Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Ezor on Secure Times: Recent FTC Actions and Statements Show Continuing Focus on Privacy

IBLT Director Jonathan I. Ezor is blogging this week at the American Bar Association Privacy & Security Law Committee's Secure Times blog. His first contribution is below:

Recent FTC Actions and Statements Show Continuing Focus on Privacy

The Federal Trade Commission has long taken a lead role in issues of privacy and data protection, under its general consumer protection jurisdiction under Section 5 of the FTC Act (15 U.S.C. §45) as well as specific legislation such as the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 ("COPPA") (which itself arose out of FTC reports). The FTC continues to bring legal actions against companies it believes have improperly collected, used or shared consumer personal information, including the recent settlement of a complaint filed against Aaron's, Inc., a national rent-to-own retail chain based in Atlanta, GA. In its October 22, 2013 press release announcing the settlement, the FTC described Aaron's alleged violations of Section 5:
Aaron’s, Inc., a national, Atlanta-based rent-to-own retailer, has agreed to settle FTC charges that it knowingly played a direct and vital role in its franchisees’ installation and use of software on rental computers that secretly monitored consumers including by taking webcam pictures of them in their homes. According to the FTC’s complaint, Aaron’s franchisees used the software, which surreptitiously tracked consumers’ locations, captured images through the computers’ webcams – including those of adults engaged in intimate activities – and activated keyloggers that captured users’ login credentials for email accounts and financial and social media sites.... The complaint alleges that Aaron’s knew about the privacy-invasive features of the software, but nonetheless allowed its franchisees to access and use the software, known as PC Rental Agent. In addition, Aaron’s stored data collected by the software for its franchisees and also transmitted messages from the software to its franchisees. In addition, Aaron’s provided franchisees with instructions on how to install and use the software. The software was the subject of related FTC actions earlier this year against the software manufacturer and several rent-to-own stores, including Aaron’s franchisees, that used it. It included a feature called Detective Mode, which, in addition to monitoring keystrokes, capturing screenshots, and activating the computer’s webcam, also presented deceptive “software registration” screens designed to get computer users to provide personal information.
The FTC's Consent Order Agreement with Aaron's includes a prohibition on the company using keystroke- or screenshot-monitoring software or activating the consumer's microphone or Web cam and a requirement to obtain express consent before installing location-tracking technology and provide notice when it's activated. Aaron's may not use any data it received through improper activities in collections actions, must destroy illegally obtained information, and must encrypt any transmitted location or tracking data it properly collects. The FTC is also continuing its efforts to educate and promote best practices about privacy for both consumers and businesses. On October 28, 2013, FTC Commissioner Julie Brill published an opinion piece in Advertising Age magazine entitled Data Industry Must Step Up to Protect Consumer Privacy. In the piece, Commissioner Brill criticizes data collection and marketing firms for failing to uphold basic privacy principles, and calls on them to join an initiative called "Reclaim Your Name" which Commissioner Brill announced earlier this year. Brill writes in AdAge:
The concept is simple. Through creation of consumer-friendly online services, Reclaim Your Name would empower the consumer to find out how brokers are collecting and using data; give her access to information that data brokers have amassed about her; allow her to opt-out if a data broker is selling her information for marketing purposes; and provide her the opportunity to correct errors in information used for substantive decisions. Improving the handling of sensitive data is another part of Reclaim Your Name. Data brokers that participate in Reclaim Your Name would agree to tailor their data handling and notice and choice tools to the sensitivity of the information at issue. As the data they handle or create becomes more sensitive -- relating to health conditions, sexual orientation and financial condition, for example -- the data brokers would provide greater transparency and more robust notice and choice to consumers.
For more information on the FTC's privacy guidance and enforcement, see the privacy and security section of the FTC Web site.

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