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United States Privacy The Courts

FTC Sues 'Massive' Data Broker for Selling Location Info on Abortion Clinics (vice.com) 120

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has sued Kochava, a large location data provider, for allegedly selling data that the FTC says can track people at reproductive health clinics and places of worship, according to an announcement from the agency. From a report: The news is a dramatic move from the FTC in a post-Roe United States, and signals that the agency will take steps against what it identifies as privacy violations around reproductive health and location data. "Defendant's violations are in connection with acquiring consumers' precise geolocation data and selling the data in a format that allows entities to track the consumers' movements to and from sensitive locations, including, among others, locations associated with medical care, reproductive health, religious worship, mental health temporary shelters, such as shelters for the homeless, domestic violence survivors, or other at risk populations, and addiction recovery," the lawsuit reads.
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FTC Sues 'Massive' Data Broker for Selling Location Info on Abortion Clinics

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  • They are so lucky (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Grokew ( 8384065 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @01:18PM (#62833419)
    One of these days their luck will run out and instead of an FTC lawsuit, there will be an angry mob ready to linch their CEO and anyone that gets in the way. Data brokers, and those websites that lists people home addresses and phone numbers, and want you to send a copy of your license to get delisted, shouldn't exist.
  • Laws (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Crowded ( 6202674 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @01:24PM (#62833453)

    If congress critters were not so lazy, this would be a DOJ suit and not an FTC suit . . . yet corporations, not listed in the constitution, have more rights than people.

    I just made myself sad.

    • Re:Laws (Score:4, Informative)

      by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @02:15PM (#62833711)

      It isn't about congress being lazy... it is about being partisan. There is no compromise and even opportunities for a majority fail because someone ostensibly in the majority "wants to represent the best interests of their constituents".

  • by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @01:26PM (#62833471)
    Kochava will have to pay a pittance and admit no wrongdoing.
    • Kochava will have to pay a pittance and admit no wrongdoing.

      While I am totally against doing this type data gather and sale, I have to wonder exactly WHAT law did they break in doing so?

      I'm wondering if the FTC has standing to bring this lawsuit? And especially in light of the SCOTUS (right decision here) ruling on the EPA and other govt bureaucracies essentially going beyond their mandates and "making up law"....I'm wondering if this case will stand at all?

      I think, per my other posts, that congress sho

      • Put them on the record on who they value more...their constituents or their corporate donors.

        Corporate donors. This isn't even a question that needs pondering.

      • And especially in light of the SCOTUS (right decision here) ruling on the EPA and other govt bureaucracies essentially going beyond their mandates and "making up law"....I'm wondering if this case will stand at all?

        I'm guessing a lot of judges and politicians have phones. Time to start making that data available to anyone too. Show them personally how little privacy everyone has, including themselves.

        Of course a lot of them probably think they are special (they are not), so all this might do is make the hypocrisy and double standards more obvious.

  • The suit is based, per the article, on the company selling data for "everything", but it concentrates on EVIL DIABOLICAL STUFF.

    "I want cell phone data in the area of xxxN yyyW" could be trying to spot people hanging out near a Dairy Queen, or an abortion clinic, or a church. Doesn't matter which. And it doesn't matter WHY. Just that they COULD ask for it.

    But someone decided to make this "actionable", by pointing out ONE reason why it would be "bad". And Slashdot fell for it.

  • So? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by morgauxo ( 974071 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @02:11PM (#62833701)

    Y'all know that one of the next things up on the conservative todo list is going after abortion clinics' records and retroactively punishing those who have used their services right? It's just a matter of waiting for next year's supreme court session.

    The only way to stop it is if enough of those bible-belt conservative women who have been preaching against abortion for decades now but secretly had one realize the danger they are in and go cancel out their husbands' votes.

    If that doesn't happen then they and anyone else who has had one is screwed!

    • Abortion centers were one of many identifiable locations in proximity to the phones.

      "... among others, locations associated with medical care, reproductive health, religious worship, mental health temporary shelters, such as shelters for the homeless, domestic violence survivors "

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Ed Tice ( 3732157 )
      Remember that 1 in 4 women have had abortions. It is *very* common for women to be protesting outside of an abortion clinic (right to life), go inside to have their abortion, and continue to come back out and protest (yes, really). In fact the "conservative" women are likely to get abortions at higher percentages than the overall population due to lack of proper sex education.

