US FTC looking into targeted pricing based on personal data

By Jody Godoy, July 24th 2024
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-ftc-looking-into-targeted-pricing-based-personal-data-2024-07-23/July
 23


(Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Trade Commission has launched a study of products 
that could allow companies to set different prices for consumers based on their 
locations, past purchases, and other personal data.

The agency said on Tuesday it had ordered Mastercard, JPMorgan Chase, and six 
other companies to provide information about targeted pricing products, the 
data they use, who uses them and the effect on prices.

The FTC is seeking the same information from IT services provider Accenture, 
consulting firm McKinsey & Co., and software providers Pros Holdings, 
Revionics, Bloomreach, and Task Software.

All of the companies offer products that use consumer data and artificial 
intelligence or other technology to target prices for individual consumers, the 
agency said. None of the companies are accused of wrongdoing.

FTC Chair Lina Khan said the study will illuminate a "shadowy ecosystem of 
pricing middlemen."

"Firms that harvest Americans' personal data can put people's privacy at risk. 
Now firms could be exploiting this vast trove of personal information to charge 
people higher prices," Khan said in a statement.

A spokesperson for Revionics said the company does not use individual consumer 
data or develop software to target prices to individuals, and that its software 
considers market-level factors when recommending prices to retailers.

"We are confident that the FTC will affirm the benefits of Revionics' AI price 
optimization software pending its research into this matter," the spokesperson 
said.

A spokesperson for Mastercard said it was reviewing the order and would 
cooperate with the FTC. Other companies did not immediately comment on the 
orders.

Online advertising has long used data such as browsing history and device 
location to determine what ads consumers see.

The agency is concerned similar technology can now be used to set disparate 
prices, which it calls "surveillance pricing," or potentially collude with 
competitors, FTC officials said.

The FTC voted 5-0 to authorize the study, though the agency's two Republican 
commissioners disagreed with the term "surveillance pricing," calling it 
"personalized pricing".

"The products the FTC is concerned about go by various names, including 
data-driven pricing, price optimization consulting, and location-based 
predictive targeting.

R.J. Cross, a consumer advocate at the U.S. Public Interest Research Group 
(PIRG), said they raise concerns about fairness and privacy.

PIRG and other groups last year called on Mastercard to limit its use of 
cardholder data to providing card services.

The FTC is already considering rules aimed at protecting consumer privacy and 
limiting what data businesses can collect without consent.

The U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is also weighing potential rules 
to expand privacy protections for consumers


Reporting by Jody Godoy in New York; Editing by Stephen Coates and Aurora Ell


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