Friday, May 31, 2013

Louisiana bans Tweeting while driving

Yesterday, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal signed a bill that bans Tweeting while driving.  SB 147 will become effective August 1, 2013, and violators may be fined up to $175 for the first offense and up to $500 for subsequent violations.

The new law bans not only Tweeting, but any other social media usage while driving.  I believe it is important for drivers and auto manufacturers to become more aware of the distracted driving issues inherent with making one's car a mobile/apps interconnected hub.  This new law is another example of the tremendous legal liability issues inherent with social media usage.

To learn how to properly handle social media liability issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Facebook losing advertising revenues due to hate speech

Facebook is the most popular social network in the world.  However, being the most popular social media platform may also create unforeseen challenges because some people and/or entities may post inappropriate and/or illegal content onto your platform.  According to the New York Times and Financial Times, multiple advertisers have stopped placing ads on Facebook because some of them have appeared next to allegedly offensive content.

Several advocacy groups have privately and publicly complained to Facebook about the content posted on its platform.  While Facebook may have initially inadvertently missed these complaints, they have caught the attention of some advertisers.  This matter may demonstrate the need for Facebook to either create a better algorithm that scans uploaded content and/or hire more people to respond to consumer complaints.

While many advertisers rely on targeted/behavioral advertising, this situation appears to demonstrate one of the downsides of this type of advertising if the proper safeguards are not implemented.  Due to the viral nature of social media, companies must better understand the platforms they utilize as advertising partners. 

To learn how to properly handle social media advertising issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Washington State Bans NCAA Schools From Using Social Media Monitoring Services on Coaches

Washington State has banned employers from generally requiring employees to turn over their personal social media credentials.  Earlier this week, Washington Governor Inslee signed SB 521 that will protect Washington state employers from becoming required to hire social media monitoring companies to review the personal digital accounts of their employees.

This law may save Washington employers tens of millions of dollars in potential costs associated with social media monitoring the personal digital accounts of employees and it will protect the personal privacy of employees.  This includes the costs associated with hiring social media monitoring companies, increased cyber liability insurance costs, and legal fees and judgements inherent with negligent social media monitoring.  The law was enacted because some companies are contacting employers, in particular colleges, to sell them social media monitoring services that are legal liability time bombs.

If an employer is monitoring the personal digital accounts of their employees and misses an issue that may indicate an employee may be violating the law and the employer does not report this information to the proper authorities in a timely manner the employer may have tremendous legal liability.  A handful of emails from more than 10 years ago appears to be the main evidence that several high level administrators at Penn State knew that Jerry Sandusky was molesting young boys on its campus.  Absent the digital evidence, it would have been much more difficult to prove that some Penn State employees allegedly knew about Jerry Sandusky's illegal activities.  The email evidence so far appears to have cost Penn State almost $50 million dollars in fines, legal and investigatory fees, and other related costs.     

The only way for an employer to know whether a particular personal digital account belongs to an employee is if it verifies that the account belongs to the person whom it claims to represent.  In other words, for a social media monitoring service to properly work an employee must at a minimum authentic his personal social media user name.  In general, verifying a personal social media user name violates Washington's SB 521 along with laws in approximately ten other states.  Therefore, Washington employers, including schools may not utilize social media monitoring companies to track their employees' personal digital accounts.   

To learn how to properly handle social media issues in your company or school you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Will Anthony Weiner's "Weiner" Tweets Derail His Candidacy For Mayor of New York City?

New York City is the greatest city in the world.  I lived in the City (NYC'ers call it the City) before and after 9/11.  It is the city that is full of come back stories.  As Frank Sinatra sang in New York New York, "if I can make it there I can make it anywhere".  Almost two years ago, former Congressman Anthony Weiner resigned from Congress because of inappropriate Tweets he sent that contained photos of his private parts.  However, he has recently announced his candidacy for Mayor of New York City.

