Another thing that weakened the FCC’s case was that in most instances, the systems the carriers had in place worked to keep customer data safe, and only a small number of users were affected by unauthorized requests. The FCC maintained that the companies didn’t do enough to protect customer data after it emerged that Securus, a communication company serving prisons, was providing location data to a Missouri sheriff without court orders who used it to track mobile phone users.
T-Mobile and the other wireless companies have also argued that the data in question isn’t protected by the Communications Act. They say that the law only holds them responsible for the data they have as a result of providing voice services and not the information they have as a result of providing data services.
The judge’s panel was skeptical of this claim and said that carriers should safeguard all information entrusted to them.
If the court decides in T-Mobile‘s favor, it may make the FCC a little more cautious about how it approaches such incidents in the future.
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source: https://www.phonearena.com/news/t-mobile-challenges-fcc-securus-fine-92-million_id168820


