Amazon and Warner Music Group are among 10 new members joining the Digital Entertainment Group, the group said Wednesday. Other new members are CenturyLink, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, MAI, Outpost Media, Parrot Analytics, Screen Engine, V2Solutions and W2O Group, DEG said. "DEG continues to adjust its agenda to serve the needs of the full home entertainment in order to help support the transformation of the industry,” DEG President Amy Jo Smith said in a statement.
Pandora updated its terms of use and privacy policy effective June 30, the company said in an email to users Wednesday. Changes include making it easier for artists to connect with users, and for users to control how artists connect with them; two new policies -- on community and content and on intellectual property -- were created about the content a user posts on Pandora; updates were made in how Pandora can contact users; and a provision was added to the privacy policy to ensure the company complied with the EU-Swiss safe harbor privacy principles, and describes how Pandora uses data for measurement purposes and how users can control their participation in those measurement studies. “If you don't agree to these updated agreements, you may close your account and you won't be bound by them,” the email said.
The FTC will explore the “growing use of online lead generation in various industries, including consumer lending and education,” at a workshop on Oct. 30, a news release said. Lead generators identify or cultivate a consumer’s interest in a product or service and sell those leads to third parties, the release said. “Ever complete an online application to get the best rate on a loan? Or enter your email address on a website to learn more about colleges you’d like to attend?” wrote FTC Consumer Protection Bureau attorney Pablo Zylberglait in a blog post Wednesday. That information oftentimes goes to middlemen “you may not know exist,” he said. Sometimes the data contains sensitive personal and financial information that “may travel through multiple online marketing entities before reaching the desired business,” the release said. Questions the FTC plans to address at the workshop include how online lead generation works; what types of lead generation may be unlawful under the FTC Act; best practices for entities that generate and sell consumer leads; and how consumers can avoid unlawful conduct in the online marketplace, the release said. Comments submitted by Aug. 25 may be addressed during the workshop, but the agency is accepting comments until Dec. 20. The workshop will be at the Constitution Center, 400 7th St. SW in Washington. A detailed agenda will be published later.
Imposters pretending to be from the FTC are offering money to OPM data breach victims, and “all you need to do is give him some information,” wrote FTC Consumer and Business Education Division attorney Lisa Weintraub Schifferle in a blog post Wednesday. One scammer has identified himself as Dave Johnson from the FTC’s office in Las Vegas, she said. The FTC doesn’t have an office in Las Vegas and won’t ask for personal information or give money to OPM data breach victims, she said. Don’t trust caller ID, don’t wire money or put it on a prepaid debit card, and don’t provide personal or financial information unless you initiated a call and you know the number is correct, Weintraub Schifferle said. “Never provide financial information by email,” she said.
Consumer Watchdog asked the FTC and Justice Department to investigate whether Apple unfairly dominates the streaming music business, said a CW news release. “Apple’s new streaming music service raises serious antitrust concerns that require the government to put limitations on Apple as it develops its service if consumers are to continue to have access to free streaming music services and so-called ‘freemium’ music,” wrote CW President Jamie Court and Privacy Project Director John Simpson in a letter Wednesday. Apple has credit card information for subscribers and knows its users’ musical preferences, and uses that information to “attempt to rub out free (commercial sponsored) music platforms,” the group said. “Confidential information provided to Consumer Watchdog suggests that Apple is pressing the three remaining music labels to give Apple exclusive rights to artists" -- it has more than 800 million credit cards on file worldwide and can charge those cards following a trial subscription; has inside knowledge of the music preferences of hundreds of millions of consumers and can leverage this information to dominate the subscription music sector regardless of price; and if the music studios don’t comply, Apple will go directly to the artists and cut the music labels out of the business, the letter said. “Apple is utilizing its market power in much the way the company did in setting e-book prices.” Documents showing Apple’s tactics are under seal in an action before the Copyright Royalty Board, under the case citation 14-CRB-0001-WR (2016-2020) (Web IV), the letter said. DOJ and the FTC can issue a subpoena to see the documents, it said. “Given that Apple is both an online platform for music apps, the dominant one in the industry, and now a competitor of streaming music services, Apple is in a position to drive up prices for consumers,” Court and Simpson wrote. DOJ, the FTC and Apple didn't comment.
