98-10740. Telecommunications Carriers' Use of Customer Proprietary Network Information and Other Customer Information  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 79 (Friday, April 24, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 20326-20339]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-10740]
    
    
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    FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
    
    47 CFR Parts 22 and 64
    
    [CC Docket No. 96-115; FCC 98-27]
    
    
    Telecommunications Carriers' Use of Customer Proprietary Network 
    Information and Other Customer Information
    
    AGENCY: Federal Communications Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Second Report and Order (Order) released February 26, 1998 
    promulgates regulations to implement the statutory obligations of 
    section 222 of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 relating to 
    telecommunications carriers' use of Customer Proprietary Network 
    Information (CPNI) and other customer information. The Order resolves 
    CPNI issues raised in other proceedings that have been deferred to this 
    proceeding, including obligations in connection with sections 272 and 
    274 of the 1996 Act.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: May 26, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lisa Choi, Attorney, Common Carrier 
    Bureau, Policy and Program Planning Division, (202) 418-1580. For 
    additional information concerning the information collections contained 
    in this Order, contact Judy Boley at (202) 418-0214, or via the 
    Internet at jboley@fcc.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This is a summary of the Commission's Order 
    adopted February 19, 1998, and released February 26, 1998. The full 
    text of this Order is available for inspection and copying during 
    normal business hours in the FCC Reference Center, 1919 M St., N.W., 
    Room 239, Washington, D.C. The complete text also may be obtained 
    through the World Wide Web, at http://www.fcc.gov/Bureaus/Common 
    Carrier/Orders/fcc98-27.wp, or may be purchased from the Commission's 
    copy contractor, International Transcription Service, Inc., (202) 857-
    3800, 1231 20th St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036. This Report and 
    Order contains new or modified information collections subject to the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA). It has been submitted to the 
    Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review under the PRA. OMB, 
    the general public, and other federal agencies are invited to comment 
    on the new or modified information collections contained in this 
    proceeding.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Certification
    
        As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the Order contains a 
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis which is set forth in the Order. 
    A brief description of the analysis follows.
        Pursuant to section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the 
    Commission performed a comprehensive analysis of the Order with regard 
    to small entities. This analysis includes: (1) a succinct statement of 
    the need for, and objectives of, the Commission's decisions in the 
    Order; (2) a summary of the significant issues raised by the public 
    comments in response to the initial regulatory flexibility analysis, a 
    summary of the Commission's assessment of these issues, and a statement 
    of any changes made in the Order as a result of the comments; (3) a 
    description of and an estimate of the number of small entities to which 
    the Order will apply; (4) a description of the projected reporting, 
    recordkeeping and other compliance requirements of the Order, including 
    an estimate of the classes of small entities which will be subject to 
    the requirement and the type of professional skills necessary for 
    compliance with the requirement; (5) a description of the steps the 
    Commission has taken to minimize the significant economic impact on 
    small entities consistent with the stated objectives of applicable 
    statutes, including a statement of the
    
    [[Page 20327]]
    
    factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the alternative 
    adopted in the Order and why each one of the other significant 
    alternatives to each of the Commission's decisions which affect small 
    entities was rejected.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This Report and Order contains either a new or modified information 
    collection. The Commission, as part of its continuing effort to reduce 
    paperwork burdens, invites the general public and the Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB) to comment on the information collections 
    contained in this Order, as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995, Public Law 104-12. Written comments by the public on the 
    information collections are due 30 days after date of publication in 
    the Federal Register. OMB notification of action is due July 6, 1998. 
    Comments should address: (1) whether the new or modified collection of 
    information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of 
    the Commission, including whether the information shall practical 
    utility; (b) the accuracy of the Commission's burden estimates; (c) 
    ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information 
    collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of 
    information on the respondents including the use of automated 
    collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
        OMB Control Number: 3060-0715.
        Title: Implementation of the Telecommunications Act of 1996: 
    Telecommunications Carriers' Use of customer proprietary Network 
    Information and Other Customer Information.
        Form No.: N/A.
        Type of Review: Revised collection.
        Respondents: Business or other for-profit.
        Public reporting burden for the collection of information is 
    estimated as follows:
    
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                             Number of                                                              
           Information collection           respondents       Annual hour burden per         Total annual burden    
                                          (approximately)            response                                       
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Customer Approval (47 CFR 64.2007)..          4,832    78 hours...................  376,896 hours.              
    Customer Approval Documentation and           4,832    30 minutes.................  2,416 hours.                
     Recordkeeping (47 CFR 64.2007(e)                                                                               
     and 64.2009).                                                                                                  
    Notification of CPNI Rights (47 CFR           4,832    78 hours...................  376,896 hours.              
     64.2007(f)).                                                                                                   
    Notification Recordkeeping (47 CFR            4,832    30 minutes.................  2,416 hours.                
     64.2007(e)).                                                                                                   
    Audit Mechanism (47 CFR 64.2009)....          4,832    30 minutes.................  2,416 hours.                
    Event Histories Recordkeeping (47             4,832    30 minutes.................  2,416 hours.                
     CFR 64.2009(d)).                                                                                               
    Corporate Compliance Certification            4,832    1 hour.....................  4,832 hours.                
     (47 CFR 64.2009(e)).                                                                                           
    Aggregate customer Information                1,400    1 hour.....................  1,400 hours.                
     Disclosure Requirements for LECs.                                                                              
    Subscriber List Information                   1,400    4 hours....................  5,600 hours.                
     Disclosure Requirement for                                                                                     
     Providers of Telephone Exchange                                                                                
     Service*.                                                                                                      
    CPNI Disclosure to Third Parties*...            500    5 hours....................  2,500 hours.                
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    *These requirements are imposed pursuant to statute. See 47 U.S.C. 222.                                         
    
        Total Annual Burden: 777,788 burden hours.
        Estimated Costs Per Respondents: $47,500 (avg.); Total cost to 
    industry: $229,520,000.
        Needs and Uses: The Second Report and Order implements the 
    statutory obligations of section 222 of the Telecommunications Act of 
    1996. Among other things, carriers are permitted to use CPNI, without 
    customer aproval, to market offerings that are related to, but limited 
    by, the customer's existing service relationship with their carrier. 
    Carriers must obtain express customer approval to use CPNI to market 
    service outside the customer's existing service relationship. Carriers 
    must provide a one-time notification of customers' CPNI rights prior to 
    any solicitation for approval. All of the collections would be used to 
    ensure that telecommunications carriers comply with the CPNI 
    requirements the Commission promulgates in the Order and to implement 
    section 222 of the statute.
    
    Synopsis of Second Report and Order
    
    I. Commission Authority
    
        1. We conclude that we have authority to promulgate regulations 
    implementing section 222.
    
    II. Carrier's Right to Use CPNI Without Customer Approval
    
    A. Scope of a Carrier's Right Pursuant to Section 222(c)(1)(A): the 
    ``Total Service Approach''
        2. The statutory language makes clear that Congress did not intend 
    for the implied customer approval to use, disclose, or permit access to 
    CPNI under section 222(c)(1)(A) to extend to all of the categories of 
    telecommunications services offered by the carrier, as proposed by 
    advocates of the single category approach. First, Congress' repeated 
    use of the singular ``telecommunications service'' must be given 
    meaning. Section 222(c)(1) prohibits a carrier from using CPNI obtained 
    from the provision of ``a telecommunications service'' for any purpose 
    other than to provide ``the telecommunications service from which such 
    information is derived'' or services necessary to, or used in, 
    provision of ``such telecommunications service.'' We agree with many 
    commenters that this language plainly indicates that Congress both 
    contemplated the possible existence of more than one carrier service 
    and made a deliberate decision that section 222(c)(1)(A) not extend to 
    all. Indeed, Congress' reference to plural ``telecommunications 
    services'' in sections 222(a) and 222(d)(1) demonstrates a clear 
    distinction between the singular and plural forms of the term. Under 
    well-established principles of statutory construction, ``where Congress 
    has chosen different language in proximate subsections of the same 
    statute,'' we are ``obligated to give that choice effect.'' Consistent 
    with this, section 222(c)(1)'s explicit restriction of a carrier's 
    ``use'' of CPNI ``in the provision of'' service further evidences 
    Congress' intent that carriers' own use of CPNI be limited to the 
    service provided to the particular customer, and not be expanded to all 
    the categories of telecommunications services available from the 
    carrier.
        3. We therefore reject the single category approach as contrary to 
    the statutory language.
        4. We likewise reject parties' suggestions that we interpret 
    section 222(c)(1)(A) based on prior Commission decisions, including the 
    McCaw orders, various Computer III orders, as well as the Common 
    Carrier Bureau's opinion in BankAmerica v. AT&T, which permitted the 
    sharing of customer information among affiliated companies based on the 
    existing business relationship and the perceived benefits
    
