WASHINGTON—The Federal Trade Commission is now soliciting public feedback through an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) as part of an effort to mitigate harmful commercial surveillance and relaxed data security practices.
The FTC said it defines commercial surveillance as “the business of collecting, analyzing, and profiting from information about people,” and added it is seeking to draw attention to the increased risks of data breaches, deceptions, and other harms it has caused consumers.
“Firms now collect personal data on individuals at a massive scale and in a stunning array of contexts,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “The growing digitization of our economy—coupled with business models that can incentivize endless hoovering up of sensitive user data and a vast expansion of how this data is used—means that potentially unlawful practices may be prevalent.”
The agency said it is seeking public comment related to commercial data collection and use practices, asking for input on whether it should implement new regulations to prevent or deter related consumer harms. The public will have an opportunity to share input during a virtual public forum, hosted by the FTC, on Sept. 8.
Currently Lacks Authority
The FTC currently lacks the authority to enforce regulations over credit unions. However, the ANPR suggests a rulemaking designed to regulate the collection and use of consumers’ data across the entire economy, and the American Data Privacy and Protection Act (ADPPA), which passed the House Energy and Commerce Committee last month, could soon provide the FTC broad authority to implement and enforce new data privacy and date security standards, including over credit unions.
