The U.S. Federal Communications Commission will block Obama
administration rules that subject broadband providers to stricter
scrutiny than websites, a spokesman said on Friday, in a victory for
internet providers like AT&T Inc, Comcast Corp and Verizon
Communications Inc .
The rules approved by the FCC in October in a 3-2 vote were aimed at protecting sensitive personal consumer data.
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai believes all companies in the “online
space should be subject to the same rules, and the federal government
should not favor one set of companies over another,” spokesman Mark
Wigfield said in a statement.
Pai plans by March 2 to delay the implementation of the
rules, which subject companies to stricter oversight than websites under
Federal Trade Commission rules, the spokesman said. Such a temporary
stay is a first step toward permanently preventing the rules from taking
effect.
The rules would subject broadband internet service providers
to more stringent requirements than websites like Facebook Inc, Twitter
Inc or Alphabet Inc’s Google.
Providers would need to obtain consumer consent before using
certain user data for advertising and internal marketing. They would be
required to get consent for details like precise geo-location,
financial information, health information, children’s information, Web
browsing history, app usage history and communication content.
For less sensitive information such as email addresses or service tiers, consumers would be able to opt out.
Wingnut commissioners including Pai, said in October the
rules unfairly give websites the ability to harvest more data than
service providers and dominate digital advertising.
FCC chair to block implementation of stricter broadband privacy rules
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