City
Epaper

Over $200 mn fine for major US carriers for selling user location data

By IANS | Updated: February 29, 2020 14:26 IST

The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed a fine of over $200 million for all major US mobile carriers for selling the location data of customers to some agencies.

Open in App

San Francisco, Feb 29 The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has proposed a fine of over $200 million for all major US mobile carriers for selling the location data of customers to some agencies.

The Federal Communications Commission today proposed fines against the nation's four largest wireless carriers for apparently selling access to their customers' location information without taking reasonable measures to protect against unauthorised access to that information. As a result, T-Mobile faces a proposed fine of more than $91 million, AT&T faces a proposed fine of more than $57 million, Verizon faces a proposed fine of more than $48 million, and Sprint faces a proposed fine of more than $12 million, the FCC said in a statement on Friday.

The Enforcement Bureau of FCC opened this investigation after reports surfaced that a Missouri Sheriff, Cory Hutcheson, used a "location-finding service" operated by Securus, a provider of communications services to correctional facilities, to access the location information of the wireless carriers' customers without their consent between 2014 and 2017.

"American consumers take their wireless phones with them wherever they go. And information about a wireless customer's location is highly personal and sensitive. The FCC has long had clear rules on the books requiring all phone companies to protect their customers' personal information. And since 2007, these companies have been on notice that they must take reasonable precautions to safeguard this data and that the FCC will take strong enforcement action if they don't. Today, we do just that," said FCC Chairman Ajit Pai.

"This FCC will not tolerate phone companies putting Americans' privacy at risk."

The FCC also admonished these carriers for apparently disclosing their customers' location information, without their authorisation, to a third party.

The four major US carriers mentioned sold access to their customers' location information to "aggregators," who then resold access to such information to third-party location-based service providers (like Securus).

Although their exact practices varied, each carrier relied heavily on contract-based assurances that the location-based services providers (acting on the carriers' behalf) would obtain consent from the wireless carrier's customer before accessing that customer's location information.

( With inputs from IANS )

Open in App

Related Stories

LifestyleCan Sleeping Without a Pillow Improve Your Sleep and Mental Health?

BusinessMoRTH's stricter bidding norms to ease competition in road projects: ICRA

NationalCyclone Shakti Live Tracker Map: Strong Winds Lash West Bengal and Andaman As Cyclonic Storm Likely to Landfall on May 24

Other SportsKohli may not have received the support he expected from the BCCI: Kaif

EntertainmentAnupam Kher embraces his ‘Hindi medium’ roots at Cannes, asks to overlook his English pronunciation

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

TechnologyAverage pay for contractual worker in India's telecom sector rises to Rs 25,225 a month

TechnologyNvidia, Humain to build AI factories in Saudi Arabia

TechnologyHow PM Modi-led NDA has curbed retail inflation better than UPA regime

TechnologyIndian tablet market grows 15 pc in Jan-March, 5G captures 43 pc share

TechnologySensex, Nifty open higher after inflation cools, geo-political tensions ease