    [[Page 20328]]
    
    of integrated marketing. We similarly reject parties' reliance on other 
    statutes, particularly the Cable Television Consumer Protection and 
    Competition Act (1992 Cable Act) and the Telephone Consumer Protection 
    Act of 1991 (TCPA), as well as the Commission's implementation of those 
    Acts. Neither of these statutes contains the specific and unique 
    language of section 222 which expressly limits a carrier's ``use'' of 
    customer information. Again, to the extent other provisions are 
    probative, they indicate that Congress was clear when it intended to 
    exempt information sharing within the context of the existing business 
    relationship from general consumer protection provisions, but chose not 
    to in section 222.
        5. We also conclude, contrary to the suggestion of its proponents, 
    that the discrete offering approach is not required by the language of 
    section 222(c)(1)(A).
        Our rejection of the discrete category approach, and support for 
    the total service approach, is also informed by our understanding of 
    the relationship between sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (d)(1). Had Congress 
    intended to permit carriers to use CPNI only for ``rendering'' service, 
    as suggested under the discrete offering approach, and as explicitly 
    provided in section 222(d)(1), it would not have needed to create the 
    exception in section 222(c)(1)(A). In contrast, by interpreting section 
    222(c)(1)(A) as we do, to permit some use of CPNI for marketing 
    purposes, we give meaning to both statutory provisions. Indeed, in 
    contrast with the various parties' views concerning the scope of 
    section 222(c)(1)(A), commenters that addressed the meaning of section 
    222(d)(1) uniformly suggest that it does not extend to a carrier's use 
    of CPNI for marketing purposes.
        6. The legislative history confirms our view that in section 222 
    Congress intended neither to allow carriers unlimited use of CPNI for 
    marketing purposes as they moved into new service avenues opened 
    through the 1996 Act, nor to restrict carrier use of CPNI for marketing 
    purposes altogether.
        7. Finally, we also reject the various arguments advanced by GTE, 
    PacTel, USTA, and U S WEST that our adoption of an interpretation more 
    limited than the single or two category approaches raises 
    Constitutional concern.
        8. We reject the Constitutional takings arguments because, to the 
    extent CPNI is property, we agree that it is better understood as 
    belonging to the customer, not the carrier.
        9. We likewise reject parties' Equal Protection challenges based on 
    section 222's limitation to telecommunications carriers alone.
        10. Non-Telecommunications Offerings. Several carriers argue that 
    certain non-telecommunications offerings, in addition to being covered 
    by section 222(c)(1)(B), also should be included within any service 
    distinctions we adopt pursuant to section 222(c)(1)(A), including 
    inside wiring, customer premises equipment (CPE), and certain 
    information services. Based on the statutory language, however, we 
    conclude that inside wiring, CPE, and information services do not fall 
    within the scope of section 222(c)(1)(A) because they are not 
    ``telecommunications services.'' More specifically, section 
    222(c)(1)(A) refers expressly to carrier use of CPNI in the provision 
    of a ``telecommunications service.''
        11. We conclude that carriers may not use CPNI derived from the 
    provision of a telecommunications service for the provision or 
    marketing of information services pursuant to section 222(c)(1)(A). We 
    likewise conclude that inside wiring and CPE do not fall within the 
    definition of ``telecommunications service,'' and thus do not fall 
    within the scope of section 222(c)(1)(A).
        12. We also conclude that, to the extent that services formerly 
    described as adjunct-to-basic are offered by CMRS providers, these 
    should be considered either within the provision of CMRS under section 
    222(c)(1)(A), or as services necessary to, or used in, CMRS under 
    section 222(c)(1)(B). In addition, we agree with the result advocated 
    by WTR, and conclude that a reasonable interpretation of section 
    222(c)(1)(A) permits carriers to use, disclose, or permit access to 
    CPNI for the limited purpose of conducting research on the health 
    effects of their service.
        13. Special Treatment for Certain Carriers. We conclude that 
    Congress did not intend to, and we should not at this time, distinguish 
    among carriers for the purpose of applying section 222(c)(1). Based on 
    the statutory language, it is clear that section 222 applies to all 
    carriers equally and, with few exceptions, does not distinguish among 
    classes of carriers.
        14. We also decline to forbear from applying section 222(c)(1), or 
    any of our associated rules, to small or competitive carriers, as SBT 
    requests.
        15. We also agree with a number of parties that there should be no 
    restriction on the sharing of CPNI among a carrier's various 
    telecommunications-related entities that provide different service 
    offerings to the same customer.
        16. In addition to finding that the total service approach is most 
    consistent with the statutory language and legislative history, we are 
    persuaded that, as a policy matter, the total service approach also 
    best advances the principles of customer control and convenience 
    implicitly embodied in sections 222(c)(1) and (c)(2).
        17. Customers do not expect that carriers will need their approval 
    to use CPNI for offerings within the existing total service to which 
    they subscribe. We believe it reasonable to conclude that, where a 
    customer subscribes to a diverse service offering--a mixture of local, 
    long distance, and CMRS--from the same carrier or its subsidiary or 
    affiliated companies, the customer views its telecommunications service 
    as the total service offering that it has purchased, and can be 
    presumed to have given implied consent to its carrier to use its CPNI 
    for all aspects of that service.
        18. By contrast, neither the discrete offering approach nor the 
    three category approach serves the statutory principle of customer 
    convenience or reasonably reflects customers' expectations of what 
    constitutes their telecommunications service.
        19. We also reject the discrete offering and three category 
    approaches because we share the concern expressed by many parties that 
    such restrictive interpretations may be difficult to implement as 
    service distinctions, and corresponding customer subscriptions, become 
    blurred with market and technological advances.
        20. Customers do not expect that carriers will use CPNI to market 
    offerings outside the total service to which they subscribe.
        21. Second, even if the Westin survey accurately shows that 
    customers desire ``one-stop shopping,'' and would permit carriers to 
    share information in order to offer improved service, our 
    interpretation of section 222(c)(1) does not foreclose carriers' 
    ability to offer integrated packages nor the beneficial marketing uses 
    to which CPNI can be made.
        22. To be sure, under the total service approach carriers may not 
    use CPNI without prior customer approval to target customers they 
    believe would be receptive to new categories of service.
        23. Finally, we reject the claim put forth by several proponents of 
    the single category approach that narrower interpretations of section 
    222(c)(1)(A) would result in significant administrative burdens for 
    carriers. On the contrary, we conclude that the total service approach 
    is the least onerous administratively.
    
    [[Page 20329]]
    
    B. Scope of Carrier's Right Pursuant to Section 222(c)(1)(B)
        24. As a threshold matter, given the wide range of views on the 
    interpretation of section 222(c)(1)(B), we reject U S WEST's assertion 
    that we simply craft rules repeating, verbatim, the statutory language. 
    We clarify, however, that we do not attempt here to catalogue every 
    service included within the scope of section 222(c)(1)(B), but rather 
    address the specific offerings that have been proposed in the record as 
    falling within that section, in particular, CPE, certain information 
    services, and installation, maintenance, and repair services. We 
    likewise believe that section 222(c)(1)(B) most appropriately is 
    interpreted as recognizing that customers impliedly approve their 
    carrier's use of CPNI in connection with certain non-telecommunications 
    services. This implied approval, however, is expressly limited to those 
    services ``necessary to, or used in, the provision of such 
    telecommunications service.'' Through this limiting language, we 
    believe carriers' CPNI use is confined only to certain non-
    telecommunications services (i.e. those ``services'' either ``necessary 
    to'' or ``used in''), as well as to those services that comprise the 
    customer's total service offering (i.e. ``such [section 222(c)(1)(A)] 
    telecommunications service'').
        25. CPE and Certain Information Services. Based on the statutory 
    language we conclude that, contrary to the position advanced by several 
    parties, a carrier may not use, disclose, or permit access to CPNI, 
    without customer approval, for the provision of CPE and most 
    information services because, as other commenters assert, they are not 
    ``services necessary to, or used in, the provision of such 
    telecommunications service'' under section 222(c)(1)(B).
        26. Contrary to NYNEX's argument, we conclude that Congress' 
    designation of the publishing of directories as ``necessary to, or used 
    in'' the provision of a telecommunications service does not require a 
    broad reading of section 222(c)(1)(B) that encompasses all information 
    services. We are persuaded that section 222(c)(1)(B) covers services 
    like those formerly characterized as ``adjunct-to-basic,'' in contrast 
    to the information services such as call answering, voice mail or 
    messaging, voice storage and retrieval services, fax store and forward, 
    and Internet access services, that the parties identified in the 
    record.
        27. Our interpretation is supported by Congress' example of the 
    publishing of directories. The publishing of directories, like those 
    services formerly described as adjunct-to-basic, can appropriately be 
    viewed as necessary to and used in the provision of complete and 
    adequate telecommunication service.
        28. As a matter of statutory construction, we find that the 
    language of section 222(c)(1)(B) is clear and unambiguous, and does not 
    permit the interpretation that CPE and most information services are 
    ``services necessary to, or used in, the provision of such 
    telecommunications service.'' But even if that language is ambiguous, 
    we are unpersuaded by parties' contrary arguments based on the 
    legislative history and policy considerations.
        29. We also reject suggestions that restrictions on CPNI sharing in 
    the context of CPE and information services would be contrary to 
    customer expectations, as well as detrimental to the goals of customer 
    convenience and one-stop shopping. As ITAA notes, CPNI is not required 
    for one-stop shopping.
        30. Finally, we reject parties' contentions that we should permit 
    carriers to use CPNI in connection with CPE and information services 
    because the Commission in the past permitted more information sharing.
        31. Installation, Maintenance, and Repair Service. We conclude 
    that, pursuant to section 222(c)(1)(B), a carrier may use, disclose, or 
    permit access to CPNI, without customer approval, in its provision of 
    inside wiring installation, maintenance, and repair services.
        32. Specifically, we are persuaded that installation, maintenance, 
    and repair of inside wiring is a service both ``necessary to'' and 
    ``used in'' a carrier's provision of wireline telecommunications 
    service. As such, carriers may use, without customer approval, CPNI 
    derived from wireline service for the provision of inside wiring 
    installation, maintenance, and repair services.
        33. We further believe that our conclusion is fully consistent with 
    customer expectation, and thereby furthers the statutory principles of 
    customer control and convenience embodied in section 222.
    C. Scope of Carrier's Right Pursuant to Section 222(d)(1)
        34. In the context of installation, maintenance, and repair of 
    inside wiring, we conclude that section 222(d)(1), as well as section 
    222(c)(1)(B), permit carrier use of CPNI without customer approval for 
    the provision of such services. We agree with virtually all commenters 
    that section 222(d)(1)'s permission for carriers to use CPNI ``to 
    initiate, render, bill, and collect for telecommunications services'' 
    includes the actual installation, maintenance, and repair of inside 
    wiring.
        35. Our conclusion is consistent with Equifax's concerns that we 
    not interpret sections 222(d)(1) as well as 222(d)(2) in a manner that 
    impedes carriers' access to information for the purpose of billing, 
    fraud prevention, and related services, as well as the carriers' 
    ability to provide the required information.
        36. Contrary to the claims of AT&T and MCI, we further conclude, 
    however, that the term ``initiate'' in section 222(d)(1) does not 
    require that CPNI be disclosed by carriers when competing carriers have 
    ``won'' the customer. We agree with GTE that section 222(d)(1) applies 
    only to carriers already possessing the CPNI, within the context of the 
    existing service relationship, and not to carriers seeking access to 
    CPNI.
        37. Furthermore, a carrier's failure to disclose CPNI to a 
    competing carrier that seeks to initiate service to a customer that 
    wishes to subscribe to the competing carrier's service, may well, 
    depending upon the circumstances, constitute an unreasonable practice 
    in violation of section 201(b). We also do not believe, contrary to the 
    position suggested by AT&T, that section 222(d)(1) permits the former 
    (or soon-to-be former) carrier to use the CPNI of its former customer 
    (i.e., a customer that has placed an order for service from a competing 
    provider) for ``customer retention'' purposes.
    
