Telecom and the Internet Hearing: “What Your Broadband Provider Knows About Your Web Use: Deep Packet Inspection and Communications Laws and Policies.”
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Representative Edward J. Markey (D-MA), chairman of the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet chaired a hearing on Deep Packet Inspection Technology and Consumer Privacy and Related Issues.
Below is the chairman's opening statement:
Good Morning. Privacy
is a cornerstone of freedom. Without
question, the digital era in communications technologies will heighten concern
about the sensitivity of personal information that can be collected or
disclosed about individual citizens and the ever increasing pervasiveness of
such data collection.
Obviously, this is happening across our society -- from
video cameras at crosswalks and Federal buildings, checkout scanners in
supermarkets, to the collection of information by national security entities,
and the gleaning of information from a consumer's web use.
I have long fought for privacy provisions to be added to our
nation's communications statutes to keep pace with changes in technology and
markets. I successfully offered
amendments that became law in previous sessions of Congress to protect
children's online privacy, to extend the privacy provisions of the Cable Act to
Direct Broadcast Satellite television providers, to add privacy protections for
wireless location information, and to strengthen telemarketing privacy
protections.
In previous Congresses I also offered legislative proposals
to establish a "privacy bill of rights" for Internet users that would have
covered websites like Google, Ebay, Amazon, and others, as well as separate
legislation that required search engine sites to destroy data collected from
users that was no longer needed for any legitimate purpose. And so I obviously have long supported the
idea of legislating where needed and to do so in a way that strengthened and
harmonized our nation's communications privacy laws.
In this Subcommittee, we have direct jurisdiction over the
Federal Communications Commission and providers of telecommunications
capabilities and services. As such,
providers of broadband access to the Internet fall squarely into our oversight
role. Today we look at how so-called
deep packet inspection technologies affect consumer privacy and related issues.
There are a couple of notable differences between the data
gathering that individual websites can and do conduct and that posed by the
deployment of deep packet inspection technologies in broadband networks. First, there is a distinction in the detail,
type, and amount of data collected. As
opposed to individual websites that know certain information about visitors to
its websites and affiliates, deep packet inspection technologies can indicate
every website a user visits and much more about a person's web use. Second, there are already an array of laws on
the books that arguably address a broadband provider's treatment of these
technologies and services, including the Cable Act, the Electronic
Communications Privacy Act, the Communications Act and other laws.
From a privacy perspective, given the sheer sophistication
of the technology's capability and the obvious sensitivity of the personal information
that can be gleaned from a consumer's Web use, I believe broadband providers deploying
deep packet inspection technologies must adopt clear privacy policies. In my view, consumers deserve, at a minimum,
1) clear, conspicuous, and constructive notice about what broadband provider's
use of deep packet inspection will be, 2) meaningful, "opt-in" consent for such
use, and 3) no monitoring or data interception of those consumers who do not
grant consent for such use.
Deep packet inspection technologies can be deployed not only
with the intent to serve targeted advertising tailored to a user's web habits. They can also be utilized to manage traffic
on the network, detect network threat, discover the presence of copyrighted or
illegal material, and other applications.
As a result, these technologies raise not only significant privacy
concerns but also highlight broader policy questions, including how they impact
the evolution of the Internet itself and its future prospects for driving
innovation and fostering competition and job creation.
Today's hearing will allow the Subcommittee to better
understand the implications of deep packet inspection technologies on
consumers, broadband providers, and the broader Internet. We welcome our witnesses to the Subcommittee
and thank them for their willingness to be here this morning.
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
July 17, 2008 |
CONTACT: Ellen Connell, 202.225.2836
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