The Guardian (USA)

Top US mobile carriers fined $200m by FCC over illegal location-data sharing

- Reuters

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission on Monday fined the largest US wireless carriers nearly $200m for illegally sharing access to customers’ location informatio­n.

The FCC is finalizing fines first proposed in February 2020, including $80m for T-Mobile; $12m for Sprint, which T-Mobile has since acquired; $57m for AT&T; and nearly $47m for Verizon.

The carriers sold “real-time location informatio­n to data aggregator­s, allowing this highly sensitive data to wind up in the hands of bail-bond companies, bounty hunters, and other shady actors”, the FCC chair Jessica Rosenworce­l said in a statement.

The wireless carriers said they plan to challenge the fines.

Carriers have allowed the use of location-data for programs like roadside assistance, logistics, medical emergency alert services, human traffickin­g alerts and fraud prevention.

“Smartphone­s are always with us, and as a result these devices know where we are at any given moment,” Rosenworce­l said. Citing the sensitivit­y of geolocatio­n data, she added: “In the wrong hands, it can provide those who wish to do us harm the ability to locate us with pinpoint accuracy.“

T-Mobile said the FCC “decision is wrong, and the fine is excessive. We intend to challenge it.”

T-Mobile said the “industry-wide third-party aggregator location-based services program was discontinu­ed more than five years ago after we took steps to ensure that critical services like roadside assistance, fraud protection and emergency response would not be disrupted”.

Verizon said it has worked to protect customers: When “one bad actor gained unauthoriz­ed access to informatio­n relating to a very small number of customers, we quickly and proactivel­y cut off the fraudster, shut down the program and worked to ensure this couldn’t happen again”.

AT&T criticized the order as lacking “both legal and factual merit. It un

fairly holds us responsibl­e for another company’s violation of our contractua­l requiremen­ts to obtain consent, ignores the immediate steps we took to address that company’s failures and perversely punishes us for supporting life-saving location services.”

The FCC said carriers relied on contract-based assurances that service providers would obtain consent from carriers’ customers before accessing location informatio­n.

Lawmakers in 2019 expressed outrage that aggregator­s were able to buy user data from wireless carriers and sell “location-based services to a wide variety of companies” and others, including bounty hunters.

 ?? ?? A T-Mobile logo in Los Angeles. The company said ‘the decision is wrong, and we will challenge it.’ Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters
A T-Mobile logo in Los Angeles. The company said ‘the decision is wrong, and we will challenge it.’ Photograph: Mike Blake/Reuters

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