concerted activity, employee privacy, enforcement, group, Heather Nolan, InfoLawGroup, information, Law, NLRA, NLRB, privacy, privacy enforcement, Section 7, social media, social network
NLRB Issues Report on Employer Social Media Policies
By Heather Nolan on June 25, 2012
advertising, events, Heather Nolan, Jamie Rubin, marketing, promotions
33rd Annual PMA Marketing Law Conference
By Heather Nolan on November 14, 2011
Colorado, data privacy, Hearing, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, personal information, privacy, privacy legislation, privacy rule, public utilities commission, smart grid, SmartGrid
Colorado PUC Holds Hearing on Smart Grid Privacy Rules
By InfoLawGroup LLP on October 18, 2011
amendments, children, comments, Federal Trade Commission, FTC, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, online privacy, privacy, Rule
FTC Proposes Revisions to COPPA Rule
By InfoLawGroup LLP on September 15, 2011
concerted activity, employee privacy, enforcement, Facebook, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, NLRA, NLRB, privacy, privacy enforcement, Section 7, social media, social network
Nonprofit Must Rehire Employees Axed for Facebook Complaints
By InfoLawGroup LLP on September 08, 2011
Dodd-Frank, Heather Nolan, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Prize and Gift Acts, social media, social networking, Unfair and Deceptive Acts or Practices Acts
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.
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, credit, creditor, creditors, Dodd-Frank, E-Sign, Fair Credit Reporting Act, FCRA, FTC, FTC report, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess
CFPB Tasked with FCRA Interpretation - FTC Issues Staff Report to Aid Transition
By InfoLawGroup LLP on July 26, 2011
FTC, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, online, online privacy, privacy, privacy by design, privacy news
Capitalizing on Privacy Practices - Study Indicates Consumers Will Pay for Privacy
By InfoLawGroup LLP on July 14, 2011
Heather Nolan, InfoLawGroup
Heather Nolan joins InfoLawGroup LLP
By Justine Young Gottshall on July 12, 2011
California, children, data mining, First Amendment, health information, Info Law Group, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, pharmaceutical companies, privacy, privacy legislation, Supreme Court, Vermont, video games
Supreme Court Pro-Business and First Amendment - Targeted Regulations in Trouble
By InfoLawGroup LLP on June 28, 2011
California, class action, ECPA, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, personal information, personal privacy, personally identifiable information, privacy, Stored Communications Act, unfair competition, Wiretap Act
California Federal Court Dismisses Bulk of Privacy Suit Against Facebook
By InfoLawGroup LLP on June 07, 2011
access, Boris Segalis, Health Care, health information, HHS, HITECH, InfoLawGroup, information law group, InformationLawGroup, Nicole Friess, NPRM, privacy, privacy rule, protected health information, Regulation, Security, security rule
Changes to HIPAA Privacy Rule Proposed by HHS - Find Out Who Has Accessed Your Health Records
By InfoLawGroup LLP on June 01, 2011
and, bills-, by, capital, capitalists, data, data privacy laws and regulations, David, David Navetta, design, do, Do Not Track, Friess, FTC, group, InfoLawGroup, information, information law group, Law, laws, Navetta, Nicole, Nicole Friess, not, privacy, privacy bills, privacy by design, start-ups, track, tracking, VCs, venture, venture capital, venture capitalists
"Privacy by Design": A Key Concern for VCs and Start-Ups
By InfoLawGroup LLP on May 23, 2011
Boris Segalis, broker, data protection, dealer, financial privacy, InfoLawGroup, information law group, information security, Nicole Friess, privacy, privacy assessment, privacy enforcement, privacy rule, Regulation S-P, Regulation SP, Safeguards Rule, SEC, Securities and Exchange Commission
Federal Privacy Enforcement Update: SEC Fines Executives for Privacy and Security Violations
By InfoLawGroup LLP on April 13, 2011
As we have reported previously on our blog, federal agencies, including the FTC, NLRB and EEOC have been very active in taking action against privacy and information security violations. This trend continues with the Securities and Exchange Commission's (SEC's) recent announcement of a settlement with three former executives a brokerage firm (GunnAllen Financial, Inc.). The SEC alleged that the former executives violated the Commission's Privacy Rule and Safeguards Rule (Regulation S-P) and aided and abetted the firm in violating these rules. This enforcement action marks the first time the SEC assessed financial penalties against individuals charged solely with violating Regulation S-P.