Consumer Law & Policy Blog

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Sunday, August 18, 2019

Luguri & Strahilevitz paper on how online companies manipulate consumers using dark patterns--and UDAP laws

Jamie Luguri and Lior Strahilevitz, both of Chicago, have written Shining a Light on Dark Patterns. Here is the abstract:

Dark patterns are user interfaces whose designers knowingly confuse users, make it difficult for users to express their actual preferences, or manipulate users into taking certain actions. They typically exploit cognitive biases and prompt online consumers to purchase goods and services that they do not want, or to reveal personal information they would prefer not to disclose. Research by computer scientists suggests that dark patterns have proliferated in recent years, but there is no scholarship that examines dark patterns’ effectiveness in bending consumers to their designers’ will. This article provides the first public evidence of the power of dark patterns. It discusses the results of the authors’ large-scale experiment in which a representative sample of American consumers were randomly assigned to a control group, a group that was exposed to mild dark patterns, or a group that was exposed to aggressive dark patterns. All groups were told they had been automatically enrolled in an identity theft protection plan, and the experimental manipulation varied what acts were necessary for consumers to decline the plan. Users in the mild dark pattern condition were more than twice as likely to remain enrolled as those assigned to the control group, and users in the aggressive dark pattern condition were almost four times as likely to remain enrolled in the program. There were two other striking findings. First, whereas aggressive dark patterns generated a powerful backlash among consumers, mild dark patterns did not – suggesting that firms employing them generate substantial profits. Second, less educated subjects were significantly more susceptible to mild dark patterns than their well-educated counterparts. Both findings suggest that there is a particularly powerful case for legal interventions to curtail the use of mild dark patterns.

The article concludes by examining legal frameworks for ameliorating the dark patterns problem. Many dark patterns appear to violate federal and state laws restricting the use of unfair and deceptive practices in trade. Moreover, in those instances where consumers enter into contracts after being exposed to dark patterns, their consent could be deemed voidable under contract law principles. The article proposes a quantitative bright-line rule for identifying impermissible dark patterns. Dark patterns are presumably proliferating because firms’ secret and proprietary A-B testing has revealed them to be profit maximizing. We show how similar A-B testing can be used to identify those dark patterns that are so manipulative that they ought to be deemed unlawful.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Sunday, August 18, 2019 at 06:38 PM in Consumer Law Scholarship, Identity Theft, Unfair & Deceptive Acts & Practices (UDAP), Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)

Monday, August 12, 2019

WSJ article about how debt settlement firms can harm consumers

Here.  Excerpt:

Companies like National Debt Relief seek out heavily indebted consumers with a promise to help them get out from under it. But regulators say these debt-settlement programs can leave customers worse off, facing high fees, damaged credit scores and unexpected income-tax bills.

* * *

Data from credit-reporting companies has been used by some debt-settlement firms to solicit consumers as their debt is rising and when many are trying to sort out their financial situation. Other firms flood mailboxes with offers of loans, but when consumers call, the pitch can be very different. * * *

Former GreenLink employees said only a small number of people who responded to the company’s mailings were offered loans. Instead, they were pitched a debt-settlement program that GreenLink sells on behalf of San Mateo, Calif.-based Freedom Debt Relief, the former employees said.

GreenLink’s salespeople were taught to “get the client’s guard down,” according to a GreenLink telephone sales script reviewed by the Journal. The Journal couldn’t determine the date of the script.

 

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Monday, August 12, 2019 at 08:58 AM in Other Debt and Credit Issues, Unfair & Deceptive Acts & Practices (UDAP) | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday, August 09, 2019

Court affirms class certification in case about Facebook's facial-recognition technology

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday affirmed the district court’s order certifying a class Facebook users in a case challenging Facebook’s facial-recognition technology as a violation of Illinois’s Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA).The court held that plaintiffs alleged a concrete and particularized harm, sufficient to confer Article III standing, because BIPA protected the plaintiffs’ concrete privacy interest, and violations of the procedures in BIPA actually harmed or posed a material risk of harm to those privacy interests. Specifically, the panel concluded that the development of a face template using facial-recognition technology without consent (as alleged in this case) invades an individual’s private affairs and concrete interests.

The decision did not address the merits of the case, only the issue whether the case can proceed as a class action.

