Now that the 2013 legislative session in Hawai‘i is in full swing, let’s take a look at what new measures are in the pipeline to regulate Internet activity. A chart of relevant information about each bill is available here. Here’s a summary of the Internet-related proposals working their way through the legislature.
Social Media and Internet Account Passwords
A set of bills (SB207 and HB713) proposes to join other states in banning employers from asking employees or job applicants to disclose the passwords to their personal social media accounts. Another set of proposals (HB1104 and HB1023) would extend the ban to educational institutions and their students or prospective students.
Privacy Policies
Two bills (HB39 and SB729) would make it a legal requirement for operators of a commercial website or online service to post a privacy policy on their website.
Cyberbullying
Three bills (HB1226, SB525, and HB397) would require the board of education to adopt various policies and programs to combat cyberbullying in public and charter schools.
Teacher/Student Interactions
Apparently responding to incidents in which teachers and students conducted inappropriate relationships online, HB678 would allow a teacher in a public or charter school to engage in electronic communication with a student (including cell phone calls) only on Department of Education networks and systems.
Identity Theft
SB325 would require businesses to implement a comprehensive, written policy and procedure to prevent identity theft and train all employees in implementation of the same.
Cybersecurity
HB462 would establish a statewide cybersecurity council to identify and assess critical computer infrastructure, identify cybersecurity “best practices,” recommend incentives for voluntary adoption of such best practices, evaluate the efficacy of such practices, and report annually to the legislature.
We’ll be tracking these bills, reporting on their status periodically, and posting revisions to the chart. Stay tuned!