News Stories

AT&T To Cut Hundreds Of U.S. Tech Jobs
Information Week
Consumer and Public Interest Groups Urge FCC to Fight for Consumers, not AT&T Executives
Woman paid thousands to rent rotary phone
Associated Press
Rules change lets AT&T avoid disclosure requirements
San Francisco Chronicle
AT&T charges elderly woman thousands for phone rental
Associated Press
FCC Asks AT&T About Hewlett-Packard Leak
Associated Press
BellSouth to close Paducah call center
Associated Press
BellSouth Seeks More Rate Power
Raleigh News & Observer
Online data breach hits AT&T customers
Computer Week
FCC queries high-speed Internet fee
USA TODAY
FCC Questions DSL Customer Fees
Wall Street Journal
'NO SERVICE AVAILABLE' HAUNTING PRICEVILLE
The Decatur Daily
Cingular Employee Blogs on Customer Service
Washington Post
Verizon and BellSouth DSL Users Won't See Lower Bills as Fee Ends
Wall Street Journal
Wiretap Ruling Threatens Telecoms
Business Week
Bell Foes Create Web Site To Fight 'Merger Monster'
National Journal Technology Daily
Beware the Merger Monster
Multichannel News
Diverse Groups Oppose Merger, Seek Divestiture of Spectrum Licenses
BUREAU OF NATIONAL AFFAIRS
Past Mergers Put Pressure on AT&T-BellSouth Deal
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Judge To Review Phone Merger Pacts
WALL STREET JOURNAL - DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
AT&T, BellSouth Shares Slip After Hearing
HOUSTON CHRONICLE
Quick Approval of Phone Deals Uncertain
NEW YORK TIMES
AT&T to Pay $550,000 to Settle Privacy Cases
BLOOMBERG NEW
AT&T to Pay $550,000 to End 2 Regulatory Matters
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
The Resurrection of AT&T
TECHNOLOGY DAILY
Supreme Court Judge to Review Case Antitrust Case Against Phone Companies
NEW YORK TIMES
Supreme Court to Review Telecoms Antitrust Case
NEW YORK TIMES-REUTERS
Privacy Rules Change for AT&T Net Service
CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER
Privacy Advocates Slam AT&T on Customer Records
NEW YORK TIMES-REUTERS
AT&T Revises Privacy Policy, Says Owns Customer Data
REUTERS
AT&T Alters Policy
BUSINESS WEEK
BellSouth Says AT&T Merger Won't Recreate Ma Bell
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Divestiture Urged: Opponents See Wireless Broadband Suffering Under AT&T-BellSouth Merger
COMMUNICATIONS DAILY
Foes of AT&T Merger with BellSouth Detail Concerns
COMMUNICATIONS DAILY
Consumer Groups Look to Squash AT&T/BellSouth Deal
REUTERS
AT&T Revises Privacy Policy, Says Owns Customer Data

June 22, 2006

NEW YORK - AT&T Inc. said on Wednesday it was revising its privacy policy, explaining to customers that it owns their phone records and can hand them over to law enforcers if necessary.

The changes take effect on Friday and come at a time when AT&T and other phone companies face lawsuits claiming they aided a U.S. government domestic spying program by giving the National Security Agency call records of millions of customers without their permission.

AT&T said the updated policy was aimed at helping customers understand its practices better and does not change how it treats customer information.

The new policy, unlike the old one, spells out the fact that AT&T owns its customers data. It says that customer information constitutes ``business records that are owned by AT&T. As such, AT&T may disclose such records to protect its legitimate business interests, safeguard others, or respond to legal process.''

The earlier policy had simply said that, aside from normal business operations such as billing and service provisioning, the company could share customer information to ``respond to subpoenas, court orders or other legal process, to the extent required and/or permitted by law,'' as well as to ``to establish or exercise'' its legal rights.

Under the new policy, which was being mailed out to AT&T's more than 7 million Internet customers, the company also said that it would track viewing information for customers of a television service it is developing in order to help it make recommendations to customers based on their viewing habits.

It also said that before customers use its services they must agree to the policy, an element that was not in its previous guidelines.

Spokesman Michael Coe said the company, which was formed in November by the merger of AT&T Corp. and SBC Communications Inc., had been working on the new policy for the last six months.

``We are not changing how we treat customer information,'' said Coe. ``We updated our policy to make the language clearer and easier for our customers to understand.''


WHAT THE MERGER MEANS TO YOU

© 2006