In 2011, Weiner first claimed that his Twitter account was hacked after he was asked about some troubling Tweets being sent from his account.  However, when he declined to ask that the proper authorities investigate the matter I knew he was not being completely honest about the situation.  When I appeared on MSNBC to discuss the crisis I didn't want to accuse a member of Congress of lying so I only alluded to the troubling nature of the alleged claims by Weiner.

Until Weiner's social media usage became news, his political star was extremely bright.  Since leaving Congress, he has worked to rehabilitate his personal life and career.  While he may have learned some hard (no pun intended) lessons about social media, it appears that his staff needs some education on how to properly post video online to ensure it doesn't become a news story.

In general, politicians seem to be able to rebound from sex scandals and handsome profitably.  Time will tell if Weiner is added to the list.  Regardless of the outcome of the election, it will be interesting to see how Weiner handles all of the questions related to his past social media endeavors.    

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

FTC Complaint Filed Against Snapchat

Consumer privacy advocate EPIC has recently filed an FTC complaint against Snapchat because it believes the service is misleading consumers regarding its ability to delete the content being sent across its platform.  According to multiple published reports, Snapchat may not be permanently deleting the content being sent through its service despite its claims.  

Snapchat's promise that content would "self-destruct" after it is viewed may remind some people of Mission Impossible's self-destruct messaging system.  Self destruct messages are ideal for some content that is sent online.  Due to the constant barrage of media coverage regarding sexting scandals, an app that actually deletes content once it is viewed may be very profitable for a company.

Unless Snapchat is able to quickly fix its alleged inability to permanently delete the content it claims it is able to delete it may have significant legal liability.  It may only be a matter of time before a user is damaged because content it thought was deleted was not.

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Friday, May 10, 2013

The Application Privacy, Protection and Security Act of 2013

Congress has recently introduced the Application Privacy, Protection and Security Act of 2013 (HR1913).  This legislation would require mobile application developers to disclose what data they collect and how they utilize, share, and archive the data they capture.

In January, 2013, the California Attorney General's office issued a privacy report on the mobile apps ecosystem.  Subsequently, on February 1, 2013, an FTC report recommended ways for mobile app developers to improve privacy disclosures.  At that time, the FTC stated that app developers should:
  • Have a privacy policy and make sure it is easily accessible through the app stores;
  • Provide just-in-time disclosures and obtain affirmative express consent before collecting and sharing sensitive information (to the extent the platforms have not already provided such disclosures and obtained such consent);
  • Improve coordination and communication with ad networks and other third parties that provide services for apps, such as analytics companies, so the app developers can better understand the software they are using and, in turn, provide accurate disclosures to consumers.
HR 1913 appears it will make some of the FTC's recommendations mandatory.  Its unfortunate that the actions of some members of the app ecosystem may lead to further regulation of the entire industry.

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC.  All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

New Mexico Bans NCAA Student-Athlete Social Media Monitoring Firms

New Mexico recently joined Delaware, California, New Jersey, Michigan, Arkansas, and Utah in protecting their schools, school employees, students, and taxpayers from the potential costs and legal liability issues associated with social media monitoring students.  Under New Mexico SB 422, it is unlawful "to demand access in any manner to a student's, applicant's or potential applicant's account or profile on a social networking web site."

The enactment of SB 422 will greatly benefit schools, school employees, students, and taxpayers because collectively post-secondary schools in New Mexico may save millions of dollars in potential compliance costs and tens or hundreds of  millions of dollars in potential costs associated with social media related lawsuits.  SB 422 along with similar laws around the country appear to negatively affect the following companies that offer social media monitoring services:  UDiligence, Varsity Monitor, Fieldhouse Media, and Jump Forward.

It appears that the only way for the above mentioned social media monitoring services to properly function is if a student either downloads an application onto his personal account(s), provides a username(s) and/or password(s) to his personal account(s), or if a student authenticates his social media account(s).  These services may claim that all they need to properly work is a student's name or alias to search for a public social media account.  However, performing an Internet search and guessing that an account belongs to a particular student just because it is on the Internet may put you in the same position as one of the people portrayed in this hilarious State Farm Commercial.  According to CNN, as of last August, Facebook may have at least 83 million fake accounts and according to PRWeek, Twitter may have as many as 20 million fake accounts.

