Original title: A Call to Action: Stop the FCC's KYC Regime
Article
The article says the FCC’s April 30, 2026 proposal to tighten KYC rules for voice providers would require identity verification—such as government ID, name, address, and alternate number—before enabling or renewing service, including prepaid plans. It argues that framing this as a robocall fix is overbroad because criminals can still bypass identity checks and reuse stolen PII, while ordinary people would be swept into permanent telecom-linked identity records. The author warns the proposal also risks undermining lawful anonymity for high-risk users of prepaid phones, including domestic violence survivors, journalists, whistleblowers, and political organizers, and could make basic communication a privilege contingent on documented identity. It highlights the specific concerns of watchlist screening, four-year retention after service ends, and per-call forfeitures starting at $2,500, which may push carriers to over-verify and over-retain data by default. The piece also argues mission creep is already implied, as the FCC asks about using KYC data for investigations beyond robocalls, including national-security and major-crime categories. It ends with a call for public comment before June 25, 2026 (replies by July 27, 2026), urging targeted anti-spam enforcement instead: focus on high-volume abuse, spoofing infrastructure, SIM-box abuse, and negligent carriers rather than universal identity collection.
Commenters largely agree that identity collection expands tracking risk and data exposure, especially because phone location and service metadata are already sensitive and often shared broadly. Some support narrower anti-fraud tactics, such as stronger caller-ID anti-spoofing and blocking hidden numbers by default, while questioning the practical benefit of mandatory KYC for scam prevention. Others focus on process and rights, objecting that mandatory FCC comments force personal data into public filings and asking whether legal avenues could better challenge PII theft harms than broad policy changes. Several respondents defend limited practicality by noting pre-existing identity checks in much of postpaid service and expressing skepticism that the proposal improves outcomes for common users. A recurring theme is due-process risk: critics argue KYC expands private gatekeeping power similar to AML/KYC systems in finance, with potential false positives and abuse from opaque watchlists. Some comments frame the debate as part of a broader trend toward mass surveillance, explicitly linking it to the current administration, while one dismisses the post’s visuals and another says uncertainty about real effectiveness remains with direct questions like whether spam calls would actually decline.