/ 23 May 2007

US lawmakers advance in battling spyware

The United States House of Representatives passed legislation on Tuesday to combat the criminal use of internet spyware and other scams aimed at stealing personal information from computer users.

Spyware, said the Bill’s Democratic sponsor, Representative Zoe Lofgren, ”is one of the biggest threats to consumers on the internet”. She and other lawmakers cited estimates that up to 90% of computers in this country are infected with some form of spyware.

Spyware is software that secretly collects information about a person or organisation and sends it to another without the original user’s consent.

Republican Representative Bob Goodlatte, co-sponsor of the Bill, said it had been written so that it ”protects consumers by imposing stiff penalties on the truly bad actors” while protecting legitimate online businesses that are developing new services to keep track of user preferences.

The Bill would make it a criminal offence, subject to a prison term of up to five years, to gain unauthorised access to a computer to help carry out another federal offence. Obtaining or transmitting personal information with the intent of injuring or defrauding a person or damaging a computer would be punishable by up to two years in prison.

The measure approves $10-million a year over the next four years to help the Justice Department fight other computer scams such as ”phishing” — the use of fake e-mails or websites to trick consumers into providing bank account numbers or credit card or other personal information — and ”pharming”, in which hackers redirect internet traffic to fake sites to steal personal information.

Similar Bills have been approved by the House in past sessions of Congress but have yet to clear the US Senate. — Sapa-AP