Any company that approaches schools to sell social media monitoring services to track students' personal digital accounts is selling a legal liability time bomb.  If a school is monitoring the personal social media content of their students and misses an indication that there may be a crime committed it may cost the school more than $100 million dollars.  For proof, just review the Penn State emails regarding the Jerry Sandusky matter.  Does a school want to be on the hook for tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in legal liability because it was utilizing a social media monitoring service to track their students personal digital accounts?      

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved.

Friday, April 26, 2013

California's Right to Know Act


California recently introduced "AB-1291 Privacy: Right to Know Act of 2013: disclosure of a customer’s personal information."  If enacted, the bill would update California's 2003 "Shine the Light" law (Civil Code Section 1798.80-1798.84) to account for the new data mining technologies and information sharing practices that have proliferated over the past ten years.  According to the bill's sponsor Assemblymember Bonnie Lowenthal, "AB 1291 expands the definition of personal information to include sensitive data, such as location, buying habits, and sexual orientation. By modernizing the requirements, consumers have a right to know not just how their basic information may have been used for junk mail, but also how it's collected and shared with data brokers, advertisers, and others."

The 2003 "Shine the Light" law enabled California residents to find out how businesses utilize their personal information.  In general, the law requires most companies (except federal financial institutions and those with less than 20 employees) that do business with California residents to either disclose how personal information is being shared for direct marketing purposes or allow customers to opt out of information sharing.  The law provides Californians the right once a calendar year to obtain free of charge the type of personal data that a business has disclosed to third parties for direct marketing activities and the names and contact information of all third parties that received the personal data.

Since 2003, data mining and behavioral advertising has proliferated beyond what many may have envisioned when the "Shine the Light" law was enacted.  To reign in some of these practices, a coalition of privacy organizations are advocating updating the law to account for new technologies.  According the Wall Street Journal, there has been significant industry backlash against updating the 2003 law. 

The Right To Know Act's general principles appear to follow the European Union's philosophy that its citizens have a right to require companies doing business with them to provide them with the type of information that is being collected about them.  Europe's privacy laws generally provide its citizens more control than the U.S. over how personal data may be utilized.  This was demonstrated when six EU data protection authorities  recently initiated coordinated enforcement measures against Google for failing to fix alleged flaws in its 2012 privacy policy update.  Google's privacy policy change along with Austrian law student Max Schrems experience with Facebook may have sparked the decision to introduce the Right to Know Act. 

Earlier this year, NBC News reported that Equifax has a database that contains almost 200 million employment and salary records that covers more than a third of all U.S. adults.  Some of these records may include week by week pay stub information.  While it may be troubling that Equifax has acquired this detailed information, at least under the Fair Credit Reporting Act consumers are able to obtain a report once a year about the data that is being collected about them.

Personal privacy may be further damaged by the new new partnership between Facebook and data brokers Acxiom, Epsilon, and Datalogic that is designed to better monetize the content of their users. The FTC is so concerned about some of the practices of data brokers that late last year it announced that it is studying how the industry collects and utilizes consumer data.  In what might be an effort to ward off potential future regulation, Axciom recently announced it was planning a service to allow consumers to obtain their personal files.     

Should advertisers be able to analyze your personal emails and/or your personal files in the cloud and utilize the information to behavioral advertise and/or combine this information with other digital and/or real world data across multiple platforms to create personal user profiles that may be accessed not only by marketers but also by insurance companies, banks, law enforcement, etc...?  What if due to the types of ads that are processed on a particular email account a company is able to make an inference about one's sexual orientation, race, religion, etc.. and this inference is utilized for discriminatory purposes? 

The intentions of the law are noble; however, due to the way the bill is currently drafted it may lead to some unintended compliance costs for businesses.  Therefore, I believe the California state legislature should work to find common ground between supporters and opponents of the bill that would increase transparency for consumers without creating an economic hardship on the business community.  

