Slashdot Mirror


FCC To Halt Rule That Protects Your Private Data From Security Breaches (arstechnica.com)

According to Ars Technica, "The Federal Communications Commission plans to halt implementation of a privacy rule that requires ISPs to protect the security of its customers' personal information." From the report: The data security rule is part of a broader privacy rulemaking implemented under former Chairman Tom Wheeler but opposed by the FCC's new Republican majority. The privacy order's data security obligations are scheduled to take effect on March 2, but Chairman Ajit Pai wants to prevent that from happening. The data security rule requires ISPs and phone companies to take "reasonable" steps to protect customers' information -- such as Social Security numbers, financial and health information, and Web browsing data -- from theft and data breaches. The rule would be blocked even if a majority of commissioners supported keeping them in place, because the FCC's Wireline Competition Bureau can make the decision on its own. That "full commission vote on the pending petitions" could wipe out the entire privacy rulemaking, not just the data security section, in response to petitions filed by trade groups representing ISPs. That vote has not yet been scheduled. The most well-known portion of the privacy order requires ISPs to get opt-in consent from consumers before sharing Web browsing data and other private information with advertisers and other third parties. The opt-in rule is supposed to take effect December 4, 2017, unless the FCC or Congress eliminates it before then. Pai has said that ISPs shouldn't face stricter rules than online providers like Google and Facebook, which are regulated separately by the Federal Trade Commission. Pai wants a "technology-neutral privacy framework for the online world" based on the FTC's standards. According to today's FCC statement, the data security rule "is not consistent with the FTC's privacy standards."

11 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. The consumer gets buttraped again. Thanks Obama by TimothyHollins · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wow.

    Your guy Trump sure is sticking it to the corporations and elites, eh?

    1. Re:The consumer gets buttraped again. Thanks Obama by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I know you are being sarcastic, but clearly you are forgetting about her emails.

  2. BeauHD by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Funny

    What does data security have to do with technology? This is why I don't come to Slashdot any more.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:BeauHD by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Informative

      And yet you are here.

      That was supposed to be the punchline. I hate to be the guy who has to explain his own jokes, but every BeauHD article comment section seems to have one knucklehead who's complaining about SJWs or some such and the comment is always, "What does Grace Hopper have to do with tech? Slashdot has really gone downhill. That's why I don't come here any more."

      Irony is hard enough to pull off in plain text, and I've been drinking since 10:30am, so I apologize.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  3. Oh, Very Fscking Hilarious, Pai... by ewhac · · Score: 5, Informative
    Not fooled.

    How convenient that Mr. Pai neglected to mention that AT&T was sued in 2014 by the FTC for false advertising -- namely, describing their mobile Internet service as "unlimited" when in fact they would throttle you or cut you off after you exceeded undocumented limits.

    AT&T argued that, because the package included voice service, the dispute was outside the FTC's jurisdiction and should properly have been brought by the FCC. Mindbogglingly, the 9th Circuit agreed. ( https://consumerist.com/2016/0... )

    So Pai's claim about wanting to achieve regulatory harmony and improved demarcation between agencies is unvarnished bullshit. He's trying to create more opportunity for regulatory arbitrage and pitting one federal commission against another.

  4. Re:The Million Regulators March on Washington by Fire_Wraith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The consumer gets buttraped again

    Yes, because the only thing protecting the consumer is the Government.

    Yes, because we have so much robust competition in the ISP market now! We don't need any government intervention, my local monopoly ISP has all my best interests at heart. If they provide poor service or screw me over, I can just switch to - oh, wait, I can't.

    Your guy Trump sure is sticking it to the corporations

    By making it less likely that an ISP will be (frivolously) sued for violating the nebulously unclear standard to take "reasonable" measure measures, Trump's government lowers the cost of the legal insurance, which lowers the total cost of doing business. And that's a good thing for both producers and the customers alike.

    Of course, because Comcast/Verizon/etc are totally going to pass those savings on to me, the consumer, rather than pad their executives' bonuses or pay more dividends to stockholders.

  5. Re:The Million Regulators March on Washington by WaxlyMolding · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What a load of rubbish this is. These companies aren't going to cut prices if they get cheaper insurance. They're going to pocket the money and stiff their customers by mishandling their information. How fucking stupid do you think we are, anyway?

  6. Of course by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "According to Ars Technica, "The Federal Communications Commission plans to halt implementation of a privacy rule that requires ISPs to protect the security of its customers' personal information." From the report: The data security rule is part of a broader privacy rulemaking implemented under former Chairman Tom Wheeler but opposed by the FCC's new Republican majority."

    Republicans screwing over the American public? This is my shocked face.

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  7. Re:The Million Regulators March on Washington by wes33 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Once you have a monopoly -- such as "Single Payer" education,
    or healthcare, or Internet-Service provision -- the price goes up
    and the quality goes down."

    what absolute bollocks - USA health costs per person
    is about $8000 whereas that bastion of capitalist competition,
    Sweden, is $4000 (you can check it out if you know how to
    use this thing called the internet).

    I think you should think twice before accusing someone
    of being "unbelievably dumb" because the world is more
    complicated than your view of it.

  8. Re:The Million Regulators March on Washington by beelsebob · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Once you have a monopoly — such as "Single Payer" education, or healthcare, or Internet-Service provision — the price goes up and the quality goes down.

    Actually, no - you've got your monopoly on the wrong side with single payer healthcare.

    Companies that are monopolies are allowed to arbitrarily increase their prices because they are the single seller.

    Single payer health care involves there only being one single insurance company buying goods from the drugs companies, doctors, and hospitals, allowing them to drive the price *down*, not up. That's why healthcare is so much cheaper in Europe than the US.

  9. Re:Because FUCK YOU, that's why by emaname · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you missed what the AC's point. The fact of the matter is there is NO competition in most markets. Consequently, competitive market forces do not work. IOW, if someone doesn't like "their conditions," they probably don't have any options which would enable them to say "thanks, but no thanks" to their provider.

    And the idea that another will appear to "fill in the gap" is much easier said than done. With the current investment environment, startups are having a tougher time getting cash. And that doesn't consider the issue of how many people are interested in or willing to startup an ISP business. I suspect that's a pretty small segment of the population. So the chance of that occurring seems quite remote.

    The "free market" is not as "free" as some people think.

    --
    An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.