Conservative groups ask Congress to rescind FCC privacy rules

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Conservative groups are urging Congress to roll back the broadband privacy rules that were enacted by the Federal Communications Commission in 2016. In a letter to House and Senate leaders, the groups asked the lawmakers to use their Congressional Review Act authority to rescind the FCC’s Broadband Privacy Order. The letter’s signees include the telecom industry-aligned NetCompetition as well as free-market groups like Americans for Tax Reform and FreedomWorks.

“Congress is fully justified in rescinding these rules both because the Order lacks proper legal grounding and because of the need to ensure real consumer privacy across contexts of user experience,” the letter reads. The regulations were passed in October and require internet service providers to obtain permission from customers before using their browsing and app usage data. “Rescinding the Privacy Order would promote both innovation and effective, consistent privacy protections in over-the-top, application, wireless and wireline markets,” reads the letter. “It would also send a clear signal that the FCC has lost its way in interpreting the statute Congress gave it.”


Conservative groups ask Congress to rescind FCC privacy rules Free Market Groups Ask Congress to Rescind FCC Privacy Rules (read the letter) Congress Asked to Axe FCC Broadband Privacy Framework (B&C)