Julie E. Cohen, C. Hoofnagle, William McGeveran, Paul Ohm, J. Reidenberg, Neil M. Richards, D. Thaw, Lauren E. Willis
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引用次数: 2
Abstract
This brief, submitted to the Supreme Court of the United States by 15 information privacy law scholars in the case of Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins (No 13-1339), argues that in enacting the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), Congress crafted a bargain between aggressive, secretive data-aggregating businesses and the public: if those businesses limited disclosures and made reasonable efforts to adhere to practices ensuring “maximum possible accuracy,” they would enjoy a safe harbor from litigation under many other state and federal theories. The FCRA’s consumer transparency requirements and remedial provisions were designed to encourage steady improvement in consumer reporting practices and to relieve pressure on public enforcement authorities. The Petitioner’s claim that Respondents cannot pursue it for its violations of the FCRA would unravel that bargain, preserving consumer reporting agencies’ broad immunity from suit while diminishing incentives to handle data fairly.In an era in which employers increasingly practice “hiring by algorithm,” inaccurate consumer reports — even those that contain putatively favorable inaccuracies — can cause real economic injury to consumers. Such inaccuracies can lead employers to screen out prospective employees as overqualified or too well-paid. Alternatively, employers may suspect resume inflation and dishonesty if background checks reveal inconsistencies or unearned honors. More generally, lawmakers historically have recognized and responded to non-economic and dignity-based injuries by creating rights of action to remedy such wrongs in court. The FCRA follows that pattern. In enacting the FCRA, Congress did not create injury but rather recognized the injury worked by improper disclosure and mishandling of information. Petitioner’s argument to the contrary threatens to upset numerous privacy, consumer protection, and other laws.
这份由15位信息隐私法学者就Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins (No 13-1339)一案向美国最高法院提交的摘要认为,在制定《公平信用报告法》(FCRA)时,国会在激进的、秘密的数据聚合企业与公众之间达成了一种交易:如果这些企业限制披露,并做出合理的努力,坚持确保“尽可能准确”的做法,那么根据许多其他州和联邦的理论,它们将享有免于诉讼的安全港。FCRA的消费者透明度要求和补救条款旨在鼓励消费者报告实践的稳步改进,并减轻公共执法当局的压力。请愿人声称被告不能追究其违反FCRA的行为,这将破坏这一协议,保留消费者报告机构免于诉讼的广泛豁免权,同时减少公平处理数据的动机。在一个雇主越来越多地采用“算法招聘”的时代,不准确的消费者报告——即使是那些假定有利的不准确的报告——也会对消费者造成真正的经济伤害。这种不准确的信息可能会导致雇主以资历过高或薪酬过高为由淘汰潜在员工。另一方面,如果背景调查显示出不一致或不劳而获的荣誉,雇主可能会怀疑简历虚报和不诚实。更一般地说,立法者历来承认并回应非经济和基于尊严的伤害,通过创造在法庭上纠正此类错误的行动权利。FCRA遵循这一模式。国会在制定《联邦信息保护法》时,并没有造成伤害,而是承认了信息披露不当和处理不当造成的伤害。请愿人的相反论点可能会扰乱许多隐私、消费者保护和其他法律。