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Docket ID: [CC Docket No. 96-115; CC Docket No. 96-149; FCC 01-247]
SUBJECT CATEGORY: Telecommunications Carriers' Use of Customer Proprietary Network Information and Other Customer Information; Implementation of the Non- Accounting Safeguards
DOCUMENT SUMMARY: This document is intended to clarify the status of the Commission's CPNI rules after the Tenth Circuit's opinion and explains how parties may obtain customer consent for use of their CPNI.
SUMMARY: Telecommunications Act of 1996; implementation—; Customer proprietary network information and other customer information; telecommunications carriers’ use; clarification,
1. In the Customer Proprietary Network Information (CPNI) Order (63 FR 20364, April 24, 1998), the Commission stated that section 222(c)(1) of the Act allows a carrier to use, without the customer's prior approval, the customer's CPNI derived from the complete service that the customer subscribes to from that carrier and its affiliates, for marketing purposes within the existing service relationship. This is known as the ``total service approach.'' The Commission also concluded that carriers must notify the customer of the customer's rights under section 222 and then obtain express written, oral or electronic customer approvala ``notice and optin'' approachbefore a carrier may use CPNI to market services outside the customer's existing service relationship with that carrier. US West appealed this order to the Tenth Circuit. On August 16, 1999, the Commission adopted the CPNI Reconsideration Order (64 FR 53242, October 1, 1999) in response to a number of petitions for reconsideration, forbearance, and clarification of the CPNI Order. The CPNI Reconsideration Order, among other things, further clarified the total service approach. It also retained the opt in approach.
2. After the Commission adopted the CPNI Reconsideration Order, the
Tenth Circuit issued its decision in US WEST v. FCC, vacating a portion
of the CPNI Order ``and the regulations adopted therein.'' In US WEST
v. FCC, US WEST contended that the optin approach for customer
approval in the CPNI Order violated the First and Fifth Amendments of
the Constitution. The Tenth Circuit first questioned whether the
government had demonstrated that the interests it put forward in regulating CPNIprotecting customer privacy and fostering
competitionare substantial. The court agreed that the government had
asserted a substantial interest in protecting customers' privacy, but
declined to find that promoting competition was a significant
consideration in Congress' enactment of section 222. The court
nonetheless concluded that the government did not demonstrate that the
CPNI regulations requiring optin customer approval ``directly and
materially advanc[ed] its interests in protecting privacy and promoting
competition.'' The court concluded that the Commission's determination
that an optin requirement would best protect a consumer's privacy
interests was not narrowly tailored as required by the First Amendment
because the Commission had failed to adequately consider an optout option.
3. The court's opinion in US WEST v. FCC analyzed only the
constitutionality of the Commission's interpretation of the customer
approval requirement of section 222(c)(1) of the Act by enacting the
optin regime discussed above. As the Commission has found previously,
the court's vacatur order related only to the discrete portions of the
CPNI Order and rules requiring optin customer approval. Had the court
intended to take the unusual step of vacating portions of the order and
rules not before it, the Commission believes it would have said so
explicitly. Accordingly, we conclude that the court sought to eliminate
only the specific section of our rules that was before it, and that its
vacatur order applied only to Sec. 64.2007(c), the only provision
inextricably tied to the optin mechanism. The remainder of the Commission's CPNI rules remain in effect.
Federal Communications Commission.
Magalie Roman Salas,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 0126579 Filed 102201; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 671201P
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Marcy Greene, Attorney Advisor, Policy and Program Planning Division, Common Carrier Bureau, (202) 4182410.
14 CFR Part 39 40 CFR Part 52 14 CFR Part 71 33 CFR Part 165 50 CFR Part 679 26 CFR Part 1 40 CFR Part 180 47 CFR Part 73 50 CFR Part 17 33 CFR Part 117 44 CFR Part 67 50 CFR Part 648 14 CFR Part 97 33 CFR Part 100 40 CFR Part 63 50 CFR Part 622 26 CFR Part 301 39 CFR Part 111 40 CFR Part 300 50 CFR Part 660 44 CFR Part 65 40 CFR Parts 52 and 81 40 CFR Part 271 47 CFR Part 64 50 CFR Part 665 47 CFR Part 76 50 CFR Part 229 14 CFR Part 23 14 CFR Part 25 21 CFR Part 522