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AT&T ,Verizon, Facebook selling customer data

AT&T has announced that it will begin selling customers’ smart phone data to the highest bidder, putting the telecommunications giant in line with Verizon, Facebook and other competitors that quietly use a consumer’s history for marketing purposes.

The company claims its new privacy policy, to be updated within   “the next few weeks,” exists to “deliver more relevant  advertising” to users based on which apps they use and their  location, which is provided by GPS-tracking. Apparently  recognizing the natural privacy concerns a customer might have,  AT&T assured the public that all data would be aggregated and  made anonymous to prevent individual identification.

A letter to customers, for instance, described how someone  identified as a movie fan will be sent personalized ads for a  nearby cinema.

People who live in a particular geographic area might appear  to be very interested in movies, thanks to collective information  that shows wireless devices from that area are often located in  the vicinity of movie theaters,” the letter states. “We  might create a ‘movie’ characteristic for that area, and deliver  movie ads to the people who live there.”

A June 28 blog post from AT&T’s chief privacy officer Bob  Quinn said the new policy will focus on “Providing You Service  and Improving Our Network and Services,” but the online  reaction has been overwhelmingly negative, with many customers  looking for a way to avoid the new conditions.

You require that we allow you to store a persistent cookie of  your choosing in our web browsers to opt out,” one person  wrote. “No mention of how other HTTP clients, such as email  clients, can opt out. If you really did care about your  customers, you would provide a way for us to opt out all traffic  to/from our connection and mobile devices in one easy  setting.”

One problem for any customer hoping for a new service is the lack  of options, smartphone or otherwise. Facebook, Google, Twitter  and Verizon each store consumer data for purposes that have not  yet been made clear. And because of the profit potential that  exists when a customer blindly trusts a company with their data,  small Internet start-ups, including AirSage and many others, have  developed a way to streamline information into dollars.

The nefarious aspect of AT&T’s announcement is underscored by  the recent headlines around the National Security Agency, which  has spent years has compelling wireless corporations to hand over  data collected on millions of Americans. Unfortunately for the  privacy of those concerned, AT&T’s new policy may only be a  sign of things to come.

Instead of merely offering customers a trusted conduit for  communication, carriers are coming to see subscribers as sources  of data that can be mined for profit, a practice more common  among providers of free online services like Google and  Facebook,” the Wall Street Journal wrote about the matter in  May.

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