The FTC filed documents with the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona Tuesday alleging LifeLock violated a 2010 settlement with the agency and 35 state attorneys general by “continuing to make deceptive claims about its identity theft protection services, and by failing to take steps required to protect its users’ data,” an FTC news release said. The commission asked the court to impose an order requiring LifeLock to provide full redress to all consumers affected by the company’s order violations, it said. “We disagree with the substance of the FTC’s contentions and are prepared to take our case to court,” LifeLock said in an emailed statement. “Security of our systems has always been, and will remain, of primary importance to us.” The 2010 settlement came after the FTC alleged LifeLock used “false claims to promote its identity theft protection services,” the agency release said. Under the settlement, LifeLock was barred from making any further deceptive claims, was required to take more stringent measures to safeguard the personal information it collects from consumers, and LifeLock was required to pay $12 million in consumer refunds, it said. The FTC alleges LifeLock violated the 2010 settlement by failing to establish and maintain a comprehensive information security program to protect users’ sensitive personal data, including credit card, Social Security numbers and bank account numbers; falsely advertised it protected consumers’ sensitive data with the same high-level safeguards as financial institutions; and failed to meet the 2010 order’s record-keeping requirements, it said. Details of the agency’s action against LifeLock were filed under seal, the release said. The court could decide to unseal portions of the case, the FTC said. The vote to file the application for a show cause order was 4-1, with Commissioner Maureen Ohlhausen voting no. Commissioner Ohlhausen declined to comment further on this case at this time, her office said. “Based on the evidence, we do not believe that anything the FTC is alleging has resulted in any member’s data being taken,” LifeLock said. “The FTC is not seeking any relief that would change LifeLock services and products going forward,” but is "raising claims related to past, not current business practices.”
Twitter unveiled a new Safety Center, designed to be a resource for those looking to report abusive accounts and block accounts and for those looking to learn about online safety, wrote Head-Global Trust & Safety Outreach, Public Policy Patricia Cartes in a blog post Monday. “Online safety is a shared responsibility, and digital citizenship is essential to fostering a safe environment for all,” Cartes said. “As Twitter evolves along with the world of online safety, we will continue to create new materials for the Safety Center.”
The Trustworthy Accountability Group, an advertising initiative fighting criminal activity in the digital advertising supply chain, announced a new program to block illegitimate and nonhuman ad traffic originating from data centers, said a TAG news release Tuesday. “Data center traffic is one of many types of nonhuman or illegitimate ad traffic, and this new program will complement TAG’s recently-announced Fraud Threat List, through which companies share web domains that are sources of fraudulent traffic.” Initially, TAG will use Google’s database of data center IP addresses and “enhance it based upon broader industry intelligence,” the group said. Companies joining TAG in this phase of the project include Dstillery, Facebook, MediaMath, Quantcast, Rubicon Project, The Trade Desk, TubeMogul and Yahoo, it said. “Industry leaders like Google are stepping up to the plate to provide the information and tools we need to block fraudulent and illegitimate ad traffic at its source,” said TAG CEO Mike Zaneis. “Tackling ad fraud will require everyone in the industry to take an active role,” said Google Vice President-Video and Display Advertising Products Neal Mohan.
The application deadline for candidates to be ICANN’s next CEO is Sept. 20, ICANN’s CEO Search Committee said Monday. The committee formed to find a replacement for outgoing ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé, who's leaving the nonprofit after its March 5-10 meeting. ICANN needs “a public interest-minded leader with a combination of business, diplomatic and organizational skills to assume the leadership of a successful multi-stakeholder organization,” the committee said. The ICANN committee said it’s seeking candidates with successful records at “respected” public, corporate, academic service, nongovernmental organizations, foundations and other public service institutions.
Sensitive and personal information for some 40 million people was stolen from Avid Life Media, a Toronto-based organization that owns the “world’s leading dating service” for those looking to have an affair, Ashley Madison, which has 37 million users, and hookup sites like Established Men and Cougar Life, KrebsOnSecurity reported Sunday. The company confirmed it had been hacked and was investigating the origin, nature and scope of the incident, in a statement Monday. The hackers identified themselves as the “Impact Team” and left a message instructing Avid Life Media to permanently shut down Ashley Madison and Established Men or the hackers would release the data taken from the company. “We have taken over all systems in your entire office and production domains, all customer information databases, source code repositories, financial records, emails,” Impact Team’s message said. The message singled out Avid Life Media Chief Technology Officer Trevor Stokes, who had noted in an internal document that protecting personal information was his biggest “critical success factor” and that he would “hate to see our systems hacked and/or the leak of personal information.” Impact Team welcomed Stokes to his “worst fucking nightmare.” The hackers demanded Avid Life media permanently shut down Ashley Madison and Established Men, “or we will release all customer records, including profiles with all the customers’ secret sexual fantasies and matching credit card transactions, real names and addresses, and employee documents and emails.” Other Avid Life Media websites were allowed to stay online. Avid Life Media said it secured its sites and closed "the unauthorized access points,” and is working with law enforcement to hold any and all parties responsible.