Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2001-09-05-Speech-3-376"

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"Mr President, ladies and gentlemen, Commissioner, freedom of expression and freedom of choice are a precious right for liberals, but not at any price. The receipt of e-mail is considerably less free of strings for the receiver than the receipt of paper leaflets and brochures. The costs may total EUR 10 billion annually for receivers, not to mention the cost in time. We therefore need, just as with paper leaflets, “No thank you” stickers. Personally, I would gladly opt for self-regulation by industry, but in practice it is clear that “opt-out” is not sustainable. For this reason, the Liberal group will support the Commission’s proposal for “opt-in”. Meanwhile there is a bill before the US congress for an “opt-in” that paves the way for sound agreements worldwide, which is necessary in an age of unlimited communication. Unwanted post will not be limited to the Internet. The mobile telephone sector will play an increasing role in the period ahead, so that companies and consumers will be saddled with high costs, while the infrastructure becomes very vulnerable. My second remark concerns the storage of traffic data. I refer to the ECHELON debate of this morning. In my view it is an invasion of privacy if traffic data are stored for longer than necessary. As a result consumers will never gain the necessary trust in e-commerce. In conclusion, the rules within the Union should be harmonised. After all, our telecom companies work in a pan-European way and therefore need uniform rules so that legal uncertainty is ruled out. For this reason, subsidiarity in this field is not an option."@en1

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