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Re: {FYI] What The World Needs Is More Lawer-Bots



And the answer is:

http://www.w3.org/P3P/

was auch schon einige Male in den USA angemerkt wurde:
http://archive.salon.com/tech/col/garf/2000/07/11/p3p/print.html

Gruss

Rigo


Am Thursday 14 October 2004 00:36 verlautbarte Jan Meyer :
> http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/view.html?pg=2
>
> ~      Mark Rasch, founder and former head of the U.S. Justice
> Department's computer crimes unit, says that the increasing trend
> toward lengthy, tiny-font policy "agreements" that users must click
> on before they can access a Web site are generating the need for more
> legal oversight. "Increasingly, companies have been putting some
> pretty nasty things into their clickwrap agreements -- such as that
> they can collect and sell your detailed personal information or
> install software that will capture your every keystroke? This is not
> legal boilerplate, the kind that everybody assents to when renting a
> car or buying a ticket to a ball game. It affects the privacy,
> security, and operability of all of the information you access
> online." Rasch says what's desperately needed is a law robot -- "a
> browser-based automaton that could be adjusted to match your
> tolerance for legal mumbo-jumbo? Once you establish privacy settings,
> your browser would transfer personal data (after prompting you) only
> to sites that conform with your privacy requirements." Rasch says
> such technology would go a long way toward eradicating such online
> nuisances as porn spam and spyware. "We will never fully automate the
> reading of contracts or agreements online. Nor would we want to --
> after all, Internet lawyers need jobs, too. But by automating the
> vetting of clickwraps or implied agreements we could make everybody
> sleep a little easier."

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