    III. ``Approval'' Under Section 222(c)(1)
    
    A. Express Versus Notice and Opt-Out
        38. We conclude, contrary to the position of a number of parties, 
    that an express approval mechanism is the best means to implement this 
    provision because it will minimize any unwanted or unknowing disclosure 
    of CPNI. In addition, such a mechanism will limit the potential for 
    untoward competitive advantages by incumbent carriers. In contrast, 
    under an opt-out approach, as even its proponents admit, because 
    customers may not read their CPNI notices, there is no assurance that 
    any implied consent would be truly informed.
        39. We are not persuaded by the statutory argument raised by the 
    BOCs, AT&T, and GTE that Congress' requirement of an ``affirmative 
    written request'' in section 222(c)(2) means that Congress intended to 
    permit notice and opt-out when it required only ``approval'' in section 
    222(c)(1).
    
    [[Page 20330]]
    
        40. We likewise reject U S WEST's claim that the earliest versions 
    of what became H.R. 1555 requires that we interpret ``approval'' to 
    permit notice and opt-out.
        41. We believe that, although the legislative history offers no 
    specific guidance on the meaning of ``approval'' in section 222(c)(1), 
    the language in the Conference Report, explaining that section 222 
    strives to ``balance both competitive and consumer privacy interests 
    with regard to CPNI,'' strongly supports our conclusion that express 
    approval is the better reading of the statutory language.
        42. We also reject the arguments that Congress' express provision 
    for a notice and opt-out mechanism in section 551 of the Act somehow 
    compels that result here even though the language of section 222 
    contains no similar express reference to such a mechanism. To the 
    contrary, section 551 confirms that Congress knew how to draft a notice 
    and opt-out provision when it determined that such an approach was 
    appropriate. For all these reasons we reject commenters' arguments that 
    notice and opt-out is in some manner required by the language of 
    section 222, or other precedent.
        43. We reject PacTel's and U S WEST's contention that customers do 
    not expect carriers to seek affirmative approval for the use of 
    information to market services to which they do not subscribe, and that 
    to do so would confuse them. To the contrary, based on the results of U 
    S WEST's affirmative approval market trial, as well as those of a 
    similar trial reported by Ameritech, we believe that, when customers 
    wish to do so, they have no problem understanding a carrier's 
    solicitation for approval and granting consent for the use of CPNI 
    outside the scope of their total service offering.
        44. We reject the argument that imposing an express approval 
    requirement will ``effectively eliminate integrated marketing'' and 
    thwart the development of one stop shopping. While section 222 
    precludes carriers from jointly marketing certain services through the 
    use of CPNI, nothing in section 222 prevents carriers from jointly 
    marketing services without relying on CPNI, as CPI and Cox point out. 
    Moreover, while the use of CPNI may facilitate the marketing of 
    telecommunications services to which a customer does not subscribe, 
    such use is not necessary for carriers to engage in joint marketing. We 
    thus reject PacTel's contention that an express approval requirement 
    would vitiate section 601(d) of the 1996 Act, which allows carriers to 
    market CMRS services jointly with other telecommunications services, 
    and section 272(g) of the Act, which permits BOC joint marketing of 
    telephone exchange service and in-region interLATA service, under 
    certain conditions. To the contrary, carriers are free to market 
    jointly telecommunications services without using CPNI to the extent 
    such marketing is otherwise permissible under other provisions. In 
    addition, as TRA points out, a customer desiring an integrated 
    telecommunications service offering tailored to its needs simply may 
    give approval to allow its carrier to access CPNI for purposes outside 
    of sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (B).
        45. We reject U S WEST's argument that an express approval 
    requirement under section 222(c)(1) would impermissibly infringe upon a 
    carrier's First Amendment rights. At the outset, we think there is a 
    substantial question as to whether CPNI restrictions even implicate 
    constitutionally protected ``speech.'' Carriers remain free to 
    communicate with present or potential customers about the full range of 
    services that they offer, and section 222 therefore does not prevent a 
    carrier from engaging in protected speech with customers regarding its 
    business or its products. What carriers cannot do is use confidential 
    CPNI in a manner that is not permitted by the statute. While section 
    222 may constrain carriers' ability to more easily ``target'' certain 
    customers for marketing by limiting in some circumstances their 
    internal use of confidential customer information, we question whether 
    that of itself constitutes a restriction on protected ``speech'' within 
    the purview of the First Amendment. Nevertheless, to the extent that it 
    were concluded that CPNI restrictions under section 222 did affect 
    carrier communications with their customers or unrelated third parties 
    in such a way as to implicate the First Amendment, at most commercial 
    speech would be at issue since any limitations under section 222 relate 
    solely to the economic interests of the speaker and its audience. But 
    any governmental restrictions on commercial speech will be upheld 
    where, as here, the government asserts a substantial interest in 
    support of the regulation, the regulation advances that interest, and 
    the regulation is narrowly drawn. As the Supreme Court has observed, it 
    has never deemed it an abridgement of freedom of speech to make a 
    course of conduct illegal merely because the conduct was initiated or 
    conducted in part through language; to the contrary, similar regulation 
    of business activity has been held not to violate the first Amendment.
        46. We further conclude that an express approval requirement would 
    not violate the free speech rights of customers. To the extent a 
    customer wishes to receive information on offerings outside the scope 
    of its total service offering, it simply may grant approval under 
    section 222(c)(1). As we previously noted, to the extent customers are 
    engaged in communications with their carrier regarding the servicing of 
    their account, they are more likely to grant approval.
    B. Written, Oral and/or Electronic Approval
        47. We conclude that carriers should be permitted to obtain such 
    approval through written, oral, or electronic means, as several 
    commenters contend.
        48. We disagree with parties arguing that section 222 mandates 
    written approval. We find nothing in the language or design of section 
    222 that limits carriers to obtaining only written approval, despite 
    arguments advanced by some of these commenters.
        49. We also reject the contention that section 222(d)(3) of the Act 
    supports a written approval requirement. While section 222(d)(3) 
    contemplates oral approval in creating an exception for CPNI use during 
    an inbound call, section 222(d)(3) also may be interpreted simply to 
    permit a carrier to use CPNI to provide a customer with information for 
    the duration of an inbound call, based on oral approval, even if the 
    customer otherwise has restricted the carrier's use of its CPNI, as 
    Ameritech points out.
        50. We conclude that a carrier relying on oral customer approval 
    should be required to notify customers of their CPNI rights, and should 
    bear the burden of demonstrating that a customer has granted approval 
    subsequent to such notification pursuant to the rules we adopt in this 
    order.
    C. Duration, Frequency, and Scope of Approval
        51. We conclude that approval obtained by a carrier for the use of 
    CPNI outside of section 222(c)(1), whether oral, written, or 
    electronic, should remain in effect until the customer revokes or 
    limits such approval, as some parties suggest. We do not require 
    carriers to renew customer approval periodically, for example, annually 
    or semi-annually, or to presume that customer approval is valid only 
    for the duration of the transaction, if the customer has not otherwise 
    specified the time period during which the approval remains valid.
    
