While earlier this week, the FTC published a 57-page report of privacy recommendations which included the addition of a "do not track" system intended to give us more control over our online data.
In the US, regulators are urging internet companies to have a "do not track" system in place that gives consumers more control over their personal data online.
Houston Tejas, a fave of those fatty-city lists is trying to better that rep via a new system that allows parents to track and control what their kids eat.
But he was working on similar systems several years before that: His first gig was in 2003 to develop an inventory controlsystem for KCD Public Relations that would help track designer samples sent to magazines, stylists, models and celebrities.