U.S. President Joe Biden has signed an executive order that aims to ban the bulk sale and transfer of Americans' private data to "countries of concern" such as China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, and Venezuela.
"Our adversaries are exploiting Americans' sensitive personal data to threaten our national security. They are purchasing this data to use to blackmail and surveil individuals, target those they view as dissidents here in the United States, and engage in other malicious activities," said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland.
"This Executive Order gives the Justice Department the authority to block countries that pose a threat to our national security from harvesting Americans' most sensitive personal data—including human genomic data, biometric and personal identifiers, and personal health and financial data."
The presidential directive requires the U.S. Department of Justice to create, execute, and oversee a novel national security initiative to mitigate this threat. Additionally, it calls for new regulations to bar or otherwise limit specific types of data transactions deemed to pose an unacceptable national security risk.
It also focuses on Americans' most sensitive information, including their genomic, biometric, personal health, geolocation, and financial data, as well as certain kinds of personally identifiable information.
Threat actors can use this type of data for intrusive surveillance, scams, blackmail, and other privacy violations. Commercial data brokers who collect it can also sell it to the highest bidder, including countries of concern, their foreign intelligence services and militaries, or companies they control.
"The sale of Americans' data raises significant privacy, counterintelligence, blackmail risks and other national security risks—especially for those in the military or national security community," a White House fact sheet warns.
"Countries of concern can also access Americans' sensitive personal data to collect information on activists, academics, journalists, dissidents, political figures, and members of non-governmental organizations and marginalized communities to intimidate opponents of countries of concern, curb dissent, and limit Americans' freedom of expression and other civil liberties."
Since the start of the year, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has also banned two data brokers (data broker Outlogic/formerly X-Mode Social and InMarket Media) from selling Americans' precise location data that could be used for tracking purposes.
The actions were in response to data brokers regularly exposing individuals' location data and revealing much more sensitive information, such as religious affiliations and medical visits.
FTC's orders followed an August 2022 Biden executive order to safeguard access to reproductive health care services and protect patients' privacy. The directive was issued after an anti-abortion group used mobile location data to target visitors of some Planned Parenthood clinics with ads.
Comments
null__ - 1 month ago
Here's a crazy idea, how about just ban the collection of personal data?
Winston2021 - 1 month ago
If you don't pay for some service, the payment is your personal data.
NoneRain - 1 month ago
That's a cool ideia. Now, imagine a pay wall for every single website and service. Would you pay to make a search on Google? Would you pay to have access to news? What about paying double for things you already pay? If that works for you, what about people with less income?
And please, don't come saying community driven things would work for everything.
Amigo-A - 1 month ago
The favorite method of the US leadership: blaming others for what you do yourself.
It is the height of insanity and marasmus to issue and sign decrees on this topic.
Winston2021 - 1 month ago
When it comes to oligarchies which is what every country is actually controlled by despite the democracy and voting veneer, there are degrees of evil. I'd rate the CCP as MORE evil than our US oligarchy, so I'll take what I can get. By the way, this is in no way in defense of the senile puppet currently occupying the White House.
NoneRain - 1 month ago
Agree with Wiston2021. Just because something is bad, you shouldn't allow worse.
kalmly - 1 month ago
Well now that's just hilarious. If you don't know why, you haven't been paying attention.
Winston2021 - 1 month ago
If you don't pay for some service, the payment is your personal data.