Representative Engel wants to make you Facebook safe.

WASHINGTON—Representative Eliot Engel (D-NY-16) has submitted the Social Networking Online Protection Act to make your social network and e-mail accounts safe from prying eyes. At least, the eyes of your employer, potential employer or your school.

H.R. 537 would make it illegal for “employers and certain other entities” to demand that you provide passwords for them to access your private social network and email accounts. It would make it unlawful for employers or potential employers to discriminate against you, dismiss you or in anyway harass you for refusing to give this personal information.

The bill would add a section to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 which essentially provides the same limitations on educational facilities as to employers above.

The Department of Homeland Security and other alphabet agencies, of course, will still be able to employ face recognition software and spy techniques in their on-going effort to make us safe from persons who support the Constitution, veterans and those rabid Ron Paul fans.

The house is also considering H.R. 624—the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act—for just that purpose.

House legislation may unlock cell phones once again

Unlocking-cell-phones-how-to-do-300x224WASHINGTON—Before January of this year, people could unlock cell phones in order to utilize whatever phone service they chose. After January 1st, that option was locked-out. That is to say that you could no longer unlock your cell phone and had to buy a new cell phone to switch services. Although unlocked cell phone are still sold through several stores and Internet sources.

That could change if legislation submitted by Representative Bob Goodlatte (R-VA6) passes.

The Unlocking Consumer Choice and Wireless Competition Act, H.R. 1123, would repeal Paragraph (3) of section 201.40(b) of title 37 of the Code of Federal Regulations, amended by the Library of Congress in October of 2012, to allow consumers to unlock cell phones. Cell phones were locked based on Copyright infringement.

This would, of course, allow consumers to switch services without having to purchase new phones. The Bill, with 8 cosponsors, was referred to the Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, And The Internet on the 15th.

It is expected that cell phone industry lobbyists will be out in force.

Snow to give way to 70-degree weather

WILLIAMS—It’s cold and there is a chance of snow the rest of the day. That, however, is predicted to give way to a high near 70-degrees by Monday. The weather service predicts a high of about 49 for Thursday with a north, northeast winds of 13 to 17 mph with gusts as high as 24. The temperature should climb to a high near 60 on Friday with the highs climbing from there through Monday. There will be a slight wind through Friday which should die down Saturday through to Monday.

That is, of course, how it stands as of this writing.