Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Consumer Information Federal Trade Commission Act grants Federal Trade Commission (FTC) responsibility regarding unfair methods of competition and unfair.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Consumer Information Federal Trade Commission Act grants Federal Trade Commission (FTC) responsibility regarding unfair methods of competition and unfair."— Presentation transcript:

1 Consumer Information Federal Trade Commission Act grants Federal Trade Commission (FTC) responsibility regarding unfair methods of competition and unfair or deceptive acts of practices involving interstate commerce At the state level—attorney general in each state

2 Federal Trade Commission Act 15 USC Section 45a. –(1) Unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce, and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce, are hereby declared unlawful. –(2) The Commission is hereby empowered and directed to prevent persons, partnerships, or corporations….from using unfair methods of competition in or affecting commerce and unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.

3 FTC and online privacy 1996 Workshop Issues –Role of government—regulation or no regulation? –Opt-in versus opt-out –Consumer access to information held about them –Sensitivity of financial and medical information and protection of children 1997 workshop on same areas

4 FTC standards for online privacy Notice/Awareness Choice/Consent Access/Participation Integrity/Security Enforcement/Redress

5 FTC’s stand on self-regulation Individual reference services—”computerized database services that are used to locate, identify, or verify the identity of individuals”—1997 FTC report in favor of self regulation Online Privacy—move toward recommending legislation –Privacy Online: Report to Congress, 1998—in favor of self- regulation (except regarding children) although only 2% of websites had privacy policies posted –Self-Regulation and Privacy Online: A Report to Congress, 1999—pointed to industry initiatives like seal programs –Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security—Final Report of the FTC Advisory Committee on Online Access and Security—no consensus –Prepared statement in May 2000—self regulation not enough

6 Online profiling Online profiling report to congress, part 1 in June 2000 –Explained the issues of online profiling Online profiling report to congress, part 2 in July 2000 –The FTC at that time recommended legislation

7 Network Advertising Initiative NAI principles, 2000 –Notice—”robust” notice appears at time and place of data collection, otherwise in privacy policy –Choice—opt-out approach –Access—consumers should get reasonable access to personally identifiable information but no details about how has to be done –Security—reasonable efforts to protect profiling data –No enforcement

8 FTC from 2000-08 Return to self-regulation approach—no new legislation Promise of increased enforcement of existing laws “notice-and choice” model –Long privacy policies no one reads “ harm-based” approach –Deal with practices that might cause physical or economic harm, or ‘unwarranted intrusions in consumers’ daily lives’

9 Current FTC Proposed framework for protecting consumer privacy 2010 –Privacy by design Companies should incorporate substantive privacy protections into their practices like data security, reasonable collection limits, sound retentions practices and data accuracy Companies should maintain comprehensive data management procedures throughout life cycle of products and services

10 More on framework –Simplified choice Companies don’t need to provide choice before collecting and using data for commonly accepted practices like product fulfillment For practices requiring choice, companies should offer the choice at a time and in a context in which the consumer is making a decision about his/her data

11 –Greater transparency Privacy notices should be clearer and shorter; companies should provide reasonable access to consumer data they maintain Companies must provide prominent disclosures and obtain affirmative express consent before using consumer data in materially different manner than claimed when data was collected All stakeholders should work to educate consumers about commercial data privacy practices

12 Enforcement Actions Toysmart.com –Went into bankruptcy—sought to sell its database of consumer information though its privacy policy said it would not disclose information to third parties— FTC intervened but overruled by bankruptcy court—database was ultimately destroyed ReverseAuction.com –Took customer information from eBay site and sent spam to the customers soliciting their business Liberty Financial companies –Didn’t keep personal information about children anonymous GeoCities –Misrepresented purpose for the data it was collecting—sold it to third parties Amazon.com –Altered privacy policy, but FTC saw no need for enforcement action Sears –Failed to disclose how much data they were actually collecting through ‘research software’ Twitter –Didn’t keep designated tweets private


Download ppt "Consumer Information Federal Trade Commission Act grants Federal Trade Commission (FTC) responsibility regarding unfair methods of competition and unfair."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google