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        52. We decline to establish at this time a restriction on the 
    number of times a carrier may contact a customer to obtain approval for 
    the use of CPNI outside of section 222(c)(1), despite arguments raised 
    by some parties.
        53. We conclude that allowing a customer to grant partial use of 
    CPNI is consistent with one of the underlying principles of section 222 
    to ensure that customers maintain control over CPNI. A carrier could 
    obtain partial use by virtue of its ability to view customer records 
    for a limited duration, notwithstanding the customer's restriction of 
    CPNI use.
    D. Verification of Approval
        54. We conclude that a carrier relying on oral approval under 
    section 222(c)(1) should bear the burden of demonstrating that such 
    approval has been given in compliance with the rules we adopt in this 
    order, as a number of parties contend.
        55. Because carriers must bear the burden of demonstrating that 
    they have obtained oral approval under section 222(c)(1), we find it 
    unnecessary to mandate specific verification mechanisms at this time. 
    In general, we agree with those commenters arguing that a carrier 
    relying on oral approval should be able to meet its burden by, for 
    example, audiotaping customer conversations, or by demonstrating that a 
    qualified independent third party operating in a location physically 
    separate from the carrier's telemarketing representative has obtained 
    customer approval under section 222(c)(1) subsequent to adequate 
    notification of its CPNI rights, and has confirmed the appropriate 
    verification data, e.g., the customer's date of birth or social 
    security number. In contrast, we would likely not consider the mere 
    absence of any CPNI restriction in the customer's database or other 
    account record sufficient to verify that a customer has given express 
    approval in accordance with section 222(c)(1), despite SBC's 
    suggestion. In addition, because carriers are required under our rules 
    to notify customers of their CPNI rights prior to soliciting approval, 
    we do not require them to send follow-up letters to customers 
    confirming approval, contrary to some parties' contentions.
        56. Finally, we require that carriers maintain records of 
    notification and approval, whether written, oral, or electronic, and be 
    capable of producing them if the sufficiency of a customer's 
    notification and approval is challenged. Maintenance of such records 
    will facilitate the disposition of individual complaint proceedings. We 
    thus require that carriers maintain such records for a period of at 
    least one year in order to ensure a sufficient evidentiary record for 
    CPNI compliance and verification purposes.
    E. Informed Approval Through Notification
        57. We require carriers to provide their customers notification if 
    the carrier wishes to use, disclose or permit access to CPNI beyond the 
    purposes specified in sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (B); at this time, 
    however, we make no decision on whether notice is required for use of 
    CPNI within the scope of sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (B).
        58. We agree with the majority of commenters that customers must be 
    made aware of their CPNI rights before they can be deemed to have 
    ``waived'' those rights.
        59. We reject BellSouth's contention that customers reasonably 
    expect businesses with whom they have a pre-existing relationship to 
    use CPNI to offer new services, and that therefore carrier use of CPNI 
    for the development and marketing of services should be deemed to be 
    permitted or invited, in the absence of specific notification to the 
    customer. Specific notification of the customer's CPNI rights, as a 
    component of informed ``approval'' under section 222(c)(1), is 
    warranted for uses of CPNI outside the customer's total service 
    offering.
    F. Form and Content of Notification
        60. Form of Notification. We conclude that a carrier should be 
    permitted to provide either written or oral notification, as a number 
    of parties contend. Such notification, for example, may take the form 
    of a bill insert, an individual letter, or an oral presentation that 
    advises the customer of his or her right to restrict carrier access to 
    CPNI.
        61. We are not persuaded by parties' assertions that oral 
    notification is necessarily less verifiable than written, will result 
    in abuses, create greater disputes and confuse customers, is too 
    difficult to accomplish successfully, or could be used to dissuade 
    customers from releasing CPNI to a competitor. We therefore conclude 
    that a carrier providing verbal notification of a customer's CPNI 
    rights must carry the burden of showing that such notice has been 
    given, in compliance with the requirements we adopt in this order. We 
    further find that carriers may use any reasonable method for verifying 
    oral notification that adequately confirms that such notification has 
    been given, including, but not limited to, audiotaping customer 
    conversations or using an independent third party verification process.
        62. We find no reason to impose different notification requirements 
    on large and small carriers, as some commenters suggest.
        63. Content of Notification. At a minimum, customer notification, 
    whether oral or written, must provide sufficient information to enable 
    the customer to make an informed decision as to whether to permit a 
    carrier to use, disclose, or permit access to CPNI. If a carrier 
    intends to share CPNI with an affiliate (or non-affiliate) outside the 
    scope of section 222(c)(1), the notice must state that the customer has 
    a right, and the carrier a duty, under federal law, to protect the 
    confidentiality of CPNI. In addition, the notice must specify the types 
    of information that constitute CPNI and the specific entities that will 
    receive the CPNI, describe the purposes for which the CPNI will be 
    used, and inform the customer of his or her right to disapprove those 
    uses, and to deny or withdraw access to CPNI at any time. The 
    notification also must advise customers of the precise steps they must 
    take in order to grant or deny access to CPNI, and must clearly state 
    that a denial of approval will not affect the provision of any services 
    to which the customer subscribes. Any notification that does not 
    provide the customer the option of denying access, or implies that 
    approval is necessary to ensure the continuation of services to which 
    the customer subscribes, or the proper servicing of the customer's 
    account, would violate our notification requirements.
        64. We also require that any notification provided by a carrier for 
    uses of CPNI outside of section 222(c)(1) be reasonably comprehensible 
    and non-misleading. In this regard, a notification that uses, for 
    example, legal or technical jargon could be deemed not to be 
    ``reasonably comprehensible'' under our requirements. If written notice 
    is provided, the notice must be clearly legible, use sufficiently large 
    type, and be placed in an area so as to be readily apparent to a 
    customer. Finally, we require that, if any portion of a notification is 
    translated into another language, then all portions of the notification 
    must be translated into that language.
        65. We agree with CWI that a carrier should not be prohibited from 
    stating in the notice that the customer's approval to use CPNI may 
    enhance the carrier's ability to offer products and services tailored 
    to the customer's needs. We also do not preclude a carrier from 
    addressing the rights of unaffiliated third parties to obtain access to 
    the customer's CPNI. Consequently, a carrier would not be prohibited 
    from,
    
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    for example, informing a customer that it may direct the carrier to 
    disclose CPNI to unaffiliated third parties upon submission to the 
    carrier of an affirmative written request, pursuant to section 
    222(c)(2) of the Act. However, a carrier would be prohibited from 
    including any statement attempting to encourage a customer to freeze 
    third party access to CPNI.
        66. We also conclude that carriers must provide notification of a 
    customer's CPNI rights, whether oral or written, prior to any 
    solicitation for approval. A customer must be fully informed of its 
    right to restrict carrier access to sensitive information before it can 
    waive that right. Any notification that is provided subsequent to a 
    solicitation for customer approval under section 222(c)(1) is 
    inadequate to inform a customer of such right. The notification may be 
    in the same conversation or document as the solicitation for approval, 
    as long as the customer would hear or read the notification prior to 
    the solicitation for approval. Finally, we conclude that the 
    solicitation for approval to use CPNI, whether in the form of a 
    signature line, check-off box or other form, should be proximate to the 
    written or oral notification, rather than at the end of a long document 
    that the customer might sign for other purposes, or at the conclusion 
    of a lengthy conversation with the customer, for example. Similarly, 
    the solicitation for approval, if written, should not be on a document 
    separate from the notification, even if such document is included 
    within the same envelope or package. The notice should state that any 
    customer approval, or denial of approval, for the use of CPNI outside 
    of section 222(c)(1) is valid until the customer affirmatively revokes 
    or limits such approval or denial.
        67. We conclude that carriers need only provide one-time 
    notification to customers of their CPNI rights, as suggested by some 
    parties.
    
    IV. Aggregate Customer Information
    
        68. We reject the claim that our interpretation of sections 
    222(c)(1) and 222(c)(3) would constitute an unlawful taking. Even 
    assuming carriers have a property interest in either CPNI or aggregate 
    customer information, our interpretation of sections 222(c)(1) and 
    222(c)(3) does not ``deny all economically beneficial'' use of 
    property, as it must, to establish a successful claim.
        69. Although LECs face certain obligations when they use aggregate 
    customer information under section 222(c)(3), Congress did not require 
    that LECs give aggregate customer information to their competitors upon 
    request in all circumstances. Rather, when LECs use this aggregate 
    information only to tailor their service offering to better suit the 
    needs of their existing customers--that is, within the scope of 
    sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (B), LECs do not need to disclose the 
    aggregate information. Moreover, LECs are permitted to use the 
    aggregate information when targeting new service customers--that is, 
    for purposes beyond the scope of section 222(c)(1)(A) and (B). When 
    they do so, LECs simply must give that information to others upon 
    request.
        70. We also reject parties' Equal Protection challenge. In order to 
    sustain an equal protection challenge, parties challenging the law must 
    prove that the law has no rational relation to any conceivable 
    legitimate legislative purpose. Making LEC aggregate customer 
    information available on nondiscriminatory terms, when used for 
    purposes beyond those in sections 222(c)(1)(A) and (B), is reasonably 
    related to the legitimate goal of promoting open competition in 
    telecommunications markets.
        71. Finally, regarding the LECs' notice obligations, the 
    nondiscrimination requirement in section 222(c)(3) protects competitors 
    from anticompetitive behavior by requiring that LECs make aggregate 
    customer information available ``upon reasonable request.'' We 
    interpret these terms to permit a requirement that LECs honor standing 
    requests for disclosure of aggregate customer information at the same 
    time and same price as when disclosed to, or used on behalf of, their 
    affiliates.
    
    V. Section 222 and Other Act Provisions
    
        72. We recognize an apparent conflict between sections 222 and 272. 
    Because Congress did not make its intent clear, our resolution of the 
    apparent conflict must therefore be guided by the interpretation that, 
    in our judgment, best furthers the policies of these two provisions, 
    and thereby, best reflects the statutory design. On this policy basis, 
    we believe that interpreting section 272 to impose no additional 
    obligations on the BOCs when they share CPNI with their statutory 
    affiliates according to the requirements of section 222, as implemented 
    in this order, most reasonably reconciles the goals of these two 
    provisions.
        73. We are persuaded here that we should interpret section 274 to 
    impose no additional CPNI requirements regarding the BOCs' use of CPNI 
    in connection with their provision of electronic publishing. Thus, as 
    in the case of section 272, where section 222 appropriately balances 
    the potentially competing interests in the specific context of 
    carriers' use and disclosure of CPNI, we conclude that we should not 
    upset the balance by ``superimposing'' nondiscrimination standards in 
    section 274.
    
    VI. Commission's Existing CPNI Regulations
    
        74. We conclude that retaining the Computer III CPNI requirements, 
    applicable solely to the BOCs, AT&T and GTE, would produce no 
    discernable competitive protection, and would be confusing to both 
    carriers and customers.
    A. BOC Cellular CPNI Rule 22.903(f) and Computer II Rule 64.702(d)(3)
        75. We conclude that we should eliminate both rules 22.903(f) and 
    64.702(d)(3).
    B. Safeguards Under Section 222
        76. We confirm our tentative conclusion that the Computer III 
    safeguards, as they currently operate, should not be applied to other 
    carriers. Insofar as the statutory scheme we implement in this order 
    fully supplants our Computer III CPNI framework, we are further 
    persuaded that we should likewise not retain the CPNI safeguards 
    designed to ensure compliance within the Computer III framework. The 
    record nevertheless supports the need to specify safeguards to prevent 
    unapproved use, disclosure, and access to customer CPNI by carrier 
    personnel and unaffiliated entities under the new scheme.
        77. Although we believe different rules are not generally necessary 
    for small or rural carriers, we note that such carriers may seek a 
    waiver of our new CPNI rules if they can show that our rules would be 
    unduly burdensome, and propose alternative methods for safeguarding the 
    privacy of their customers, consistent with section 222.
        78. Access Restrictions. We decline to require restrictions that 
    would prohibit carrier personnel from accessing CPNI of customers who 
    have either failed, or expressly declined, to give requisite approval 
    for carrier use of CPNI for marketing purposes.
        79. Use Restrictions and Personnel Training. We specifically 
    require that carriers develop and implement software systems that 
    ``flag'' customer service records in connection with CPNI. Carriers 
    have indicated that their systems could be modified relatively easily 
    to accommodate such CPNI ``flags.'' The flag must be conspicuously 
    displayed within a box or comment
    
