US Chamber of Commerce
U.S. Chamber of Commerce Letter on Broadband Connectivity and the Homework Gap
The US Chamber of Commerce urgently calls on Congress to provide the funding necessary to ensure students without sufficient access to digital tools do not fall behind. In addition, Congress should fully fund the “Broadband DATA Act” signed into law in March, which would allow the Federal Communications Commission to better facilitate long-term digital resilience.
US Chamber Releases Recommendations for Closing the Digital Divide in Rural America
The US Chamber of Commerce’s Technology Engagement Center (C_TEC) released nine policy principles aimed at closing America’s digital divide.
US Chamber of Commerce Releases Model Privacy Legislation, Urges Congress to Pass a Federal Privacy Law (US Chamber of Commerce)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Wed, 02/13/2019 - 12:35FCC’s Idea of a Broadband Privacy ‘Compromise’ Involves Few Compromises
If the Federal Communications Commission gets its broadband privacy rule wrong, Internet service providers, consumers, and edge providers could all suffer. The FCC "compromise" on its privacy rules is far from the real change needed to protect the Internet economy.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s revised proposal claims to be a compromise that draws upon the Federal Trade Commission’s suggestion of opt-in consent for only sensitive data, but in reality the commission’s new proposal eliminates the need to distinguish between sensitive and non-sensitive data because opt-in consent will still be mandated for most of the consumer information useful for broadband providers. The FCC’s revised rule in essence tells ISPs that they can now be smothered by a ton of regulatory feathers instead of a ton of stone. So why is it critical that the FCC adopt an approach closer to that of the FTC? If the commission gets the broadband privacy rule wrong, ISPs, consumers, and those providing internet content and services could all suffer negative consequences.