Verizon, T-Mobile, Sprint, and AT&T can definitely hear the FCC now.
The nation's largest mobile providers are facing potentially hundreds of millions of dollars in fines after the Federal Communications Commission determined the companies didn't adequately protect customers' location data. At issue was the practice of selling customers' real-time location data to third parties — data which then ended up in the hands of bounty hunters, debt collectors, and other questionable parties.
The news, reported by the Wall Street Journal, follows a Jan. 31 announcement by the FCC that at least one phone carrier had violated federal privacy protections. According to Reuters, the FCC is set to propose fines of $200 million in total for the four mobile carriers tomorrow.
But this may be too little, too late. Senator Ron Wyden (D - Oregon) blasted the FCC for failing to proactively protect consumers and, instead, only reacting to investigative reporting on the issue done by the likes of Motherboard.

"If reports are true, then [FCC Chairman] Ajit Pai has failed to protect consumers at every turn," wrote Wyden. "This issue came to light after my office and dedicated journalists discovered how wireless carriers shared Americans’ locations without consent. He investigated only after public pressure mounted."
Tweet may have been deleted
In May of last year, AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, and T-Mobile were hit with a class-action lawsuit alleging the companies violated the law in selling customers' location data. In other words, the $200 million in proposed FCC fines could be just the beginning of what the mobile carriers will be forced to pay out.
Importantly, however, it's worth noting that the carriers may end up getting off without paying anything close to the reported $200 million number. That's because, as the Journalnotes, all four carriers will likely fight tooth and nail to avoid such heavy penalties.
SEE ALSO: FCC confirms wireless carriers broke federal law by selling location data
We reached out to Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile for comment, but received no immediate response. A Sprint spokesperson did get back to us, but only to say that they had "nothing to share on this right now."
Perhaps the carriers' representatives are all too busy checking the couch cushions for a few hundred million to formulate a response.
TopicsAT&TCybersecurityPrivacyVerizon
(责任编辑:焦點)
Photos show the Blue Cut fire blazing a path of destruction in California
‘The Florida Project’ is the best 2017 movie that you haven’t heard of
Even Jennifer Lawrence was 'shaken' after seeing 'mother!'
Kickstarter addict reflects on backing $16,000 worth of board games, regrets everything
These glasses hide a fitness tracker on your faceTesla's rumored P100D could make Ludicrous mode even more Ludicrous
A Tesla Model S P100D begs the question: What's more Ludicrous than Ludicrous?Right now, the biggest
...[详细]New 'Rick and Morty' fan theory makes a scary amount of sense
SPOILER ALERT: If you have not yet watched season 3 episode 7 of Rick and Morty'The Ricklantis Mixup
...[详细]New 'Rick and Morty' fan theory makes a scary amount of sense
SPOILER ALERT: If you have not yet watched season 3 episode 7 of Rick and Morty'The Ricklantis Mixup
...[详细]Apple iOS 11 has a hidden security feature that cops will hate
The iPhone X is coming, and with it a shiny new iOS for legions of Apple fans to excitedly pore over
...[详细]This 'sh*tpost' bot makes terrible memes so you don't have to
The internet is awash in trashy memes just waiting for your late-night retweet spree. Why waste prec
...[详细]Apple's macOS High Sierra will launch on Sept. 25
The next version of Apple's desktop operating system, macOS High Sierra, will launch on Sept 25, App
...[详细]The new Apple Watch Series 3 is trying to look out for your heart
The Apple Watch Series 3 is more health-focused than ever, coming packaged with an improved heart ra
...[详细]The Cassini spacecraft will crash into Saturn to save its moons
There is poetry in the fact that when the Cassini spacecraft burns up in Saturn's atmosphere on Frid
...[详细]Teacher absolutely nails it with new homework policy
The war against homework has begun.。A massive pile of homework after a long day at school is enough
...[详细]Here's the name of that underwhelming new Crayola crayon
After more than five monthsof excruciatingly unnecessary hype and emotional torture, Crayola has fin
...[详细]