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    field within the first few lines of the first computer screen. The flag 
    must indicate whether the customer has approved the marketing use of 
    his or her CPNI, and reference the existing service subscription. In 
    conjunction with such software systems, we require that all employees 
    with access to customer records be trained as to when they can and 
    cannot access the customer's CPNI. Carriers must also maintain internal 
    procedures to handle employees that misuse CPNI contrary to the 
    carriers' stated policy. These requirements represent minimum 
    guidelines that we believe most carriers can readily implement and that 
    are not overly burdensome.
        80. Access Documentation. We require that carriers maintain an 
    electronic audit mechanism that tracks access to customer accounts. The 
    system must be capable of recording whenever customer records are 
    opened, by whom, and for what purpose. We believe awareness of this 
    ``audit trail'' will discourage unauthorized, ``casual'' perusal of 
    customer accounts, as well as afford a means of documentation that 
    would either support or refute claimed deliberate carrier CPNI 
    violations. We further require that carriers maintain such contact 
    histories for a period of at least one year to ensure a sufficient 
    evidentiary record for CPNI compliance and verification purposes.
        81. Supervisory Review for Outbound Marketing Campaigns. We require 
    carriers to establish a supervisory review process that ensures 
    compliance with CPNI restrictions when conducting outbound marketing. 
    Although supervisory review would neither be convenient nor practical 
    when customers initiate a service call (i.e., in the inbound marketing 
    context), we believe that such review is fully warranted in connection 
    with outbound marketing campaigns. There is both less likelihood that 
    customers will detect CPNI violations and greater incentive for sales 
    employees to misuse CPNI when the dialogue with the customer is 
    initiated by the carrier. Indeed, a major focus of outbound sales 
    representatives is on the acquisition of new customers rather than on 
    the retention of, and service to, current customers. Accordingly, we 
    require that sales personnel obtain supervisory review of any proposed 
    request to use CPNI for outbound marketing purposes. We require 
    carriers to maintain a record of the ``event histories'' (like contact 
    histories) for at least one year from the date of the marketing 
    campaign.
        82. Corporate Certification. We require each carrier to submit a 
    certification signed by a current corporate officer, as an agent of the 
    corporation, attesting that he or she has personal knowledge that the 
    carrier is in compliance with our CPNI requirements on an annual basis. 
    This certification must be made publicly available, and be accompanied 
    by a statement explaining how the carrier is implementing our CPNI 
    rules and safeguards.
        83. Additional requirements. The Commission will enforce all rules 
    announced in this order upon their effective date. Because carriers may 
    need time to conform their data systems and operations to comply with 
    the software flags and electronic audit mechanisms required under this 
    order, however, we will not seek enforcement of these specific 
    safeguard rules for a period of eight months from the date these rules 
    become effective. After that time, we authorize the Chief of the Common 
    Carrier Bureau to undertake enforcement actions when necessary and 
    appropriate, and, to the extent that carrier behavior justifies 
    requirements beyond those outlined herein, to establish additional 
    safeguards. This delegation to the Common Carrier Bureau will 
    facilitate the handling of CPNI compliance issues in an expedited 
    manner.
    
    VII. Procedural Issues
    
    A. Second Report and Order
    1. Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
        84. As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 
    603, an Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) was incorporated 
    in the Notice. The Commission sought written public comment on the 
    proposals in the Notice, including the IRFA. The Commission's Final 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) in this Second Report and Order 
    conforms to the RFA, as amended by the Contract With America 
    Advancement Act of 1996 (CWAAA), Public Law No. 104-121, 110 Stat. 847 
    (1996).
    a. Need for and Objectives of the Proposed Rules
        85. The Commission, in compliance with section 222 of the 1996 Act, 
    promulgates rules in this order to reflect Congress' directive to 
    balance the competitive and customer privacy interests associated with 
    the use and protection of customer proprietary network information 
    (CPNI), while fully considering the impact of these requirements on 
    small carriers. This order reflects the statutory principle that 
    customers must have the opportunity to protect the information they 
    view as sensitive and personal from use and disclosure by carriers. As 
    a general matter, we find that customer approval for carriers to use, 
    disclose, or permit access to CPNI is inferred from the existing 
    customer-carrier relationship; therefore, we conclude that such consent 
    should be limited to the ``total service offering'' to which the 
    customer subscribes from a carrier. To preserve the customer's control 
    over the dissemination of sensitive information, we require an express 
    approval requirement for the use of CPNI beyond the total service 
    offering to which the customer subscribes from a carrier. While these 
    rules permit customers to decide whether and to what extent their CPNI 
    is used, they also restrict carriers' anticompetitive use of CPNI.
    b. Summary of Significant Issues Raised by the Public Comments in 
    Response to the IRFA
        86. In the IRFA, the Commission generally stated that any rule 
    changes that might occur as a result of this proceeding could impact 
    small business entities. Specifically, in the IRFA, the Commission 
    indicated there were no reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance 
    requirements. The IRFA solicited comment on alternatives to our 
    proposed rules that would minimize the impact on small entities 
    consistent with the objectives of this proceeding. In response we 
    received no comments specifically directed to the IRFA. As noted infra 
    Part X.A.1.e of this FRFA, in making the determinations reflected in 
    this order, we have given consideration to those comments of the 
    parties that addressed the impact of our proposed rules on small 
    entities.
    c. Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which 
    Rules Will Apply
        87. The RFA directs agencies to provide a description of and, where 
    feasible, an estimate of the number of small entities that will be 
    affected by our rules. The RFA generally defines the term ``small 
    entity'' as having the same meaning as the terms ``small business,'' 
    ``small organization,'' and ``small governmental jurisdiction.'' For 
    the purposes of this order, the RFA defines a ``small business'' to be 
    the same as a ``small business concern'' under the Small Business Act, 
    15 U.S.C. 632, unless the Commission has developed one or more 
    definitions that are appropriate to its activities. Under the Small 
    Business Act, a ``small business concern'' is one that: (1) Is 
    independently owned and operated; (2) is not dominant in its field of 
    operation; and (3) meets any additional criteria established by the 
    Small Business Administration (SBA). The SBA has defined a small 
    business for Standard
    
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    Industrial Classification (SIC) categories 4812 (Radiotelephone 
    Communications) and 4813 (Telephone Communications, Except 
    Radiotelephone) to be small entities when they have no more than 1,500 
    employees. We first discuss generally the total number of small 
    telephone companies falling within both of those SIC categories. Then, 
    we discuss the number of small businesses within the two subcategories, 
    and attempt to refine further those estimates to correspond with the 
    categories of telephone companies that are commonly used under our 
    rules.
        88. Although affected incumbent local exchange carriers (ILECs) may 
    have no more than 1,500 employees, we do not believe that such entities 
    should be considered small entities within the meaning of the RFA 
    because they either are dominant in their field of operations or are 
    not independently owned and operated, and are therefore by definition 
    not ``small entities'' or ``small business concerns'' under the RFA. 
    Accordingly, our use of the terms ``small entities'' and ``small 
    businesses'' does not encompass small ILECs. Out of an abundance of 
    caution, however, for regulatory flexibility analysis purposes, we will 
    separately consider small ILECs within this analysis and use the term 
    ``small ILECs'' to refer to any ILECs that arguably might be defined by 
    SBA as ``small business concerns.''
        89. Total Number of Telephone Companies Affected. The United States 
    Bureau of the Census (the Census Bureau) reports that at the end of 
    1992, there were 3,497 firms engaged in providing telephone services, 
    as defined therein, for at least one year. This number contains a 
    variety of different categories of carriers, including local exchange 
    carriers, interexchange carriers, competitive access providers, 
    cellular carriers, mobile service carriers, operator service providers, 
    pay telephone operators, PCS providers, covered SMR providers, and 
    resellers. It seems certain that some of those 3,497 telephone service 
    firms may not qualify as small entities because they are not 
    ``independently owned and operated.'' For example, a PCS provider that 
    is affiliated with an interexchange carrier having more than 1,500 
    employees would not meet the definition of a small business. It seems 
    reasonable to conclude, therefore, that fewer than 3,497 telephone 
    service firms are either small entities or small incumbent LECs that 
    may be affected by this order.
        90. Wireline Carriers and Service Providers. The SBA has developed 
    a definition of small entities for telephone communications companies 
    other than radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The Census Bureau 
    reports there were 2,321 such telephone companies in operation for at 
    least one year at the end of 1992. According to the SBA's definition, a 
    small business telephone company other than a radiotelephone company is 
    one employing fewer than 1,500 persons. All but 26 of the 2,321 non-
    radiotelephone companies listed by the Census Bureau were reported to 
    have fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, even if all 26 of those 
    companies had more than 1,500 employees, there would still be 2,295 
    non-radiotelephone companies that might qualify as small entities or 
    small incumbent LECs. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    carriers are not independently owned and operated, we are unable at 
    this time to estimate with greater precision the number of wireline 
    carriers and service providers that would qualify as small business 
    concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that 
    fewer than 2,295 small entity telephone communications companies other 
    than radiotelephone companies are small entities or small ILECs that 
    may be affected by this order.
        91. Local Exchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition of small providers of local exchange services. 
    The closest applicable definition under the SBA's rules is for 
    telephone communications companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) 
    companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number 
    of LECs nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we 
    collect annually in connection with the Telecommunications Relay 
    Service (TRS). According to our most recent data, 1,371 companies 
    reported that they were engaged in the provision of local exchange 
    services. Although it seems certain that some of these carriers are not 
    independently owned and operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, or 
    are dominant we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of LECs that would qualify as small business 
    concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that 
    fewer than 1,371 small providers of local exchange service are small 
    entities or small ILECs that may be affected by this order.
        92. Interexchange Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to 
    providers of interexchange services (IXCs). The closest applicable 
    definition under the SBA's rules is for telephone communications 
    companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most 
    reliable source of information regarding the number of IXCs nationwide 
    of which we are aware appears to be the data that we collect annually 
    in connection with TRS. According to our most recent data, 143 
    companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of 
    interexchange services. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 
    1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of IXCs that would qualify as small business 
    concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we estimate that 
    there are fewer than 143 small entity IXCs that may be affected by this 
    order.
        93. Competitive Access Providers. Neither the Commission nor the 
    SBA has developed a definition of small entities specifically 
    applicable to providers of competitive access services (CAPs). The 
    closest applicable definition under the SBA's rules is for telephone 
    communications companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) 
    companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number 
    of CAPs nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we 
    collect annually in connection with the TRS. According to our most 
    recent data, 109 companies reported that they were engaged in the 
    provision of competitive access services. Although it seems certain 
    that some of these carriers are not independently owned and operated, 
    or have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to 
    estimate with greater precision the number of CAPs that would qualify 
    as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we 
    estimate that there are fewer than 109 small entity CAPs that may be 
    affected by this order.
        94. Operator Service Providers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA 
    has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to 
    providers of operator services. The closest applicable definition under 
    the SBA's rules is for telephone communications companies other than 
    radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of 
    information regarding the number of operator service providers 
    nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we collect 
    annually in connection with the TRS. According to our most recent data, 
    27 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of 
    operator services. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    companies are not independently owned and operated, or
    
