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At long last, a meaningful step to protect Americans’ privacy

The CFPB rejects the learned helplessness of generations of regulators.

Cory Doctorow
5 min readAug 16, 2023
A modified version of ‘World’s Highest Standard of Living,’ Margaret Bourke-White’s classic 1937 Life Magazine photograph, which originally depicted a breadline of downtrodden Black people in a Depression breadline standing in front of a billboard depicting a cheerful white family in a luxury sedan, captioned ‘World’s highest standard of living: there’s no way like the American Way.’ The image has been modified; the faces of the white family have been replaced with the glaring red eye of HAL 900

This Saturday (19 Aug), I’m appearing at the San Diego Union-Tribune Festival of Books. I’m on a 2:30PM panel called “Return From Retirement,” followed by a signing:

https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/festivalofbooks

Privacy raises some thorny, subtle and complex issues. It also raises some stupid-simple ones. The American surveillance industry’s shell-game is founded on the deliberate confusion of the two, so that the most modest and sensible actions are posed as reductive, simplistic and unworkable.

Two pillars of the American surveillance industry are credit reporting bureaux and data brokers. Both are unbelievably sleazy, reckless and dangerous, and neither faces any real accountability, let alone regulation.

Remember Equifax, the company that doxed every adult in America and was given a mere wrist-slap, and now continues to assemble nonconsensual dossiers on every one of us, without any material oversight improvements?

https://memex.craphound.com/2019/07/20/equifax-settles-with-ftc-cfpb-states-and-consumer-class-actions-for-700m/

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Cory Doctorow
Cory Doctorow

Written by Cory Doctorow

Writer, blogger, activist. Blog: https://pluralistic.net; Mailing list: https://pluralistic.net/plura-list; Mastodon: @pluralistic@mamot.fr

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