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Communications AT&T United States Verizon

US Telecom Operators Say They've (Mostly) Stopped Selling Your Location Data To Shady Middlemen (gizmodo.com) 52

In a collection of letters published by FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel on Thursday, representatives of T-Mobile, AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon all said they had ceased or significantly curtailed the sale of their customers' location data to companies whose shady practices brought to light triggered alarms among privacy advocates and lawmakers on Capitol Hill. From a report: The companies were responding to questions from Rosenworcel prompted by news reports that location data originating with America's largest telecoms was being acquired and sold downstream by bounty hunters and others without the consent of the companies themselves or their customers. The New York Times, for instance, reported last year that law enforcement officials had also purchased access to location data, circumvented the usual need for a warrant. On Wednesday, House lawmakers grilled the FCC's chairman, Ajit Pai, for details about the status of the commission's nearly year-long investigation into the malpractice. After two hours, it adjourned with no new information.

In a May 15 letter, AT&T said that as of March 29 it was no longer sharing its customers' data with location aggregators. Sprint said in its letter that it is now only sharing location data with one location aggregator and two customers "with a public interest," a roadside assistance company and another that facilities compliance with state lottery requirements. T-Mobile said that, as of February 8, it had "terminated all service provider access to location data" under its aggregator program, and that, as of March 9, it had terminated all existing aggregator contracts. "Except for four roadside assistance companies," Verizon terminated its location aggregator program as of November 2018, the company said. It added that the four remaining contracts were terminated by the end of March.

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US Telecom Operators Say They've (Mostly) Stopped Selling Your Location Data To Shady Middlemen

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I just booked a vacation 2 days ago and today I'm getting sporadic emails from different companies that clearly indicates at least one of the companies (probably all of them) I booked something with ratted me out. This is why tech is so creepy. And obviously I would never do business with any of these companies soliciting me.

  • by HoleShot ( 1884318 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @12:34PM (#58603360)

    Sure they have. Just like UNlimited is unlimited really.

    • The difference between this and "unlimited" is that "unlimited" is a lie, and here, they're admitting they're still selling it. They're just insisting they're only selling it to Good People(TM).

      But I don't think they're really supposed to be selling it at all.

    • Sure they have. Just like UNlimited is unlimited really.

      It's totally unlimited until you hit the cap. It says so right there on page 73, paragraph 12.2 of your contract!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If an individual took it upon himself to follow you around and record your every movement, every personal association, and every purchase, all with the intent to develop a profile on your private life, he would be charged with stalking.

    What makes it different when a large corporation does it?

  • I've (mostly) stopped juggling grenades in crowded theaters.

    • Or at least, I've stopped juggling grenades in the specific crowded theater that blew the whistle on me.

  • "representatives of T-Mobile, AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon all said they had ceased or significantly curtailed the sale of their customers' location data to companies "

    Yes, but who do those companies then resell the data to? And what does "significantly curtailed" mean? Does that mean that they used to sell it to 50 companies and now they're 'only' selling it to 25?

    This just seems like a way for T-Mobile, AT&T, Sprint, and Verizon to have plausible deniability when that same location data is found bein

    • I don't think these questions really matter. The important thing here is that it doesn't say anything about curtailing the collection of that data. Even if right now they're being slightly more prudent about what they do with that data, doesn't mean that they'll continue to be prudent in the future. What they do with the data right now means very little. The only thing that matters is that they're still collecting the data.
      • The important thing here is that it doesn't say anything about curtailing the collection of that data. ... What they do with the data right now means very little. The only thing that matters is that they're still collecting the data.

        That's a very good point.

        They're almost certainly still collecting data (I'd bet on it), and at a later date they may "change their mind*" and decide to sell or transfer it.

        Or maybe T-Mobile and Sprint merge, or one buys the other, and voilà, there's all that sweet, sweet data waiting to be monetized.

        .

        * "changed their mind" AKA "we lied when we said we were never going to do that again".

  • by Anonymous Coward

    They are now licensing it.

  • ...only conspiracy theorists would think like that.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @01:29PM (#58603622)
    These companies can do ANYTHING they want with our data, as long as it's allowed by law. Period. End. Of. Story. They can say whatever they want. "We're stopping the practice, for realizes, we promise promise promise etc. etc. etc." It doesn't matter. At. All.

    A company will share anything that allows them to make money, unless there is some economic reason that the company is better off holding the data private. For example, there is pretty strong evidence that Apple sells and shares user data MUCH less than the others. It's part of what you get when you pay the premium for Apple products. Their premium sales model would suffer if they failed to distinguish themselves on this front. Google and Facebook? They're bottom-line commodity services and will sell anything for a buck. Cambridge-Analytica-type events are going to happen over, and over, and over again, unless it's made explicitly illegal at the federal level and enforced with prison sentences.

    Don't get me wrong - I'm not really angry about any of this. This is capitalism at work. Data is valuable and thus will be bought, traded for, and sometimes stolen. We designed this system, and it works pretty darn well. But please, let's be honest about what's happening.

    The safest bet is to assume that EVERYTHING is shared. You do a search or watch a video on one platform with ALL the privacy boxes checked, and 10 minutes later you'll be getting creepy targeted adds on a totally unrelated platform. Your internet activity is bought and sold in real-time. "Private mode" is an illusion. The internet is NOT private. Don't kid yourself that it ever was. Or ever will be.
    • This is capitalism at work.

      Do you really think any non-capitalist system would be less interested in this data? Are you really that dumb?

      Not saying you're wrong, you're just way, way too narrow minded.

  • guys like this [commondreams.org] and this [youtube.com] should be off the plate. You take big donor money then you don't get elected. It needs to be a do not pass go, do not collect $200 deal.
    • anyone who holds a national office or presidential cabinet position should be given a lifetime pension at full Salary with benefits and barred from working in the private sector. No more revolving doors. You wanna be a Congressman, President or lead the Treasury? Good for you, but you're not gonna take that and turn it into a swanky job after selling us out. No buying stocks either. You wanna serve the nation serve the nation. We'll take care of you, it's alright.
  • by EnOne ( 786812 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @02:22PM (#58603954)
    Why would a company the "facilities compliance with state lottery requirements" need to track people by their phone?
  • by thesjaakspoiler ( 4782965 ) on Thursday May 16, 2019 @09:17PM (#58605782)
    why loose revenue to the middlemen if you can have the entire pie for yourself?

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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