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    have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate 
    with greater precision the number of operator service providers that 
    would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. 
    Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 27 small entity 
    operator service providers that may be affected by this order.
        95. Pay Telephone Operators. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to pay 
    telephone operators. The closest applicable definition under the SBA's 
    rules is for telephone communications companies other than 
    radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of 
    information regarding the number of pay telephone operators nationwide 
    of which we are aware appears to be the data that we collect annually 
    in connection with the TRS. According to our most recent data, 441 
    companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of pay 
    telephone services. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 
    1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of pay telephone operators that would qualify as 
    small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we 
    estimate that there are fewer than 441 small entity pay telephone 
    operators that may be affected by this order.
        96. Wireless Carriers. The SBA has developed a definition of small 
    entities for radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The Census Bureau 
    reports that there were 1,176 such companies in operation for at least 
    one year at the end of 1992. According to the SBA's definition, a small 
    business radiotelephone company is one employing no more than 1,500 
    persons. The Census Bureau also reported that 1,164 of those 
    radiotelephone companies had fewer than 1,000 employees. Thus, even if 
    all of the remaining 12 companies had more than 1,500 employees, there 
    would still be 1,164 radiotelephone companies that might qualify as 
    small entities if they are independently owned are operated. Although 
    it seems certain that some of these carriers are not independently 
    owned and operated, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of radiotelephone carriers and service providers 
    that would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's 
    definition. Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 1,164 
    small entity radiotelephone companies that may be affected by this 
    order.
        97. Cellular Service Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA 
    has developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to 
    providers of cellular services. The closest applicable definition under 
    the SBA's rules is for telephone communications companies other than 
    radiotelephone (wireless) companies. The most reliable source of 
    information regarding the number of cellular service carriers 
    nationwide of which we are aware appears to be the data that we collect 
    annually in connection with the TRS. According to our most recent data, 
    804 companies reported that they were engaged in the provision of 
    cellular services. Although it seems certain that some of these 
    carriers are not independently owned and operated, or have more than 
    1,500 employees, we are unable at this time to estimate with greater 
    precision the number of cellular service carriers that would qualify as 
    small business concerns under the SBA's definition. Consequently, we 
    estimate that there are fewer than 804 small entity cellular service 
    carriers that may be affected by this order.
        98. Mobile Service Carriers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has 
    developed a definition of small entities specifically applicable to 
    mobile service carriers, such as paging companies. The closest 
    applicable definition under the SBA's rules is for telephone 
    communications companies other than radiotelephone (wireless) 
    companies. The most reliable source of information regarding the number 
    of mobile service carriers nationwide of which we are aware appears to 
    be the data that we collect annually in connection with the TRS. 
    According to our most recent data, 172 companies reported that they 
    were engaged in the provision of mobile services. Although it seems 
    certain that some of these carriers are not independently owned and 
    operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this time 
    to estimate with greater precision the number of mobile service 
    carriers that would qualify under the SBA's definition. Consequently, 
    we estimate that there are fewer than 172 small entity mobile service 
    carriers that may be affected by this order.
        99. Broadband PCS Licensees. The broadband PCS spectrum is divided 
    into six frequency blocks designated A through F, and the Commission 
    has held auctions for each block. The Commission has defined small 
    entity in the auctions for Blocks C and F as an entity that has average 
    gross revenues of less than $40 million in the three previous calendar 
    years. For Block F, an additional classification for ``very small 
    business'' was added and is defined as an entity that, together with 
    its affiliates, has average gross revenue of not more than $15 million 
    for the preceding three calendar years. These regulations defining 
    small entity in the context of broadband PCS auctions have been 
    approved by the SBA. No small business within the SBA-approved 
    definition bid successfully for licenses in Blocks A and B. There were 
    90 winning bidders that qualified as small entities in the Block C 
    auctions. A total of 93 small and very small businesses won 
    approximately 40 percent of the 1,479 licenses for Blocks D, E, and F. 
    However, licenses for Blocks C through F have not been awarded fully; 
    therefore, there are few, if any, small businesses currently providing 
    PCS services. Based on this information, we conclude that the number of 
    small broadband PCS licensees will include the 90 winning bidders and 
    the 93 qualifying bidders in the D, E, and F Blocks, for a total of 183 
    small PCS providers as defined by the SBA and the Commission's auction 
    rules.
        100. Narrowband PCS Licensees. The Commission does not know how 
    many narrowband PCS licenses will be granted or auctioned, as it has 
    not yet determined the size or number of such licenses. Two auctions of 
    narrowband PCS licenses have been conducted for a total of 41 licenses, 
    out of which 11 were obtained by small businesses owned by members of 
    minority groups and/or women. Small businesses were defined as those 
    with average gross revenues for the prior three fiscal years of $40 
    million or less. For purposes of this FRFA, the Commission is utilizing 
    the SBA definition applicable to radiotelephone companies, i.e., an 
    entity employing no more than 1,500 persons. Not all of the narrowband 
    PCS licenses have yet been awarded. There is therefore no basis to 
    determine the number of licenses that will be awarded to small entities 
    in future auctions. Given the facts that nearly all radiotelephone 
    companies have fewer than 1,000 or fewer employees and that no reliable 
    estimate of the number of prospective narrowband PCS licensees can be 
    made, we assume, for purposes of the evaluations and conclusions in 
    this FRFA, that all the remaining narrowband PCS licenses will be 
    awarded to small entities.
        101. SMR Licensees. Pursuant to 47 CFR 90.814(b)(1), the Commission 
    has defined ``small entity'' in auctions for geographic area 800 MHz 
    and 900 MHz SMR licenses as a firm that had average annual gross 
    revenues of less than $15 million in the three previous calendar years. 
    This definition of a ``small entity''
    
    [[Page 20336]]
    
    in the context of 800 MHz and 900 MHz SMR has been approved by the SBA. 
    The rules adopted in this order may apply to SMR providers in the 800 
    MHz and 900 MHz bands that either hold geographic area licenses or have 
    obtained extended implementation authorizations. We do not know how 
    many firms provide 800 MHz or 900 MHz geographic area SMR service 
    pursuant to extended implementation authorizations, nor how many of 
    these providers have annual revenues of less than $15 million. We 
    assume, for purposes of this FRFA, that all of the extended 
    implementation authorizations may be held by small entities, which may 
    be affected by this order.
        102. The Commission recently held auctions for geographic area 
    licenses in the 900 MHz SMR band. There were 60 winning bidders who 
    qualified as small entities in the 900 MHz auction. Based on this 
    information, we conclude that the number of geographic area SMR 
    licensees affected by the rule adopted in this order includes these 60 
    small entities. No auctions have been held for 800 MHz geographic area 
    SMR licenses. Thus, no small entities currently hold these licenses. A 
    total of 525 licenses will be awarded for the upper 200 channels in the 
    800 MHz geographic area SMR auction. The Commission, however, has not 
    yet determined how many licenses will be awarded for the lower 230 
    channels in the 800 MHz geographic area SMR auction. Moreover, there is 
    no basis on which to estimate how many small entities will win these 
    licenses. Given that nearly all radiotelephone companies have fewer 
    than 1,000 employees and that no reliable estimate of the number of 
    prospective 800 MHz licensees can be made, we assume, for purposes of 
    this FRFA, that all of the licenses may be awarded to small entities 
    who, thus, may be affected by this order.
        103. Resellers. Neither the Commission nor the SBA has developed a 
    definition of small entities specifically applicable to resellers. The 
    closest applicable definition under the SBA's rules is for all 
    telephone communications companies. The most reliable source of 
    information regarding the number of resellers nationwide of which we 
    are aware appears to be the data that we collect annually in connection 
    with the TRS. According to our most recent data, 339 companies reported 
    that they were engaged in the resale of telephone services. Although it 
    seems certain that some of these carriers are not independently owned 
    and operated, or have more than 1,500 employees, we are unable at this 
    time to estimate with greater precision the number of resellers that 
    would qualify as small business concerns under the SBA's definition. 
    Consequently, we estimate that there are fewer than 339 small entity 
    resellers that may be affected by this order.
    d. Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and Other 
    Compliance Requirements
        104. In this Second Report and Order, if carriers choose to use 
    CPNI to market service offerings outside the customer's existing 
    service, we obligate these carriers to (1) obtain customer approval; 
    (2) provide their customers a one-time notification of their CPNI 
    rights prior to any solicitation for approval; and (3) maintain records 
    of customer notification and approval, whether oral, written, or 
    electronic.
        105. We require carriers to develop and implement software systems 
    that ``flag'' customer service records in connection with CPNI. The 
    flag must be conspicuously displayed within a box or comment field 
    within the first few lines of the first computer screen, and the flag 
    must indicate whether the customer has approved the marketing use of 
    his or her CPNI, and reference the existing service subscription.
        Also in connection with the software systems, carriers must 
    implement internal standards and procedures informing employees when 
    they are authorized to utilize CPNI. In addition, they must develop 
    standards and procedures to handle employees who misuse CPNI.
        106. We further require that carriers maintain an electronic audit 
    mechanism that tracks access to customer accounts and is capable of 
    recording whenever customer records are opened, by whom, and for what 
    purpose. Carriers must maintain these ``contact histories'' for a 
    period of at least one year to ensure a sufficient evidentiary record 
    for CPNI compliance and verification purposes. Additionally, sales 
    personnel must obtain supervisory review of any proposed request to use 
    CPNI for outbound marketing purposes, to ensure compliance with CPNI 
    restrictions when conducting such campaigns.
        107. Finally, carriers must submit on an annual basis a 
    certification signed by a current corporate officer, as an agent of the 
    corporation, attesting that he or she has personal knowledge that the 
    carrier has complied with the rules adopted in this order. The 
    certification must be made publicly available, and be accompanied by a 
    statement explaining how the carrier is implementing our CPNI rules and 
    safeguards.
    e. Significant Alternatives and Steps Taken by Agency to Minimize 
    Significant Economic Impact on a Substantial Number of Small Entities 
    Consistent With Stated Objectives
        108. After consideration of possible alternatives, we have 
    concluded that our rules should apply equally to all carriers. Several 
    parties in their comments address the impact of possible changes in our 
    CPNI rules on small entities. As a general matter, various small 
    entities express concern that, having never been required to comply 
    with CPNI regulations in the past, any regulation that extends to them 
    will impose immediate costs. Specifically, SBT argues that we should 
    forbear from applying section 222(c)(1) to small businesses, and 
    thereby permit their use of CPNI for all marketing purposes, because 
    small entities need more flexibility to use CPNI to be competitive in 
    the marketplace. SBT likewise opposes a three category approach, 
    claiming it gives large carriers flexibility to develop and meet 
    customers' needs, but may unnecessarily limit small business as 
    competition grows. SBT maintains that small carriers could be 
    competitively disadvantaged by any interpretation of section 
    222(c)(1)(A) other than the single category approach because a large 
    carrier can base the design of a new offering on statistical customer 
    data and market widely, while a small business can best meet 
    specialized subscriber needs if it offers local, interexchange, and 
    CMRS tailored to the specific subscriber. ALLTEL and SBC agree with 
    USTA that a multiple category definition of telecommunications service 
    would specifically burden small companies.
        109. As we discussed in this order, we decline to forbear from 
    applying section 222(c)(1) to small carriers because we are unpersuaded 
    that customers of small businesses have less meaningful privacy 
    interests in their CPNI. We believe that the total service approach 
    furthers the balance of privacy and competitive considerations for all 
    carriers and provides all carriers with flexibility in marketing their 
    telecommunications products and services. Indeed, if SBT is accurate in 
    its claim that small businesses typically have closer personal 
    relationships with their customers, then small businesses likely would 
    have less difficulty in obtaining customer approval to market services 
    outside of a customer's existing service. Under the total service 
    approach, carriers are able to use the customer's entire customer 
    record in the course of providing the customer service, and no
    
