Reuters/Henry Romero
Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona introduced a resolution on Tuesday backed by 34 other senators to undo the regulations under the Congressional Review Act, a typically-seldom-used law that GOP members in Congress are more widely applying to repeal recently approved regulations from federal agencies. The resolution broadly seeks to prevent similar rules from taking effect as well.
Flake had previously announced his intention to reverse the rules in an op-ed earlier this month.
Representative Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, who chairs a House panel on telecommunications, introduced a companion measure on Wednesday. Republicans control both chambers of Congress.
Getty/Chip Somodevilla
Now, the entire set of privacy rules is on the chopping block. The most famous portion the rules would force internet providers to obtain consumer consent before using precise geo-location, financial information, health information, children's information, and web-browsing and app usage history for advertising and internal marketing. You would have to specifically opt-in before your internet provider was allowed to sell such data.
That portion of the rules was not scheduled to take effect until early December, however.
FCC chairman Ajit Pai, nominated by Republican President Donald Trump on Tuesday to serve a new five-year term, told a Senate panel on Wednesday that consumers would have privacy protections even without the Obama administration rules.
AP
Republican commissioners including Pai said at the time that the rules unfairly give websites like Facebook, Twitter, or Google the ability to harvest more data than service providers and dominate digital advertising.
Sites like those are currently regulated under slightly looser privacy guidelines set by the Federal Trade Commission. Most notably, they are not required to get opt-in consent before using your web browsing and app usage histories for advertising purposes. This is part of why you may see targeted advertisements as you browse online.
Pai and other GOP officials have said they want to create a privacy framework that allows ISPs to be regulated under FCC guidelines that are similar to those from the FTC.
"All actors in the online space should be subject to the same rules, enforced by the same agency," said Pai and acting FTC chairwoman Maureen Ohlhausen in a joint statement upon the FCC's data security stay last week. "Until that happens, however, we will work together on harmonizing the FCC's privacy rules for broadband providers with the FTC's standards for other companies in the digital economy."
Reuters/Yuri Gripas
Blackburn, meanwhile, wants to return all privacy jurisdiction to the FTC. "The FCC's decision last October to unilaterally swipe jurisdiction from the FTC by creating its own privacy rules for ISPs was troubling," she said in a statement on Wednesday. "The FTC has been our government's sole online privacy regulator for over twenty years. A dual-regulatory approach will only serve to create confusion within the Internet eco-system and harm consumers."
The FTC's ability to enforce ISPs is currently in doubt, however, due to an appeals court decision last year that deemed AT&T exempt from FTC oversight because of its status as a "common carrier" - a designation that was set in place for all ISPs by the 2015 net-neutrality order. Pai and Republicans in Congress have widely opposed applying that status to ISPs, and are widely expected to try rolling back the current net-neutrality rules in some form.
That said, even if the Obama-era net-neutrality order is reversed, some ISPs like Verizon and AT&T would retain their "common carrier" status because they offer telephone services. Further action would likely be needed to restore FTC authority.
Democrats in Congress have criticized the resolutions.
"Big broadband barons and their Republican allies want to turn the telecommunications marketplace into a Wild West where consumers are held captive with no defense against abusive invasions of their privacy by internet service providers," said Massachusetts senator Ed Markey in a statement on Tuesday.
The American Civil Liberties Union also criticized Flake's proposal.
"With this move, Congress is essentially allowing companies like Comcast, AT&T, and Verizon to sell consumers' private information to the highest bidder," said ACLU general counsel Neema Singh Guliani.