The FCC is investigating whether AT&T Mobility violated government rules and orders concerning Internet service, the agency said in a letter AT&T filed in court Jan. 5.
The Federal Trade Commission accused the company in a 2014 lawsuit of deceiving at least 3.5 million smartphone customers who paid for unlimited data plans and had their transmission speeds drastically reduced. The company disclosed the FCC probe in court documents seeking dismissal of the case.
AT&T says the FTC lawsuit deals with the same issues that the FCC is investigating. Mobile data services are regulated by the FCC, and the FTC lacks authority to sue, AT&T said in its filing in San Francisco federal court.
āIt is the FCC, not the FTC, that regulates network management practices,āMark Siegel, a spokesman for Dallas-based AT&T, said in an e-mail.
The companyās āmaximum bit rateā program, sometimes called throttling, temporarily reduces mobile data speeds for some users to prevent service degradation for all āby preventing heavy users of data from overwhelming the mobile network,ā AT&T said in its filings. The program complies with FCC rules, AT&T says.