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    business is prohibited from meeting customer needs by offering tailored 
    packages of local, interexchange, and CMRS with customer approval. 
    Moreover, to the extent carriers do not choose to use CPNI for 
    marketing purposes, or do not want to market new service categories, 
    they do not need to comply with our approval or notice requirements. 
    Finally, given our decisions to permit oral, written, or electronic 
    approval under section 222(c)(1), and impose use rather than access 
    restrictions, the total service approach addresses any concern that 
    CPNI restrictions will disrupt the customer-carrier dialogue or the 
    carriers' ability to provide full customer service.
        110. Some commenters urge the Commission to adopt notification 
    rules which would require dominant carriers to give their customers 
    written notification of their CPNI rights, while smaller carriers or 
    carriers in competitive markets would be permitted to give oral 
    notification to its customers. We find no reason to impose a written 
    notification requirement only on incumbent carriers. While competitive 
    concerns may justify different regulatory treatment for certain 
    carriers, we believe all customers, despite the size or identity of 
    their carrier, have similar and important privacy concerns.
        111. We also reject the suggestion by Arch, LDDS WorldCom, MCI, 
    Sprint, and TCG that our rules in connection with CPNI safeguards be 
    limited to large or incumbent carriers, as they had been previously. 
    Rather, we maintain that Congress intended for all carriers to 
    safeguard customer information, and that the safeguards we adopt today 
    do not impose a greater administrative burden on small carriers. We 
    remain unconvinced that the burdens of section 222 are so great on 
    small carriers that they cannot comply with reasonable restrictions. 
    Indeed, the mechanisms we require expressly factor commercial 
    feasibility and practice into an appropriate regulatory framework, and 
    represent minimum general requirements. We also find that the use of an 
    electronic audit mechanism to track access to customer accounts is not 
    overly burdensome because many carriers already maintain such 
    capabilities for a variety of business purposes unrelated to CPNI. 
    Carriers have indicated that such capabilities are important, for 
    example, to track employee use of company resources, including 
    computers and databases, as well as for personnel disciplinary 
    purposes. The contact histories that we require carriers to maintain 
    for a period of at least one year also should not be burdensome to 
    carriers because carriers routinely evaluate these contact histories to 
    determine the success of marketing campaigns. As we discuss in this 
    order, we believe the safeguards we adopt in this order will afford 
    carriers the flexibility in conforming their systems, operations, and 
    procedures to assure compliance with our rules. Furthermore, in an 
    effort to reduce, for all carriers, the administrative burden of 
    compliance with our rules, we specifically decline to impose a password 
    access restriction on carrier use of CPNI. We also conclude that use 
    restrictions are less burdensome to all carriers, including medium and 
    small sized carriers. We decline at this time to impose a requirement 
    of separate marketing personnel on the basis that such a rule may 
    produce inefficiencies particularly for small carriers, and thereby may 
    dampen competition by increasing the costs of entry into 
    telecommunications markets.
    2. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
        112. This Second Report and Order contains several new information 
    collections. We describe our collections as follows:
        113. In this order, if carriers choose to use CPNI to market 
    service offerings outside the customer's existing service, we obligate 
    these carriers to obtain customer approval and document such approval 
    through software ``flags'' on customer service records indicating 
    whether the customer has approved or declined the marketing use of his 
    or her CPNI when solicited. These requirements constitute new 
    ``collections of information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520. Implementation of this 
    requirement is subject to approval by the Office of Management and 
    Budget as prescribed by the Paperwork Reduction Act.
        114. Additionally, we require all telecommunications carriers that 
    choose to solicit customer approval to provide their customers a one-
    time notification of their CPNI rights prior to any such solicitation. 
    Pursuant to this one-time notification requirement, these carriers must 
    maintain a record of such notifications. This requirement constitutes a 
    new ``collection of information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520. Implementation of this 
    requirement is subject to approval by the Office of Management and 
    Budget as prescribed by the Paperwork Reduction Act.
        115. All carriers must record whenever customer records are opened, 
    by whom, and for what purpose, and maintain these contact histories for 
    a period of at least one year. These requirements constitute new 
    ``collections of information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520. Implementation of this 
    requirement is subject to approval by the Office of Management and 
    Budget as prescribed by the Paperwork Reduction Act.
        116. Finally, we have adopted rules in this order requiring all 
    telecommunications carriers to submit on an annual basis a 
    certification signed by a current corporate officer attesting that he 
    or she has personal knowledge that the carrier is in compliance with 
    the rules we promulgated in this order, and to create an accompanying 
    statement explaining how the carriers are implementing our rules and 
    safeguards. Pursuant to this recordkeeping requirement, all 
    telecommunications carriers must maintain in a publicly available file 
    the compliance certificates and accompanying statements. This 
    requirement constitutes a new ``collection of information'' within the 
    meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3520. 
    Implementation of all of these recordkeeping requirements are subject 
    to approval by the Office of Management and Budget as prescribed by the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act.
    
    VIII. Ordering Clauses
    
        117. Accordingly, It Is Ordered that pursuant to sections 1, 4(i), 
    222 and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 
    151, 154(i), 222 and 303(r), a Report and Order is hereby Adopted.
        118. It is further ordered that, pursuant to our own motion, 
    paragraph 222 of In the Matter of Implementation of the Non-Accounting 
    Safeguards of Section 271 and 272 of the Communications Act of 1934, as 
    amended, CC Docket No. 96-149, First Report and Order and Further 
    Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 11 FCC Rcd 21905 (1996), is hereby 
    Overruled.
        119. It Is Further Ordered that the Commission's Office of Public 
    Affairs, Reference Operations Division, Shall Send a copy of this 
    Second Report and Order, including the associated Final Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small 
    Business Administration, in accordance with paragraph 605(b) of the 
    Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (1981).
        120. It Is Further Ordered that part 22 of the Commission's rules, 
    47 CFR 22.903 and part 64 of the Commission's
    
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    rules, 47 CFR 64.702(d)(3) are Removed as set forth in the Rule 
    Changes.
        121. It Is Further Ordered that part 64 of the Commission's rules, 
    47 CFR part 64 is Amended as set forth in Rule Changes, effective 30 
    days after publication of the text thereof in the Federal Register.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    47 CFR Part 22
    
        Communications common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements.
    
    47 CFR Part 64
    
        Communications common carriers, Reporting and recordkeeping 
    requirements, Telephone.
    
    Federal Communications Commission.
    Magalie Roman Salas,
    Secretary.
    
    Rule Changes
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, 47 CFR parts 22 and 64 are 
    amended as follows:
    
    PART 22--PUBLIC MOBILE SERVICES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 22 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 222, 303, 309 and 332.
    
    
    Sec. 22.903  [Removed].
    
        2. Remove Sec. 22.903.
    
    PART 64--MISCELLANEOUS RULES RELATING TO COMMON CARRIERS
    
        3. The authority citation for part 64 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 47 U.S.C. 154, 222, 254(k).
    
    
    Sec. 64.702  [Amended]
    
        4. In Sec. 64.702 remove and reserve paragraph (d)(3).
        5. Subpart U is added to part 64 to read as follows:
    
    Subpart U--Customer Proprietary Network Information
    
    Sec.
    64.2001  Basis and purpose.
    64.2003  Definitions.
    64.2005  Use of customer proprietary network information without 
    customer approval.
    64.2007  Notice and approval required for use of customer 
    proprietary network information.
    64.2009  Safeguards required for use of customer proprietary network 
    information.
    
    Subpart U--Customer Proprietary Network Information
    
    
    Sec. 64.2001  Basis and purpose.
    
