BALTIMORE -- THE reputation business is exploding. Having eroded
privacy for decades, shady, poorly regulated data miners, brokers and
resellers have now taken creepy classification to a whole new level.
They have created lists of victims of sexual assault, and lists of
people with sexually transmitted diseases. Lists of people who have
Alzheimer's, dementia and AIDS. Lists of the impotent and the
depressed.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/17/opinion/the-dark-market-for-personal-data.html?ref=opinion
There are lists of "impulse buyers." Lists of suckers: gullible
consumers who have shown that they are susceptible to
"vulnerability-based marketing." And lists of those deemed
commercially undesirable because they live in or near trailer parks or
nursing homes. Not to mention lists of people who have been accused of
wrongdoing, even if they were not charged or convicted.

Typically sold at a few cents per name, the lists don't have to be
particularly reliable to attract eager buyers -- mostly marketers, but
also, increasingly, financial institutions vetting customers to guard
against fraud, and employers screening potential hires.

There are three problems with these lists. First, they are often
inaccurate. For example, as The Washington Post reported, an Arkansas
woman found her credit history and job prospects wrecked after she was
mistakenly listed as a methamphetamine dealer. It took her years to
clear her name and find a job.

Second, even when the information is accurate, many of the lists have
no business being in the hands of retailers, bosses or banks. Having a
medical condition, or having been a victim of a crime, is simply not
relevant to most employment or credit decisions.

Third, people aren't told they are on these lists, so they have no
opportunity to correct bad information. The Arkansas woman found out
about the inaccurate report only when she was denied a job. She was
one of the rare ones.

"Data-driven" hiring practices are under increasing scrutiny, because
the data may be a proxy for race, class or disability. For example, in
2011, CVS settled a charge of disability discrimination after a job
applicant challenged a personality test that probed mental health
issues. But if an employer were to secretly use lists based on
inferences about mental health, it would be nearly impossible for an
affected applicant to find out what was going on. Secrecy is
discrimination's best friend: Unknown unfairness can never be
detected, let alone corrected.


These problems can't be solved with existing law. The Federal Trade
Commission has strained to understand personal data markets -- a
$156-billion-a-year industry -- and it can't find out where the data
brokers get their information, and whom they sell it to. Hiding behind
a veil of trade secrecy, most refuse to divulge this vital
information.


The market in personal information offers little incentive for
accuracy; it matters little to list-buyers whether every entry is
accurate -- they need only a certain threshold percentage of "hits" to
improve their targeting. But to individuals wrongly included on
derogatory lists, the harm to their reputation is great.

Continue reading the main story

Continue reading the main story

The World Privacy Forum, a research and advocacy organization,
estimates that there are about 4,000 data brokers. They range from
giants like Acxiom, a publicly traded company that helps marketers
target consumer segments, to boutiques like Paramount Lists, which has
compiled lists of addicts and debtors. Companies like these vacuum up
data from just about any source imaginable: consumer health websites,
payday lenders, online surveys, warranty registrations, Internet
sweepstakes, loyalty-card data from retailers, charities' donor lists,
magazine subscription lists, and information from public records.


It's unrealistic to expect individuals to inquire, broker by broker,
about their files. Instead, we need to require brokers to make
targeted disclosures to consumers. Uncovering problems in Big Data (or
decision models based on that data) should not be a burden we expect
individuals to solve on their own.

Privacy protections in other areas of the law can and should be
extended to cover consumer data. The Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act, or Hipaa, obliges doctors and hospitals to give
patients access to their records. The Fair Credit Reporting Act gives
loan and job applicants, among others, a right to access, correct and
annotate files maintained by credit reporting agencies.





It is time to modernize these laws by applying them to all companies
that peddle sensitive personal information. If the laws cover only a
narrow range of entities, they may as well be dead letters. For
example, protections in Hipaa don't govern the "health profiles" that
are compiled and traded by data brokers, which can learn a great deal
about our health even without access to medical records.

Congress should require data brokers to register with the Federal
Trade Commission, and allow individuals to request immediate
notification once they have been placed on lists that contain
sensitive data. Reputable data brokers will want to respond to
good-faith complaints, to make their lists more accurate. Plaintiffs'
lawyers could use defamation law to hold recalcitrant firms
accountable.

We need regulation to help consumers recognize the perils of the new
information landscape without being overwhelmed with data. The right
to be notified about the use of one's data and the right to challenge
and correct errors is fundamental. Without these protections, we'll
continue to be judged by a big-data Star Chamber of unaccountable
decision makers using questionable sources.




Frank Pasquale, a professor of law at the University of Maryland, is
the author of the forthcoming book "The Black Box Society: The Secret
Algorithms That Control Money and Information."


-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU

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