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FTC Pledges "Vigorous" Pursuit of Cell Phone Record Sales |
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February 3, 2006
The agency told the House Committee on Energy and Commerce that it is currently investigating these activities and plans to pursue the investigations vigorously. "Companies that engage in pretexting – the practice of obtaining personal information, such as telephone records, under false pretenses – not only violate the law, but they undermine consumers' confidence in the marketplace and in the security of their sensitive data," Commissioner Jonathan Leibowitz told the committee. According to Leibowitz, an entire industry of companies offering to provide purchasers with the cellular and land line phone records of third parties has developed. He said the agency could bring law enforcement actions against telephone record pretexters for deceptive or unfair practices under Section 5 of the FTC Act and that the FTC is currently investigating companies that appear to be engaged in telephone pretexting. "While pretexting to acquire telephone records has recently become more prevalent, the practice of pretexting is not new. The Commission has a history of combating pretexting." The first FTC law enforcement action targeting operators who used false pretenses to gather financial information occurred in 1999. The company involved in that case offered to provide consumers' financial records for a fee. The FTC charged the company's employees obtained the records from financial institutions by posing as the consumer whose records it was seeking. The Commission charged that the practice was unfair and deceptive and violated the FTC Act. Following passage of the Gramm Leach Bliley Act (GLBA), which specifically prohibits pretexting of customer data from financial institutions, the agency launched Operation Detect Pretext in 2001. Report Your Experience
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