        (a) Basis. The rules in this subpart are issued pursuant to the 
    Communications Act of 1934, as amended.
        (b) Purpose. The purpose of the rules in this subpart is to 
    implement section 222 of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 
    U.S.C. 222.
    
    
    Sec. 64.2003  Definitions.
    
        Terms used in this subpart have the following meanings:
        (a) Affiliate. An affiliate is an entity that directly or 
    indirectly owns or controls, is owned or controlled by, or is under 
    common ownership or control with, another entity.
        (b) Customer. A customer of a telecommunications carrier is a 
    person or entity to which the telecommunications carrier is currently 
    providing service.
        (c) Customer proprietary network information (CPNI).
        (1) Customer proprietary network information (CPNI) is:
        (i) Information that relates to the quantity, technical 
    configuration, type, destination, and amount of use of a 
    telecommunications service subscribed to by any customer of a 
    telecommunications carrier, and that is made available to the carrier 
    by the customer solely by virtue of the customer-carrier relationship; 
    and
        (ii) Information contained in the bills pertaining to telephone 
    exchange service or telephone toll service received by a customer of a 
    carrier.
        (2) Customer proprietary network information does not include 
    subscriber list information.
        (d) Customer premises equipment (CPE). Customer premises equipment 
    (CPE) is equipment employed on the premises of a person (other than a 
    carrier) to originate, route, or terminate telecommunications.
        (e) Information service. Information service is the offering of a 
    capability for generating, acquiring, storing, transforming, 
    processing, retrieving, utilizing, or making available information via 
    telecommunications, and includes electronic publishing, but does not 
    include any use of any such capability for the management, control, or 
    operation of a telecommunications system or the management of a 
    telecommunications service.
        (f) Local exchange carrier (LEC). A local exchange carrier (LEC) is 
    any person that is engaged in the provision of telephone exchange 
    service or exchange access. For purposes of this subpart, such term 
    does not include a person insofar as such person is engaged in the 
    provision of commercial mobile service under 47 U.S.C. 332(c).
        (g) Subscriber list information (SLI). Subscriber list information 
    (SLI) is any information:
        (1) Identifying the listed names of subscribers of a carrier and 
    such subscribers' telephone numbers, addresses, or primary advertising 
    classifications (as such classifications are assigned at the time of 
    the establishment of such service), or any combination of such listed 
    names, numbers, addresses, or classifications; and
        (2) That the carrier or an affiliate has published, caused to be 
    published, or accepted for publication in any directory format.
        (h) Telecommunications carrier. A telecommunications carrier is any 
    provider of telecommunications services, except that such term does not 
    include aggregators of telecommunications services (as defined in 47 
    U.S.C. 226(a)(2)).
    
    
    Sec. 64.2005  Use of customer proprietary network information without 
    customer approval.
    
        (a) Any telecommunications carrier may use, disclose, or permit 
    access to CPNI for the purpose of providing or marketing service 
    offerings among the categories of service (i.e., local, interexchange, 
    and CMRS) already subscribed to by the customer from the same carrier, 
    without customer approval.
        (1) If a telecommunications carrier provides different categories 
    of service, and a customer subscribes to more than one category of 
    service offered by the carrier, the carrier is permitted to share CPNI 
    among the carrier's affiliated entities that provide a service offering 
    to the customer.
        (2) If a telecommunications carrier provides different categories 
    of service, but a customer does not subscribe to more than one offering 
    by the carrier, the carrier is not permitted to share CPNI among the 
    carrier's affiliated entities.
        (b) A telecommunications carrier may not use, disclose, or permit 
    access to CPNI to market to a customer service offerings that are 
    within a category of service to which the customer does not already 
    subscribe to from that carrier, unless the carrier has customer 
    approval to do so, except as described in paragraph (c) of this 
    section.
        (1) A telecommunications carrier may not use, disclose, or permit 
    access to CPNI derived from its provision of local service, 
    interexchange service, or CMRS, without customer approval, for the
    
    [[Page 20339]]
    
    provision of CPE and information services, including call answering, 
    voice mail or messaging, voice storage and retrieval services, fax 
    store and forward, and Internet access services. For example, a carrier 
    may not use its local exchange service CPNI to identify customers for 
    the purpose of marketing to those customers related CPE or voice mail 
    service.
        (2) A telecommunications carrier may not use, disclose or permit 
    access to CPNI to identify or track customers that call competing 
    service providers. For example, a local exchange carrier may not use 
    local service CPNI to track all customers that call local service 
    competitors.
        (3) A telecommunications carrier may not use, disclose or permit 
    access to a former customer's CPNI to regain the business of the 
    customer who has switched to another service provider.
        (c) A telecommunications carrier may use, disclose, or permit 
    access to CPNI, without customer approval, as described in this 
    paragraph (c).
        (1) A telecommunications carrier may use, disclose, or permit 
    access to CPNI, without customer approval, in its provision of inside 
    wiring installation, maintenance, and repair services.
        (2) CMRS providers may use, disclose, or permit access to CPNI for 
    the purpose of conducting research on the health effects of CMRS.
        (3) LECs and CMRS providers may use CPNI, without customer 
    approval, to market services formerly known as adjunct-to-basic 
    services, such as, but not limited to, speed dialing, computer-provided 
    directory assistance, call monitoring, call tracing, call blocking, 
    call return, repeat dialing, call tracking, call waiting, caller I.D., 
    call forwarding, and certain centrex features.
    
    
    Sec. 64.2007  Notice and approval required for use of customer 
    proprietary network information.
    
        (a) A telecommunications carrier must obtain customer approval to 
    use, disclose, or permit access to CPNI to market to a customer service 
    to which the customer does not already subscribe to from that carrier.
        (b) A telecommunications carrier may obtain approval through 
    written, oral or electronic methods.
        (c) A telecommunications carrier relying on oral approval must bear 
    the burden of demonstrating that such approval has been given in 
    compliance with the Commission's rules in this part.
        (d) Approval obtained by a telecommunications carrier for the use 
    of CPNI outside of the customer's total service relationship with the 
    carrier must remain in effect until the customer revokes or limits such 
    approval.
        (e) A telecommunications carrier must maintain records of 
    notification and approval, whether oral, written or electronic, for at 
    least one year.
        (f) Prior to any solicitation for customer approval, a 
    telecommunications carrier must provide a one-time notification to the 
    customer of the customer's right to restrict use of, disclosure of, and 
    access to that customer's CPNI.
        (1) A telecommunications carrier may provide notification through 
    oral or written methods.
        (2) Customer notification must provide sufficient information to 
    enable the customer to make an informed decision as to whether to 
    permit a carrier to use, disclose or permit access to, the customer's 
    CPNI.
        (i) The notification must state that the customer has a right, and 
    the carrier a duty, under federal law, to protect the confidentiality 
    of CPNI.
        (ii) The notification must specify the types of information that 
    constitute CPNI and the specific entities that will receive the CPNI, 
    describe the purposes for which CPNI will be used, and inform the 
    customer of his or her right to disapprove those uses, and deny or 
    withdraw access to CPNI at any time.
        (iii) The notification must advise the customer of the precise 
    steps the customer must take in order to grant or deny access to CPNI, 
    and must clearly state that a denial of approval will not affect the 
    provision of any services to which the customer subscribes.
        (iv) The notification must be comprehensible and not be misleading.
        (v) If written notification is provided, the notice must be clearly 
    legible, use sufficiently large type, and be placed in an area so as to 
    be readily apparent to a customer.
        (vi) If any portion of a notification is translated into another 
    language, then all portions of the notification must be translated into 
    that language.
        (vii) A carrier may state in the notification that the customer's 
    approval to use CPNI may enhance the carrier's ability to offer 
    products and services tailored to the customer's needs. A carrier also 
    may state in the notification that it may be compelled to disclose CPNI 
    to any person upon affirmative written request by the customer.
        (viii) A carrier may not include in the notification any statement 
    attempting to encourage a customer to freeze third party access to 
    CPNI.
        (ix) The notification must state that any approval, or denial of 
    approval for the use of CPNI outside of the service to which the 
    customer already subscribes to from that carrier is valid until the 
    customer affirmatively revokes or limits such approval or denial.
        (3) A telecommunications carrier's solicitation for approval must 
    be proximate to the notification of a customer's CPNI rights.
        (4) A telecommunications carrier's solicitation for approval, if 
    written, must not be on a document separate from the notification, even 
    if such document is included within the same envelope or package.
    
    
    Sec. 64.2009  Safeguards required for use of customer proprietary 
    network information.
    
        (a) Telecommunications carriers must develop and implement software 
    that indicates within the first few lines of the first screen of a 
    customer's service record the CPNI approval status and reference the 
    customer's existing service subscription.
        (b) Telecommunications carriers must train their personnel as to 
    when they are and are not authorized to use CPNI, and carriers must 
    have an express disciplinary process in place.
        (c) Telecommunications carriers must maintain an electronic audit 
    mechanism that tracks access to customer accounts, including when a 
    customer's record is opened, by whom, and for what purpose. Carriers 
    must maintain these contact histories for a minimum period of one year.
        (d) Telecommunications carriers must establish a supervisory review 
    process regarding carrier compliance with the rules in this subpart for 
    outbound marketing situations and maintain records of carrier 
    compliance for a minimum period of one year. Specifically, sales 
    personnel must obtain supervisory approval of any proposed outbound 
    marketing request.
        (e) A telecommunications carrier must have a corporate officer, as 
    an agent of the carrier, sign a compliance certificate on an annual 
    basis that the officer has personal knowledge that the carrier is in 
    compliance with the rules in this subpart. A statement explaining how 
    the carrier is in compliance with the rules in this subpart must 
    accompany the certificate.
    
    [FR Doc. 98-10740 Filed 4-23-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6712-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/26/1998
Published:
04/24/1998
Department:
Federal Communications Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-10740
Dates:
May 26, 1998.
Pages:
20326-20339 (14 pages)
Docket Numbers:
CC Docket No. 96-115, FCC 98-27
PDF File:
98-10740.pdf
CFR: (7)
47 CFR 22.903
47 CFR 64.702
47 CFR 64.2001
47 CFR 64.2003
47 CFR 64.2005
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