Well this has been a long time coming: The FCC today levied fines totaling nearly $200 million against the four major carriers -- including AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile and Verizon -- for illegally sharing access to customers' location information without consent.

Some highlights: "The FCC's findings against AT&T, for example, show that AT&T sold customer location data directly or indirectly to at least 88 third-party entities. The FCC found Verizon sold access to customer location data (indirectly or directly) to 67 third-party entities. Location data for Sprint customers found its way to 86 third-party entities, and to 75 third-parties in the case of T-Mobile customers."

..."The fine amounts vary because they were calculated based in part on each day that the carriers continued sharing customer location data after being notified that doing so was illegal (the agency also considered the number of active third-party location data sharing agreements). The FCC notes that AT&T and Verizon took more than 320 days from the publication of the Times story to wind down their data sharing agreements; T-Mobile took 275 days; Sprint kept sharing customer location data for 386 days."

More here: https://krebsonsecurity.com/2024/04/fcc-fines-major-u-s-wireless-carriers-for-selling-customer-location-data/

FCC Fines Major U.S. Wireless Carriers for Selling Customer Location Data – Krebs on Security

@briankrebs

It would be interesting to know how much revenue was generated from this illegal activity. Is $200M just a drop in the bucket? Are fines just a cost of doing this kind of business?

@mastodonmigration @briankrebs When GM was recently challenged for sharing driver behaviour information with third parties, one of the interesting takeaways was that the revenue stream for GM was, at least in their characterization of it, quite minor. There is no greater sin in USA than leaving money on the table, so there's that. In the case of GM, they may also have wanted to have some experience and develop some expertise in surveillance capitalism. The telecomms already got that.