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Internet users shall no longer be forced to spend time (and money) downloading and opening junk-mail. In the future the consumer must have asked to recieve e-mails, before a firm may send them to the consumer.
The EU-Commision and Europe-Parlaiment have agreed on this in a new EU-direktiv on data-securiety. All that there is needed now is approval from the 15 member contries before it can be finally approved, but all 15 have given their promise that it will be implemented. Firms will also have to have permision to use cookies to store personal information about people that use their web-sites. This looks to be a good day :D |
<font color="silver">Only problem is the free email services, such as hotmail and yahoo... in these cases, "the consumer" would be the email provider; not the account holder. </font>
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It sure does [img]smile.gif[/img]
No more European junkmail. But I bet there'll still be a lot coming in from the US... |
Not to mention Hotmail and Yahoo are based in America...
[ 05-31-2002, 03:42 AM: Message edited by: caleb ] |
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About time the EU did something good too [img]smile.gif[/img]
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Happely Norway is NOT a part of EU! haha! but we must follow many of their directives anyway :( ! [ 05-31-2002, 07:24 PM: Message edited by: Megabot ] |
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Who the hell is the EU to decide what goes tho ppl's emails? Who gave *them* the right to impose their will on the rest of the world? in this case I actually agree with them, But I oppose them out of principle, purely because I feel that no single governemet, country or orginaiztion should have the right to impose their will upon others!
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