The court's decision is here. A US News & World Report story on the decision here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Friday, August 09, 2019 at 03:39 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Empirical analysis of the Supreme Court's class-action cases

Scotusblog this week posted an analysis of the U.S. Supreme Court's review of class action cases. Among its observations is that the Court overturns almost 70 percent of class action decisions made by appeals courts by either reversing or vacating these decisions. In addition, the analysis found that, between the 2010 and 2018 terms, the Court favored the defendant companies in the vast majority of consumer class actions, although the outcome in court in securities class actions was more balanced.

The full blog post is here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Friday, August 09, 2019 at 10:54 AM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Wednesday, August 07, 2019

How collectors trick consumers into reviving old debts

The Washington Post reports today on debt collectors' tactics to revive debts that they cannot otherwise collect on because the statute of limitations has passed. If the consumer makes a payment, even against his or her own will, that can be used to try to revive the life of the debt. So debt collectors often "focus on getting consumers to reset the statute of limitations through a variety of means, including sending them credit cards that let them pay off their old debts or by allowing them to make a small payment to halt debt collection calls. The efforts have contributed to the flood of debt-collection lawsuits clogging courts across the country, consumer advocates say. In New York City, the number of debt-collection lawsuits surpassed 100,000 last year, compared with 47,000 in 2016, according to data from the New Economy Project."

The full article is here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Wednesday, August 07, 2019 at 02:00 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

Sunday, August 04, 2019

Call for Papers for 4th CFPB Research Conference on Consumer Finance

We've received the following Call for Papers:

4th CFPB Research Conference on Consumer Finance
December 12th–13th, 2019
This December, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) will host its fourth research
conference on consumer finance at Catholic University in Washington, DC. Information on prior
conferences can be found here: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/cfpbresearch-conference/
We encourage the submission of a variety of research. This includes, but is not limited to, work
on: the ways consumers and household make decisions about borrowing, saving, and financial
risk-taking; how various forms of credit (mortgage, student loans, credit cards, installment
loans, etc.) affect household well-being; how salience of product fees and terms affect saving and
borrowing; the structure and functioning of consumer financial markets; distinct and
underserved populations; and relevant innovations in modeling or data, including the use of
alternative data.

A deliberate aim of the conference is to connect the core community of consumer finance
researchers and policymakers with the best research being conducted across the wide range of
disciplines and approaches that can inform the topic. Disciplines from which we hope to receive
submissions include, but are not limited to, economics, law and economics, and cognitive
sciences.

The conference’s scientific committee includes:

• Michael Baye (Indiana University)
• Ken Brevoort (Federal Reserve Board of Governors)
• Jeremy Bulow (Stanford University)
• Liran Einav (Stanford University)
• Gregory Elliehausen (Federal Reserve Board of Governors)
• Robert M. Hunt (Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia)
• Brian Melzer (Dartmouth College)
• Tom Miller (Mississippi State University)
• Janis K. Pappalardo (Federal Trade Commission)
• Wilbert van der Klaauw (Federal Reserve Bank of New York)

Authors may submit complete papers or detailed abstracts that include preliminary results. All
submissions should be made in electronic PDF format to CFPB_ResearchConference@cfpb.gov
by Tuesday, September 3, 2019.

Please remember to include contact information on the cover page for the corresponding author.

Please submit questions or concerns to CFPB_ResearchConference@cfpb.gov.

Travel expenses will be provided for the presenting author of each accepted paper in the
program.

Posted by Jeff Sovern on Sunday, August 04, 2019 at 04:25 PM in Conferences, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau | Permalink | Comments (0)

Friday, August 02, 2019

FTC update on claims in Equifax settlement

Last week, the Federal Trade Commission announced a $700 million settlement with Equifax concerning its liability for the 2017 data breach in which hackers stole the personal information of 147 million people. The settlement seemed to offer people as much as $125 in cash. In the week after the FTC announced the settlement, more than 4.5 million people visited the settlement site. So many people that the FTC has now announced that the payments will be much less than $125. The settlement also offers people the option of three years of free credit monitoring, instead of cash. But the FTC has now stated that, those who take the cash "will wind up only getting a small amount of money.”

The FTC's update, encouraging people to opt for credit reporting, is here.

Posted by Allison Zieve on Friday, August 02, 2019 at 12:32 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)

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