ARTICLE
7 November 2016

FCC Adopts Controversial Broadband Privacy Regs

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a general practice, full-service Am Law 100 law firm with more than 600 attorneys. We are headquartered in Boston and have additional US offices in Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, San Diego, San Francisco, and Washington, DC, as well as an office in Toronto, Canada.
The FCC has voted 3-2 along party lines to require internet service providers (ISPs) to get a customer's explicit consent before they can use or share what is termed "sensitive" personal information.
United States Privacy

BREAKING NEWS –

The FCC has voted 3-2 along party lines to require internet service providers (ISPs) to get a customer's explicit consent before they can use or share what is termed "sensitive" personal information. That definition raises some eyebrows: according to the FCC's rules, "sensitive" information includes browsing history, mobile location data, TV viewing history, call and text message records, and information about what mobile apps subscribers use.

The regulation was billed by the FCC as based on transparency, consumer choice and data security.

We will have a full analysis of the new regulations tomorrow.

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