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As more and more ransomware attacks affect companies large and small, such as the recent, well-known attacks on the Colonial Pipeline and the meat processing company JBS, industrious.
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Although the U.S. has no federal law that specifically regulates artificial intelligence (AI), the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has indicated that it may be preparing to exercise its consumer protection authority with respect to AI deployment. In May, the FTC issued new guidance for the use of AI, building upon its 2020 AI guidance and its 2016 report on big data. And FTC Acting Chair Kelley Slaughter has stated in public remarks that the Commission will be exploring concerns relating to algorithmic harms, including bias and discrimination. Organizations deploying AI systems in the U.S. are advised to familiarize themselves with the FTC guidance in order to make sure that their uses of AI are in compliance with U.S. consumer protection requirements.
Auto Finance Excellence - June 9, 2021
Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), an auto lender should mark a customer’s account as “disputed” when it receives a dispute from a credit reporting agency. If the lender’s investigation determines the reporting was accurate, it may remove the “dispute” notation.
As furnishers of credit, auto lenders have two broad obligations under the FCRA. First, they must provide accurate information to the credit bureaus. This duty prohibits lenders from reporting information that it knows or has reasonable cause to believe is inaccurate. It also prohibits auto financers from reporting information that is inaccurate if the lender has been notified of the specific inaccuracy.
Developments surrounding Section 230 of Communications Decency Act CDA: a novel application of CDA in a FCRA online privacy case Henderson v. The Source for Public Data & denial of CDA immunity in an alleged design defect in a social media app Lemmon v Snap & a new Florida Law