Another major federal agency is asking the U.S. telephone companies collect and maintain personal information about their customers . agency is urging companies to sign the reports on this activity to the government . Data stored include ' metadata ' ( data about data ) as personal phone numbers , hours of phone calls and location data . And the agency is not NSA we have heard in recent months.
It is for the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ), which currently requires this data only to companies that have over 100,000 local subscribers . They need to generate reports about phone calls they make their clients in rural areas . All this is part of an effort to solve a problem called ' completion of rural telephone ' , in which , calls to remote areas of the country interrupted or never reach the destination .
Although calls to rural areas account for under 10 % of all national calls in the U.S. , to make such a call can be difficult in many cases . Customers have reported that they do not hear anything because of the falling number or the bell falls over, while the receiver does not understand that if someone calls . Also it signals obtained if the phone is busy while this is not really happening .
All these happen because the rural telephone companies allowed the most expensive tarifojnë other companies in areas with high density of population to perform distance calls . As a result, some companies work with intermediaries that help reduce costs and perform calls with the lowest prices possible .
By requiring companies to submit reports concerning rural calls , FCC thinks it can find a solution to this problem that many people call unacceptable . To a person , the FCC's requirements could be confused with something else , such as might be thought that this is a government intrusion or eavesdropping on phone calls . In fact , the issue is much simpler than that : a process that will all come to help to improve an important aspect that is hurting the U.S. today .
Unlike the NSA , this process has some differences : first , the time is shorter . It is about data recording up to 6 months . On the other hand , the FCC has no access to the individual history of calls. The data come in the form of general statistics : the number of calls received a response , the number of those that are not completed etc. .
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