Seems the brain trust that's currently passing for a government in the State of Texas recently passed some laws which make it a criminal offense to repair a computer without a private investigator's license. Violators can face a $4,000 fine and one year in jail, as well as a $10,000 civil penalty.
Oh, and if you take your PC in to someone who doesn't have that license?
You can face the same penalties.
Guess what I ain't doing if I move there? Sheesh.
Stories:
This asinine law is already being challenged on the legal front.
http://www.ij.org/first_amendment/tx_computer_repair/6_26_08pr.html
Oh, and if you take your PC in to someone who doesn't have that license?
You can face the same penalties.
Guess what I ain't doing if I move there? Sheesh.
Stories:
PC Repair In Texas Now Requires a PI License
Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday July 01, @07:59PM
from the lumberjack-requires-scuba-license-too dept.
JohnnyNapalm writes "In some shocking news out of Texas, PC repair will now require a PI License. Surely this stands to have a substantial impact on small repair shops around the state if upheld. Never fear, however, as the first counter-suit has already been filed."
[+] court, it, bigbrother (tagging beta)
Texas PC Repair Now Requires PI License
06.30.08
by Brian Heater
From its Texas Rangers to its enthusiastic take on the death penalty, the Lone Star State has long been known for its aggressive stance on law enforcement. Thanks to a strange new law, it's a sting that may soon be felt by a number of the state's computer-repair people.
A recently passed law requires that Texas computer-repair technicians have a private-investigator license, according to a story posted by a Dallas-Fort Worth CW affiliate.
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1895,2324220,00.asp
New Computer Repair Law Affects Both Company Owners and Consumers
http://cw33.trb.com/news/kdaf-062608-computerspelpina,0,486476.story
- Every repair technician in Texas must have private investigator's license
- Licenses are obtained with criminal justice degree or 3 year apprenticeship
- Violators can face up to a 4K fine and 1 year in jail
This asinine law is already being challenged on the legal front.
http://www.ij.org/first_amendment/tx_computer_repair/6_26_08pr.html
Under the new law enacted in 2007, Texas has put computer repair shops on notice that they had better watch their backs any time they work on a computer. If a computer repair technician without a government-issued private investigator’s license takes any actions that the government deems to be an “investigation,” they may be subject to criminal penalties of up to one year in jail and a $4,000 fine, as well as civil penalties of up to $10,000. The definition of “investigation” is very broad and encompasses many common computer repair tasks.
To get a private investigatorÂ’s license, owners of computer repair shops would have to close their business while they either obtained a criminal justice degree or completed a three-year apprenticeship under a licensed P.I.
But the repair shops are not the only ones at risk. The law also criminalizes consumers who knowingly use an unlicensed company to perform any repair that constitutes an investigation in the eyes of the government. Consumers are subject to the same harsh penalties as the repair shops they use: criminal penalties of up to one year in jail and a $4,000 fine, and civil penalties of up to $10,000—just for having their computer repaired by an unlicensed technician.
The newly launched Institute for Justice Texas Chapter (IJ-TX) is challenging the new law under the Texas Constitution by filing a lawsuit in Travis County against the Private Security Board on behalf of Texas computer repair companies and their customers.