Wireless Providers: Asking For Warrants Would Be Too Much Work

Earlier this month, I wrote about research by the ACLU that found in many cases, police departments aren’t bothering to request warrants before asking mobile providers to turn over location information from suspects’ cell phones. But what about the role of telecoms in police investigations? It’s bad enough that law enforcement agencies aren’t bothering with due process, but at least part of the blame falls on the carriers who are turning that data over without seeing a warrant. That’s why legislation like the California Location Privacy Bill, which would require police to show a warrant before accessing location data and for service providers to publish reports of such requests, seems like such a good, common-sense idea. Right? Well, not according to leading wireless industry trade group CTIA an acronym it bafflingly still uses, even though the organization has dropped the moniker Cellular Telephone Industries Association in favor of The Wireless Association – which says that asking for a warrant would, well, just be too much work. In an official CTIA letter to Mark Leno, the bill’s author, vice president of external and state affairs Jamie Hastings said the wireless industry has “serious concerns that the legislation may create confusion for wireless providers and hamper their response to legitimate law enforcement investigations. In addition, the provider reporting requirements create unduly burdensome and costly mandates on providers and their employees and are unnecessary as they will not serve wireless consumers.” The CTIA, and Hastings, represent member companies including Verizon, AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile. Hastings is doing the dirty work, but the message is clear: They don’t want to be held accountable to their customers. There’s another particularly weird moment in the letter. “The bill would require providers to report the total number of location information disclosures annually, the number of times location information has been disclosed, the number of times no location information has been provided, the number of times providers contest such demands, and the number of users whose location information has been disclosed,” Hastings wrote. “Additionally, these reports would need to be posted on the Internet in a searchable format. ” What a crushing amount of data that must be! Especially in comparison to, say, tracking the bills and overage charges on what now amount to more than 331 million wireless subscribers in the United States, according again to the CTIA. “Mobile phone companies can give up this data millions of times per year, but really can’t be bothered to tell us when or why?” wrote Ars Technica’s Cyrus Farivar. “That’s ridiculous. ”

Image: Morguefile
Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Recent Posts

HostMilano 2025: AI and Automation Transform Professional Kitchen Operations

HostMilano 2025 concluded its 44th edition on October 26 and remains the premier world fair…

2 días ago

Prezent AI reaches latest milestone following recognition as top software company in 2025

As the new year approaches, the Software Report—a trusted source for market research and industry…

3 días ago

Ness Digital Engineering and Vendavo to usher in new era of AI-led innovation

Now that AI has been on the scene for a number of years, we can…

3 días ago

AI is reengineering orthopedic systems through new multi-layer software architectures

The rapid evolution of orthopedic technology is no longer being driven by devices alone. Instead,…

2 semanas ago

Digital credentialing enters a new phase with the arrival of I.C.E. Exchange 2025 in Phoenix

The credentialing industry’s calendar is turning toward Phoenix this month, where the I.C.E. Exchange will…

2 semanas ago

Tax season gets an upgrade as Deduction raises $2.8M and launches its AI-powered tax agent

Deduction today announced the launch of “Taylor, CPAI,” the first AI tax accountant built for…

2 semanas ago