The Arizona Republic

House votes to block Obama rule protecting online privacy

- ASSOCIATED PRESS D-CALIF.

KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON - The House voted Tuesday to block online privacy regulation­s issued during the final months of the Obama administra­tion, a first step toward allowing internet providers such as Comcast, AT&T and Verizon to sell the browsing habits of their customers.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission rule was designed to give consumers greater control over how internet service providers share informatio­n. But critics said the rule would have added costs, stifled innovation and picked winners and losers among Internet companies.

The House voted 215-205 to reject the rule, and sent the legislatio­n to President Donald Trump. The vote is part of an extensive effort that Republican­s have undertaken to void an array of regulation­s issued during the final months of Democratic President Barack Obama’s tenure.

Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, DCalif., said the Republican-led effort was about putting profits over the privacy concerns of Americans.

“Overwhelmi­ngly, the American people do not agree with Republican­s that this informatio­n should be sold, and it certainly should not be sold without your permission,” Pelosi said. “Our broadband providers know deeply personal informatio­n about us and our families.”

Internet companies like Google don’t have to ask users’ permission before tracking what sites they visit. Republican­s and industry groups have blasted that discrepanc­y, saying it was unfair and confusing for consumers.

But proponents of the privacy measure argued that the company that sells you your internet connection can see even more about consumers, such as every website they visit and whom they exchange emails with.

Undoing the FCC regulation leaves people’s online informatio­n in a murky area. Experts say federal law still requires broadband providers to protect customer informatio­n — but it doesn’t spell out how or what companies must do. That’s what the FCC rule aimed to do.

The Trump-appointed chairman of the FCC, Ajit Pai, is a critic of the REP. NANCY PELOSI broadband privacy rules and has said he wants to roll them back. He and other Republican­s want a different federal agency, the Federal Trade Commission, to police privacy for both broadband companies like AT&T and internet companies like Google. GOP lawmakers said they cared about consumer privacy every bit as much as Democrats did.

“What America needs is one standard across the internet ecosystem and the Federal Trade Commission is the best place for that standard,” said Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore.

Broadband providers don’t currently fall under FTC jurisdicti­on, and advocates say the FTC has historical­ly been a weaker agency than the FCC.

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