Matching
Match the U.S. government privacy law with its description below.
Premises:
Regulates disclosure of cable television subscriber records
Gives students and parents access to school records and limits disclosure of and records to unauthorized parties
Closes a narrow loophole in the law that allowed people to give away copyrighted material (such as software) on the Internet without legal repercussions
Strictly outlines procedures federal agencies must follow when looking at customer records in banks
Establishes the Dot Kids domain that lists only Web sites that conform to policies to protect children under the age of 13; it functions similarly to the children's section of a library and was ruled unconstitutional in 2004
Amends 1984 and 1996 acts to outlaw transmission of harmful computer code such as viruses
Gives law enforcement the right to impose penalties on people using the Internet to distribute spam
Forbids retailers from releasing or selling video-rental records without customer consent or a court order
Protects children from obscene and pornographic materials by requiring libraries to install filtering software on their computers; upheld by the Supreme Court in July 2003
Restricts activities of telemarketers
Responses:
Computer Abuse Amendments Act
No Electronic Theft (NET) Act
Right to Financial Privacy Act
Cable Communications Policy Act
Video Privacy Protection Act
Dot Kids Implementation and Efficiency Act
Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA)
CAN-SPAM Act
Family Educational Rights Privacy Act
Telephone Consumer Protection Act
Correct Answer:
Premises:
Responses:
Regulates disclosure of cable television subscriber records
Gives students and parents access to school records and limits disclosure of and records to unauthorized parties
Closes a narrow loophole in the law that allowed people to give away copyrighted material (such as software) on the Internet without legal repercussions
Strictly outlines procedures federal agencies must follow when looking at customer records in banks
Establishes the Dot Kids domain that lists only Web sites that conform to policies to protect children under the age of 13; it functions similarly to the children's section of a library and was ruled unconstitutional in 2004
Amends 1984 and 1996 acts to outlaw transmission of harmful computer code such as viruses
Gives law enforcement the right to impose penalties on people using the Internet to distribute spam
Forbids retailers from releasing or selling video-rental records without customer consent or a court order
Protects children from obscene and pornographic materials by requiring libraries to install filtering software on their computers; upheld by the Supreme Court in July 2003
Restricts activities of telemarketers
Premises:
Regulates disclosure of cable television subscriber records
Gives students and parents access to school records and limits disclosure of and records to unauthorized parties
Closes a narrow loophole in the law that allowed people to give away copyrighted material (such as software) on the Internet without legal repercussions
Strictly outlines procedures federal agencies must follow when looking at customer records in banks
Establishes the Dot Kids domain that lists only Web sites that conform to policies to protect children under the age of 13; it functions similarly to the children's section of a library and was ruled unconstitutional in 2004
Amends 1984 and 1996 acts to outlaw transmission of harmful computer code such as viruses
Gives law enforcement the right to impose penalties on people using the Internet to distribute spam
Forbids retailers from releasing or selling video-rental records without customer consent or a court order
Protects children from obscene and pornographic materials by requiring libraries to install filtering software on their computers; upheld by the Supreme Court in July 2003
Restricts activities of telemarketers
Responses:
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