FCC to look into firms' use of customer data

Staff at the Federal Communications Commission are expected to recommend that it review rules on how phone and cable companies can use customer information as they try to take business from each other, an FCC official said Friday.

The FCC enforcement bureau will recommend that the commission reject a complaint by cable operators charging that Verizon Communications violated the agency's customer privacy rules by using customer information to prevent them from switching their phone service to cable, an agency official said on condition of anonymity.

Beyond that, the enforcement bureau is expected to recommend that the FCC address more broadly the issue of "customer retention activities" by both phone companies and cable operators to make sure the rules apply equally to both, the official said.

"It is important that we do everything we can to maximize consumer choice and reduce rates," FCC Chairman Kevin Martin said in a statement Friday. "In today's competitive telecommunications market, we must make sure that there is a level playing field for all companies to compete."

Both Verizon and phone industry leader AT&T offer high-speed Internet and video services that compete with cable, while cable providers sell phone services.

Comcast and Time Warner Cable, among others, had complained to the FCC in February that Verizon was improperly using its customers' information in order to stop them from switching their phone service.

In a recommendation expected on Friday, the enforcement bureau will say the FCC should turn down that complaint and look further into whether customer retention efforts on all sides are anti-competitive.

Comcast responded in a statement by saying, "We are evaluating our legal options at the federal level and will continue to pursue our complaints with state public-utility commissions."

Last month, Verizon countered the cable industry complaint by asking the FCC to make it easier for people to switch from cable television to video services offered by phone companies.

Verizon said consumers should be able to switch from cable as easily as they can change phone companies. Phone companies accept cancellations from rival providers, but many cable companies require consumers to submit disconnection orders themselves.

Cable operators' efforts "to suppress communications would reduce consumer choice, and the bureau's recommendation to reject it is legally correct and good policy," Verizon said in a statement Friday. "As the FCC looks at the rules, it should note that consumers cannot enjoy the full benefits of competition if companies are blocked from providing information on new choices."

Story Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.

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2 comments (Page 1 of 1)
I Missed Something...
by lampietheclown April 12, 2008 6:57 PM PDT
QUOTE: ...using customer information to prevent them from switching their phone service to cable... That tells me why but not how. How are they using customer information to do this? In what way does it (allegedly) breach their privacy agreement? The fact that they are trying to keep their customers from switching to a competitors service is not a story. It would be a story if they didn't try. Lampie
Reply to this comment
Hmm. Kevin Martin sides with the telcos _again_...
by directorblue April 13, 2008 12:42 PM PDT
These news stories can be written years in advance. When has Martin _ever_ sided with the American consumer or the cable operators to enhance competition with the telcos? Answer: never, so far as I can tell. Allowing AT&T to absorb BellSouth... preventing wholesaling of 700 MHz spectrum... and hindering cable competition wherever possible... All appear to be the handiwork of Martin, who if memory serves used to be a big telecom lawyer (and one of the biggest clients at his old firm is... Verizon). Someday an enterprising reporter will actually do some "reporting" and discuss these egregious conflicts-of-interest. Martin may be doing nothing "technically" wrong, but his potential conflicts certainly smell to high heaven. And his behavior during his short reign has done nothing to persuade me that he gives a flying flip about the American consumer.
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