Open Technology Institute, Privacy Advocates Urge Wireless Industry to Protect Personal Data of Low-income Americans
Washington, DC – Yesterday, 国产视频鈥檚 Open Technology Institute (鈥淥TI鈥) and 11 other consumer advocacy groups (鈥減rivacy advocates鈥) filed an to a filed in August by CTIA – The Wireless Association, in which wireless carriers asked the Federal Communications Commission to reconsider its authority to safeguard the sensitive information of Lifeline program applicants. The FCC鈥檚 permits Lifeline providers, which provide low-cost service to those with demonstrated financial need, to copy and store the highly sensitive information collected in customers鈥 applications, including Social Security numbers, tax records and addresses.
Privacy advocates argue in their Opposition that if carriers fail to protect the privacy and security of these applications, thousands of Lifeline applicants and customers could be exposed to financial fraud, identity theft, and predatory marketing practices. Privacy advocates further explain that CTIA鈥檚 arguments are procedurally flawed and without legal merit.
Privacy advocates鈥 Opposition follows on the heels of and recently filed by OTI with the FCC encouraging it to ensure that Lifeline eligibility applications receive strong privacy and data security protections.
The following statement may be attributed to Laura Moy, Senior Policy Counsel at OTI:
鈥淎s we all know from the number of highly-publicized large-scale data breaches that have occurred over the past several months, there is no shortage of threats to sensitive consumer information鈥攅specially details on financial status, such as those contained in Lifeline applications, which could be used to facilitate identity theft and financial fraud. CTIA would have us believe that low-income customers, who have to share sensitive information in order to receive this essential service, have nowhere to turn for reliable assurances that their carriers will take reasonable measures to protect that information.
鈥淒ata security, especially as it applies to sensitive financial information, is simply too important for a 鈥榯rust us鈥 approach. Despite CTIA’s assertions otherwise, the FCC has ample legal authority to ensure that carriers put their money where their mouths are when it comes to privacy and security. It should therefore deny CTIA鈥檚 petition and continue to enforce a reasonable data security standard for Lifeline eligibility applications.鈥
OTI was joined on the Opposition by Appalshop, Center for Democracy & Technology, Center for Digital Democracy, Center for Rural Strategies, Consumer Action, Consumer Federation of America, Consumer Watchdog, Free Press, Public Knowledge, United Church of Christ, OC, Inc., and World Privacy Forum.
The full filing may be viewed .