Trump quietly repeals internet privacy protection laws

05 Apr 2017

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President Donald Trump on Monday officially repealed federal privacy protections imposed last year on the likes of AT&T, Charter, Comcast and Verizon.

Trump quietly signed into law a bill that blocks the implementation of rules that would have required those internet providers to ask permission before selling sensitive customer data, like web-browsing histories, to advertisers and other third parties, the White House confirmed.

President Donald Trump on Monday officially hit the delete button on federal privacy protections imposed last year on the likes of AT&T, Charter, Comcast and Verizon.

Trump quietly signed into law a bill that blocks the implementation of rules that would have required those internet providers to ask permission before selling sensitive customer data, like web-browsing histories, to advertisers and other third parties, the White House confirmed.

Earlier on Friday, three of the nation's biggest internet service providers vowed to keep customers' web browsing histories secure, following the controversial congressional vote to kill federal web privacy rules.

Comcast, Verizon, and AT&T announced that they have no plans to profit from sharing their customers' personal information with advertisers, despite the overturned Federal Communications Commission (FCC) guidelines.

The new law amounts to a major blow to privacy groups like the ACLU [Amrican civil Liberties Union] and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which had backed the Federal Communications Commission and its efforts under former FCC chairman Tom Wheeler and his boss, former President Barack Obama. And it's a major win for the telecom industry, which saw the rules as unfair and burdensome.

Many telecom companies also objected because tech companies like Facebook and Google would not have been affected by the rules.

''Consumers deserve and expect one consistent set of online privacy protections and this action helps clear the way for a more uniform approach across the entire internet ecosystem,'' said Jonathan Spalter, the CEO of USTelecom, a Washington, DC-based advocacy group for the industry, in a statement.

Some telecom companies, however, insisted they would protect consumers' personal information anyway - and chalked doubts up to their opponents.

Bob Quinn, a senior executive vice president at AT&T, struck a defiant tone in a blog post Friday, slamming privacy groups for ignoring ''facts''.

 ''If the government believes that location data is sensitive and requires more explicit consumer disclosures and permissions,'' he continued, ''then those protections should apply to all players that have access to location data, whether an ISP or edge player or search engine.''

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