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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

AT&T sells your location data to anyone says lawsuit



No Doubt the NSA is an AT&T customer

  • Who needs a warrant when you can just buy the date from private parties.


(WND)  -  A lawsuit has been filed in federal court in California that accuses AT&T of selling the location data of its phone customers to “anyone for any purpose.”
That’s a violation of its promise to customers to protect such information, including “phone customers’ sensitive location data,” the complaint charges.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation said it is working with Pierce Bainbridge Beck Price & Hecht LLP on the class action complaint filed on behalf of AT&T customers in California.
It seeks to stop the telecom giant and two data location aggregators from giving bounty hunters, car dealerships, landlords, creditors, bail bondsmen, stalkers and many others access to wireless customers’ real-time locations without authorization.
“An investigation by Motherboard earlier this year revealed that any cellphone user’s precise, real-time location could be bought for just $300. The report showed that carriers, including AT&T, were making this data available to hundreds of third parties without first verifying that users had authorized such access. AT&T not only failed to obtain its customers’ express consent, making matters worse, it created an active marketplace that trades on its customers’ real-time location data,” EFF said.

“AT&T and data aggregators have systematically violated the location privacy rights of tens of millions of AT&T customers,” said EFF Staff Attorney Aaron Mackey. “Consumers must stand up to protect their privacy and shut down this illegal market. That’s why we filed this lawsuit today.”
AT&T is “entrusted with real-time location data so that it can help 911 operators find its customers in the event of an emergency,” the complaint argues.
The technology can locate callers even within a building, to the floor or even specific room.
“This real-time location data is highly sensitive and can reveal where any AT&T customer is located – often with in just a few meters – in seconds. … This data was never intended for broad commercial purposes.”
The lawsuit alleges AT&T violated the Federal Communications Act and engaged in deceptive practices under California’s unfair competition law.
“The location data AT&T offered up for sale is extremely precise and can locate any of its wireless subscribers in real time, providing a window into the intimate details of their lives: where they go to the doctor, where they worship, where they live, and much more,” said Abbye Klamann Ognibene, an associate at Pierce Bainbridge.
“To sell this information without any notification to users is deceptive, extraordinarily invasive of their privacy, and illegal,” said Thomas D. Warren, a partner at Pierce Bainbridge.
The case, filed in federal court in the Northern District of California, seeks an order to stop distributing the location information to “data aggregators” who “specialize in the commercial sale of location data for widespread purposes.”
How bad can it get?
The complaint cites the case of former sheriff Corey Hutcheson, who had access to carrier location data and used it to target and track a former sheriff, five state troopers and Circuit Judge David Dolan for three years “without their consent or knowledge and without legal authority to do so.
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