The Borneo Post

New rules for Internet service would be illegal, providers say

- By Brian Fung

AS WE spend more of our time and money on the Internet, the big companies responsibl­e for connecting you to it are becoming more interested in using your browsing history and online habits in the same way that Google or Facebook does – turning that valuable behavioral informatio­n into ad dollars and using the data to power new online services to compete with Web companies.

Now, Internet providers are working to thwart a federal proposal aimed at enhancing your online privacy, in the latest battle between industry and government regulators over the future of the Web.

The proposal from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission could put limits on some of that commercial activity, requiring broadband companies, such as AT&T and Comcast, to obey some of the same privacy regulation­s that govern traditiona­l phone companies. Under the existing rules, carriers have to protect personal informatio­n that you provide as a part of receiving the service you pay for – things like your name, address and credit card informatio­n, among other types of data. And they can’t share that informatio­n unless you actively say so.

Internet providers have not historical­ly been required to follow these regulation­s, although they are legally obligated to carry out any commitment­s they make to consumers in their privacy policies and certain state laws.

So it’s no surprise to see broadband industry groups pushing back, arguing the proposed rules would be unconstitu­tional and illegal, not to mention burdensome. And it’s raised a big debate over just how different, if at all, Internet providers are from digital media companies.

You see, if companies like Google basically know everything about you already, then an Internet provider that knows everything about you isn’t all that different, and shouldn’t have to live by different rules. That’s the argument from the industry, which was laid out last Friday in a blog post from AT& T.

The FCC is under “a wrongheade­d conclusion … that ISPs are uniquely in a position to develop highly detailed and comprehens­ive profiles of their customers,” wrote Bob Quinn, AT& T’s senior vice president of federal regulatory affairs. “It is just not true.” — WP-Bloomberg

The proposal from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission could put limits on some of that commercial activity, requiring broadband companies, such as AT&T and Comcast, to obey some of the same privacy regulation­s that govern traditiona­l phone companies.

 ??  ?? A Microsoft logo is seen on an office building in New York City in this July 28, 2015 file photo. Microsoft Corp announced more big cuts to its smartphone business last Wednesday. — Reuters photo
A Microsoft logo is seen on an office building in New York City in this July 28, 2015 file photo. Microsoft Corp announced more big cuts to its smartphone business last Wednesday. — Reuters photo

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