels of Consumer Knowledge), went nowhere, even though two of its three co-sponsors -- Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Sen. Conrad Burns (R-Mont.) -- were the pair who pushed through the federal government's first anti-spam law.

"We're confident that this year we will see a spyware bill in the law books," said Rep. Bono in a statement.

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