
Hours after the Supreme Court announced its decision reversing
Roe v. Wade, Senator Ron Wyden called for a national privacy law protecting people's online and mobile activities.
“Congress must pass legislation protecting people’s data so their
web searches, text messages and location tracking aren’t weaponized against them,” Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, stated.
He added that technology companies “must take immediate steps to
limit the collection and retention of customer data so that they don’t become tools of persecution.”
Wyden did not say whether he was referring to any specific pending
legislation.
Several privacy bills have been introduced recently, but none of them appear to be comprehensive enough to prevent state law-enforcement officials from obtaining data about
people's online activities.
One recent bill -- the “Health and Location Data Protection
Act,” introduced last week by Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) and co-sponsored by Wyden and others -- would prohibit data brokers from sharing information about people's health or
location.
Another bill, the “Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act” would require government agencies to obtain a court order before buying personal information from data
brokers.
That bill would also prohibit law-enforcement authorities and intelligence agencies from purchasing data obtained through deception, as well as through violations of a privacy policy
or other contract.
But neither of those two bills would prevent search engine operators, mobile companies or internet access providers from compiling the kind of data that could later be
obtained by prosecutors.
The advocacy group Fight for the Future also called for the Biden administration, Congress and the Federal Trade Commission to “do everything in their power to
end corporate surveillance, data harvesting, and data retention practices that are weapons perfectly built to persecute abortion patients.”
In addition, the organization reiterated its call for online companies to “end the collection and storage
of sensitive location, health, and other data that will be used to apprehend and persecute anyone engaged in the abortion care process.”
Earlier this month, Fight for the Future and
dozens of civil rights groups (including Amnesty International USA, Center for Digital Democracy, Electronic Privacy Information Center, Free Press, and S.T.O.P.--The Surveillance Technology Oversight
Project) urged Google CEO Sundar Pichai to stop collecting location data from mobile users.
“In a world in which abortion could be made illegal, Google’s current practice of
collecting and retaining extensive records of cell phone location data will allow it to become a tool for extremists looking to crack down on people seeking reproductive health care,” the groups
wrote. “The only way to protect your customers’ location data from such outrageous government surveillance is to not keep it in the first place.”