Facebook is getting attention in
Washington again as two U.S. senators seek federal investigations of recent
reports of employers demanding job applicants turn over the passwords they use
to log in to the social networking site. Sen. Charles Schumer, D-New York, and
Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Connecticut, said Sunday they will ask the Justice
Department and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to look into
the matter. They argue that the practice is objectionable, according to an
Associated Press report. The
lawmakers want the agencies to determine if requesting social media passwords
by employers violates federal laws that protect unauthorized access to data,
notably the Stored Communications Act or the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, the
report said. The development comes on the heels of Blumenthal's vow to file legislation to address the issue. Facebook, too,
has expressed concern about the practice and pledged to work
with policymakers to address it, as well as engage in legal action where
necessary. "While we will continue to do our part, it is important that
everyone on Facebook understands they have a right to keep their password to
themselves, and we will do our best to protect that right," Facebook's
Chief Privacy Officer for Policy Erin Egan wrote in a company blog. While
Blumenthal and Schumer are spearheading initiatives on the national level to
address the password issue, legislators on the state level are also moving to
protect social network users. Both Maryland and Illinois are considering bills
to bar public agencies from asking for social networking passwords. In New
Jersey, Assemblyman John Burzichelli has filed
a measure that takes a broader
approach to the problem. It prohibits all employers "from requiring a
current or prospective employee to provide or disclose any user name, password
or other means for accessing a personal account or service through an
electronic communications device." Meanwhile, in California, Democratic
state Sen. Leeland Yee has also filed
a bill to block employers from
not only requesting social media user names and passwords from employees or job
applicants, but also bar bosses from asking for a sit-down with employees or
applicants to review their social media pages or asking that the pages be
printed out for review by managers.
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