The House
of Representatives has rejected an effort to give the Federal Communications
Commission the power to stop
employers from asking job applicants for their password to Facebook and other social networking
sites. The effort was an amendment, proposed by Representative Ed Perlmutter of
Colorado, added to legislation to reform the FCC. "What this amendment
does is it says that you cannot demand, as a condition of employment, that
somebody reveal a confidential password to their Facebook, to their Flickr, to
their Twitter, whatever their account may be," Perlmutter said during a
speech on the House floor. The amendment would have added the following
paragraph to the Federal
Communications Commission Process Reform Act of 2012:
“Nothing in this Act or any amendment made by this Act shall be construed to limit or restrict the ability of the Federal Communications Commission to adopt a rule or to amend an existing rule to protect online privacy, including requirements in such rule that prohibit licensees or regulated entities from mandating that job applicants or employees disclose confidential passwords to social networking websites.”
The
amendment was deemed unnecessary by the Republicans, and was voted down 236 to
184. Only one House Republican voted in support of the amendment, while only
two House Democrats voted against the amendment. Republicans argued that while
the proposed legislation wouldn't help the situation, they were willing to work
on new legislation in the future. While this might sound like Republicans hate
privacy, that's not necessarily the case. The actual proposal that was being
debated was the FCC Process Reform Act, which is a Republican-backed and
Democrat-opposed bill. The FCC Process Reform Act wants to require the FCC to
be more transparent, and Democrats believe it's unacceptable to require the
(currently Democrat-controlled) agency to do this. As CNET points out,
Perlmutter's amendment was merely a "transparent, if clever, delaying
tactic." After all, CNET's Declan McCullagh says, "If Perlmutter
actually wanted to add that pro-privacy section to the bill, he could have
suggested an amendment instead of returning to the committee." Perlmutter
may not care nearly as much about our privacy as we think he does. In 2008, he voted for anti-privacy legislation.
The FCC Process Reform Act did pass, by a vote of 247 to 174.
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