Senator Ted Cruz Blocks Two Bipartisan Privacy Bills

Senator Ted Cruz Blocks Two Bipartisan Privacy Bills

Senator Ted Cruz Blocks Two Bipartisan Privacy Bills

Texas Senator Ted Cruz has blocked a privacy bill that seeks to protect all Americans from having their personal information exposed by data brokers — arguing that law enforcement needs access to some data and that the bill requires refinement.

The Bitcoiner was the only US Senator to object to Democrat Senator Ron Wyden’s bill — Senate Bill 2850 — on Wednesday, arguing a lack of data could disrupt efforts to ensure that convicted sex offenders are kept away from children.

SB 2850 seeks to stop brokers from exposing personal data

Wyden said SB 2850 would seek to offer Americans protection against data brokers that sell sensitive data to “anyone with a credit card,” stating that some people use this information to carry out violence, stalking, and other criminal threats. 

Cruz, who has long pushed back against central bank digital currencies and other surveillance measures, told fellow lawmakers that he’s “interested in expanding the protection to as wide a universe as is feasible, as is practicable, but that answer is not yet worked out.”

A narrower privacy bill introduced by Wyden immediately after, Senate Bill 2851, which seeks to extend protections only to federal lawmakers, state officials, and their staff, as well as survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence, was also rejected by Cruz, citing the same reasons mentioned in his objection to SB 2850.

However, Cruz offered to work with Wyden on the bipartisan bill, saying he doesn’t want Congress to “do nothing and fail to take reasonable common sense steps” that may hinder the privacy of law-abiding citizens.

Cointelegraph reached out to Cruz and Wyden but didn’t receive a response by the time of publication.

Source: Freedom of the Press

Privacy has been a highly debated topic within the cryptocurrency community, which was built on the ideals of freedom from surveillance.  Limiting the data shared with brokers may also reduce the risk of security breaches, which remains a persistent threat in the US and abroad.

There has also been considerable controversy over how online data is stored and used. Data brokers collect personal information, from names and addresses to phone numbers and financial data, to sell to businesses for marketing purposes and to make more informed, data-driven decisions.

Privacy push comes after lawmaker’s fatal home attack

Calls to expand privacy protections for lawmakers follow the assassination of former Minnesota Representative Melissa Hortman at her home in June.

Related: I funded my lifestyle from Bitcoin, not Telegram: Pavel Durov

The Federal Bureau of Investigation believes the alleged perpetrator, Luther Boelter, found Hortman’s address through data brokers.