Ted Cruz blocks bill that would extend privacy protections to all Americans

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By Dipa Biswash

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Sen Ted Cruise (R-TX) has blocked an attempt to pass the law that has increased the privacy protection of data for federal lawmakers and government officials in the United States.

Sen Ron Wider (D-OR) on Monday night asked the US Senate unanimously agreed to fellow senators to pass its law, S.2850Or to protect Americans from doxing and political violence laws.

Wider’s bill, if passed then would have been taken Bilateral Government officials, law makers and their family are designed to protect them from selling or traded by their personal information data brokers and to extend them to every American and individual living in the United States.

“Congress members should not be specially treated,” said Wideon under the Senate. “Our elements demand protection from violence, humiliation and other criminal threats.”

“Everyone, including US military and intelligence officials to protect everyone, is the most effective way to protect the secret officers,” added Wide, every Congressional recordThe

Cruise was the only objectionable senator who claimed without proof that Wideon’s bill could disrupt law enforcement, such as “to know where sex hunters are living.”

Data brokers are part of the billion dollars of industries worldwide, which often gains from access and sales in the personal, financial and granular positions of Americans collected from the Internet connected to the Internet. This data is sold, in the governments, who do not need any warrants for commercially obtained data.

The data collection of huge banks also brings its own risk, including security laps and data violations. The data purchased by the Data Brokers has been used for the people of the dox and in recent cases two Minnesota state lawmakers are associated with the recent murder, whose killer The allegedly got their home addresses From the data brokers.

Cruise also objected to the second law that Wideon introduced sooner, S.2851Which extended the protection of the state officials and lawmakers as well as their staff as well as domestic violence and sexual abuse.

In reply, Cruise said that “he is interested in extending the protection as wide as wide, as it is interested in expanding as usable, that answer has not yet been implemented.”

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