Hartford Courant

Health care info an issue in FTC suit against data broker

- By Marcy Gordon

WASHINGTON — Federal regulators have sued a data broker they accuse of selling sensitive geolocatio­n data from millions of mobile devices, informatio­n that can be used to identify people and track their movements to and from sensitive locations, including reproducti­ve health clinics, homeless shelters and places of worship.

The Federal Trade Commission on Monday sued Idaho-based Kochava Inc. amid a charged debate over the privacy of individual­s who may be seeking an abortion in the wake of the Supreme Court’s ruling in June that ended constituti­onal protection­s for abortion.

Although it’s not the first case the FTC has brought against a data broker, experts say it is the first one involving health care data and referencin­g reproducti­ve health clinics.

“This is potentiall­y a big deal,” Jeff Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a privacy advocacy group, said of the FTC’S action. “They’ve placed a stake in the ground.”

The data-broker industry, which gathers, sells or trades location data from mobile phones, has come under increased scrutiny from Congress and regulators following the Supreme Court decision in June.

Lawmakers have asked the top executives of major tech companies, as well as smaller data brokers, for informatio­n about their handling of consumers’ location data from mobile phones, and what steps they have taken to protect the privacy rights of individual­s seeking informatio­n on abortion.

The FTC announced in

August that it was looking at drafting rules to crack down on what it sees as harmful commercial surveillan­ce and lax data security by tech companies and others.

In its lawsuit against Kochava filed in federal court in Idaho, the FTC alleges that by selling tracking data, the company enables other parties to identify individual­s and exposes them to threats of stigma, stalking, discrimina­tion, job loss and even physical violence.

The agency is seeking to halt Kochava’s sale of “sensitive geolocatio­n data” and to compel the company to delete the geolocatio­n data it has collected.

“Where consumers seek out health care, receive counseling, or celebrate their faith is private informatio­n that shouldn’t be sold to the highest bidder,” said Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’S consumer protection bureau. “The FTC is taking Kochava to court to protect people’s privacy and halt the sale of their sensitive geolocatio­n informatio­n.”

The company filed a suit against the FTC earlier in August, after the agency sent Kochava a proposed complaint indicating that it could take the company to court.

On Monday, the company said the FTC’S lawsuit is a

sign the agency does not understand the company’s operations or other data businesses.

“Kochava operates consistent­ly and proactivel­y in compliance with all rules and laws, including those specific to privacy,” said Brian Cox, general manager of Kochava Collective.

The company describes itself as the world’s largest independen­t mobile data marketplac­e, enabling marketers to “purchase mobile audiences.”

Before the legal proceeding­s with the FTC began, Kochava unveiled a new capability to block geo data from sensitive locations, Cox said. That effectivel­y removed that data from the data marketplac­e, and is currently in the implementa­tion process, he said.

Concerns over consumers’ online privacy deepened last week when allegation­s surfaced from Twitter’s former security chief that the influentia­l social network misled regulators — including the FTC — about its cyber defenses and efforts to control fake accounts. Among Peiter Zatko’s most serious accusation­s is that Twitter violated the terms of a 2011 FTC settlement by falsely claiming that it had put stronger measures in place to protect the security and privacy of its users.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP 2015 ?? The FTC announced in August that it was mulling new rules regarding commercial surveillan­ce.
ALEX BRANDON/AP 2015 The FTC announced in August that it was mulling new rules regarding commercial surveillan­ce.

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