      I'm going to assume the FTC is acting in a politically neutral way here (despite all of the rhetoric here on ./) because, well,

      • Curious as to where I can find these numbers you have. Are they "persons who had an abortion" vs. "number of women", or "number of abortions" vs. "number of women"?

        Of the women I'm familiar with, 3 have had abortions during the last 30 years. But, they've had in excess of 9 abortion (at last count), with 7 of those a single woman. So, would those be "3 women who have had abortions", or "9 abortions per XX women"?

        If, say, 36 women were involved, would that make "1 in 4", or "3 in 36" under the criteria used

        • This data is taken from much larger-scale studies and tracks across multiple years.

          https://ajph.aphapublications.... [aphapublications.org] Work is done to ensure that these calculations take into account that many women have multiple abortions.

          https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]

          • OK, so the "1 in 4" is a guess made in 2008 for future terms, that was "proven" incorrect in 2014.

            They do not seem to be tied to "1 in 4" women in general. One of the tables says about 15 per thousand (overall) women had an abortion in 2014.

            • Yes and if 15 per thousand have an abortion per year and women have 30 years of child-bearing ability, that would lead to an extrapolated number of 450 per thousand having an abortion or 45%. However, the final numbers are 25% probably because of some women having the procedures multiple times in their lifetimes.
              • But that assumes that they maintain the "I will have an abortion" mantra throughout the years. That seems like a specious argument, even at best, considering there were 4 times the births as abortions during the one year. Certainly, not every woman is going through the decision process every year.

                But I'll grant that your numbers are much fairer than many I see boasting large number of women get an abortion, rather than have a kid. It doesn't match what I've seen over the last 30 years, so maybe it's one of

                • That doesn't assume anybody maintains any mantra. The abortion rate is 195 per 1000 live births. In other words, 20% of pregnancies are terminated. In any given year, 1.5% of women are in a position where they (a) are pregnant and (b) choose to have an abortion. Maybe by year seven, a woman who previously had an abortion has had a change of heart about the procedure and carries the next (unexpected) pregnancy to term. But she's still a woman who (past tense) had an abortion and contributes to the stati
    • Given the state of US healthcare, the chance of these unit pumpers to die in labor is nontrivial anyway, so the problem should, as a friend put it, "mendel [wikipedia.org] itself out".

  • by Anubis IV ( 1279820 ) on Monday August 29, 2022 @02:54PM (#62833853)

    For any iPhone users who keep Location Services enabled for apps they trust, you should still consider switching "Precise Location" location off.

    Settings > Privacy > Location Services > [app name] > Precise Location

    Disabling Precise Location only gives the app a fuzzy idea of where you are, rather than a pinpoint location, so it can help protect the privacy of your home address, your work, or other destinations you might be visiting. It's good enough for the weather and close enough that I have yet to encounter a curbside pickup that complains when I click "I'm here" in their app. I leave Precise Location on for pictures, but that's one of the few exceptions.

    After you do that housekeeping, keep an eye out the next time you're prompted to allow location tracking by an app. You'll find that there's a little "Precise" label in the top left of the map popup that appears at the same time. Tap it and you can toggle Precise Location sharing off right from the start.

  • While all the Slashdot Pundits quibble over points of law from a position of complete ignorance, out in the real word the impact is violence, intimidation, and ultimately murder. Someone will be killed, and the people selling the information will be part of the chain.

    The right wing, i.e. the Republican Party, is already using violence to achieve it's goals. The insurrection on January 6th was not an isolated event. The Alex Jones/Infowars assault on the families of Sandy Hook victims is now a standard tact

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      Specific references to what are perceived to be right-wing causes, then saying they're "evidence" of a vast right-wing conspiracy to do things normally associated with left-wing sources?

      Someone is seriously "bent" to hide things like left-wing riots in Kenosha, Chicago, Seattle, and dozens of other places to say that violence is "just" a right-wing thing. These places weren't a bunch of "right wing kooks" doing bad things, including violence against people. They just had better people hiding what they did,

  • It's now illegal to tell people where abortion clinics are?

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