Insights on David Navetta,Heather Nolan

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InfoLawGroup Attorneys Co-Author Social Media Risk Whitepaper

By InfoLawGroup LLP on August 03, 2011

Building on the InfoLawGroup's depth of experience in social networking and social media, Attorneys David Navetta and Richard Santalesa have co-authored a new whitepaper with the ACE Group, a global leader in insurance and reinsurance, entitled Social Media: The Business Benefits May be Enormous, But Can the Risks - Reputational, Legal, Operational - be Mitigated?

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Financial Industry Gets New Guidance on the Use of Social Media

By Heather Nolan on July 28, 2011

Banks and other financial institutions face unique issues when it comes to the use of social media. Faced with conflicts between social media platform rules, customer expectations, self-regulatory standards, and the strict regulations that govern the industry, guidance has been needed. The industry received some of that guidance recently through a whitepaper issued by BITS, the technology arm of The Financial Services Roundtable whose members are 100 of the largest financial institutions in the U.S.The report addresses the compliance, legal, operational, and reputational risks - and related mitigation strategies - of using social media in connection with a financial or banking operation. Regarding compliance, the report discusses the myriad of compliance areas relevant to banks, including marketing, privacy and security. For example, because social media web sites and web activities are deemed advertising by regulators, the report warns of the risks of failing to comply with various marketing laws and regulations applicable to the banking industry, including state Unfair and Deceptive Acts or Practices Acts and Prize and Gift Acts, as well as others that require additional steps for financial institutions, such as Truth in Lending, Truth in Savings, and FDIC membership rules. The paper predicts even stronger and more subjective requirements to come under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. Risks of non-compliance vary widely - from litigation and reputation risk, regulatory enforcement actions and in some cases civil money penalties.