[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 63 (Thursday, April 11, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2409-S2410]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
S. 1116
Mrs. BLACKBURN. Thank you, Mr. President. Today I rise to speak about
the legislation I introduced to the Senate this week, S. 1116, the
BROWSER ACT.
[[Page S2410]]
Broadband or high-speed internet has absolutely revolutionized the
way we communicate, the way we conduct commerce, and actually the way
we participate in government.
Broadband is one of the greatest innovations in history. It allows
near-instantaneous exchange of information and brings efficiencies to
the daily life of millions of Americans as they move more of their
transactional life online.
Thanks to broadband, entrepreneurs have been able to bring thousands
of new applications to consumers. These edge services are now an
essential part of our lives. We find ourselves every day saying: I
can't imagine what we did before we had this or before we had that.
These apps give consumers access to entertainment, news, information,
helping us drive around town, and access to emergency services.
As consumers use these applications, they generate massive amounts of
data about themselves, and that is the problem. Many companies collect
this data and use it for a range of purposes without the user's
knowledge.
They are collecting all of this--every bill you pay, every website
you visit, these platforms are following you.
After all this information is shared, the question is, Who owns the
virtual you? Who owns you and your presence online? Our laws have not
kept pace with technological innovation.
Now we see some States and we even have some cities that are adding
more complexity to the problem by enacting their own privacy rules and
standards, despite the fact that digital commerce is not restricted to
one area. Digital commerce is interstate and global in nature.
It is time we have a consistent national law regarding online
privacy. We need one set of rules and one regulator for the entire
internet ecosystem. It just makes sense.
That is why I have introduced the legislation I previously proposed
as a Member of the House of Representatives. As I said, it is called
the BROWSER Act. Americans want to be certain their privacy is
protected in the physical and the virtual space. Broadband users--who
are each and every one of us--should have the right to say who can or
cannot access their private data.
Think about it. At this point, how and when you pay your bills, the
credit cards you use, the sites you visit, the merchandise you shop
for, friends you connect with, there is somebody tracking that activity
with every move of the mouse. They are on it.
Consumers should have the right to clear and conspicuous notice of a
service providers' privacy policies and the ability to either opt in or
opt out, depending on the sensitive nature of that data. The BROWSER
Act requires digital services to provide users with clear and
conspicuous notice of their privacy rights. It also requires digital
services to provide users the ability to opt in to the collection of
sensitive information while also giving users the ability to opt out of
the collection of nonsensitive information.
By allowing for a clear and conspicuous notification process,
consumers will be able to make a more educated choice about the nature
of the relationship they want to have with online vendors and with tech
companies.
Furthermore, the BROWSER Act will prohibit digital services from
denying their service to users who refuse to waive their personal
privacy rights. The BROWSER Act also empowers the FTC, the Federal
Trade Commission, to enforce these rules using its unfair or deceptive
acts or practices authorities.
Now the Federal Trade Commission has been our privacy regulator in
both the physical and the online space. Just this week, Senator
Klobuchar and I sent a letter to the FTC urging stronger action for bad
actors in the tech space. Companies like Facebook and Google have
transformed society in revolutionary ways and need to recognize that
with that great power comes great responsibility. This is the 21st
century; it is not the Wild West. These tech companies need to be
respectful of your privacy rights.
My hope is that through this bipartisan effort, we will shed light on
the need to protect competition and online privacy to keep up with the
fast-paced changes in technology. The FTC has a responsibility to hold
tech companies accountable for securing their platforms. We need them
to step up and be the cop on the beat in the virtual space.
Before I yield the floor, I want to make one last point. The BROWSER
Act treats everyone in broadband and edge companies exactly the same--
one regulator, one set of rules. This is common sense.
Unfortunately, yesterday, Democrats in the House passed a bill to
regulate broadband service providers, but they didn't do anything to
Big Tech. They didn't do anything about privacy with Google, with
Facebook, with Yahoo--these people who collect your data and sell it to
the highest bidder; then that person markets back to you.
When I chaired the Communications and Technology Subcommittee in the
House, I repeatedly offered to work with the other side of the aisle to
preserve a free and open internet. I am always happy to work together
to find a legislative solution and put this so-called net neutrality
issue to rest once and for all. Rather than work together on this, the
House pushed through a hyperpartisan bill to reinstate a controversial,
heavyhanded regulation of communication companies, but--heaven forbid--
they do not want to touch Big Tech, their big buddies.
I am so grateful Leader McConnell has said that this bill coming from
the House is dead on arrival in the Senate. I look forward to
continuing to work on this issue. But here is what my friends across
the aisle and my friends over in the House need to realize: The
internet is not broken. The internet is not broken. Many of you
probably have an electronic device close at hand. It is working just
fine. The internet does not need the intervention of Nancy Pelosi and
House Democrats. It is fine. It is going to be just fine by itself. In
fact, as an alternative, we could just strike out the text of the
House-passed bill and insert the BROWSER Act in its place--one set of
rules for the entire internet ecosystem, one set of rules enforced by
one Federal regulator. That is the BROWSER Act. It is about fairness.
It is about encouraging innovation. It is about making certain we keep
a free and open internet.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Fischer). The majority leader.