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved.  

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

AP Twitter Account Hack Causes Dow Jones to Plunge

As social media becomes a bigger part of our everyday lives, the legal issues surrounding social media increase greatly.  One of the verified Associated Press Twitter accounts was hacked earlier today and the hacker tweeted, "Breaking: Two Explosions in the White House and Barack Obama is injured".   Within minutes the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged 140 points.

Hacking into the AP's Twitter account may violate multiple federal and state laws.  Was this hack done to intentionally create chaos and/or harm our financial makets?  Was the hacker testing how the U.S. financial markets, and/or the media, and/or the government would react to the hack? What was the motive behind the hack?  Was this just a big joke done for personal pleasure?  Do those who lost money in the stock market because of the hack have a cause of action against the hacker?

These are some of the many questions that may be answered in the near future.
   
To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved. 

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Will Social Media Crowdsourcing Catch The Boston Marathon Terrorists?

The Boston Marathon terrorist bombing was a cowardly act that killed at least 3 people, caused at least 13 people to lose limbs, and hospitalized 183.  This terrorist act should remind us that post 9/11 there are still threats to democracy and our way of life. 

While our nation mourns this terrible tragedy, law enforcement officials are hard at work trying to capture the perpetrators of this dastardly act.  One of the tools that the police are utilizing in their hunt for the terrorists is social media crowdsourcing. According to Wikipedia, crowdsourcing "is the practice of obtaining needed services, ideas, or content by soliciting contributions from a large group of people, and especially from an online community".  Will social media be able to quicken the pace to identity and then capture the perpetrators of this tragedy? 

Facebook, Google, and Microsoft have each been fined and/or forced to change their practices because some of their activities have been found to violate state and/or federal law/regulations.  While some of these practices have raised the angst of regulators and/or privacy advocates the technology of these companies may also help catch the Boston Marathon Terrorists.

Facebook has been utilized by Massachusetts authorities to catch criminals.  Google Earth has been used to solve various crimes.  Microsoft worked with the New York City Police Department to develop a counter-terrorism and crime prevention system.  While some of these technologies may be leading us closer to a surveillance state they may also help prevent terrorism and catch criminals. 

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved. 

Monday, April 15, 2013

When will the FTC follow the EU's lead in protecting digital privacy?


Are Google's March 2012 privacy policy changes legal?  This is a question that the European data protection authorities have been working on since Google first announced its intention to change its privacy policies in January 2012.  Soon after the announcement, France asked European data protection authorities to open an inquiry into the matter. In addition, U.S. Representative Edward Markey announced his intention to ask the FTC whether Google's privacy policy changes were also legal in the United States.   

On April 2, 2013, the United Kingdom's Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) stated, "the ICO has launched an investigation into whether Google’s revised March 2012 privacy policy is compliant with the (European) Data Protection Act. The action follows an initial investigation by the French data protection authority CNIL, on behalf of the Article 29 group of which the ICO is a member. Several data protection authorities across Europe are now considering whether the policy is compliant with their own national legislation." 

The ICO's announcement was in conjunction with France's Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés (CNIL-France's privacy body) press release that stated on March 19, 2013, "representatives of Google Inc. were invited at their request to meet with the taskforce led by the CNIL and composed of data protection authorities of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United-Kingdom. Following this meeting, no change (by Google to its Privacy Policy) has been seen."  The CNIL further stated, "[t]he article 29 working party’s analysis is finalized. It is now up to each national data protection authority to carry out further investigations according to the provisions of its national law transposing European legislation."

How will this development affect Google?  It means that French data protection authorities along with regulators in the UK, Netherlands, Germany, Spain and Italy may take joint legal action involving an investigation and possible fines into Google's privacy policy changes that enables it to combine the data it obtains from users across all of its digital services.  The ICO has the authority to levy fines of up to £500,000 for breaches of the Data Protection Act. The CNIL may fine an entity up to €300,000 (£255,000).  While these fines may not be much of a deterrent to Google and/or other companies to stop allegedly violating European privacy laws, regulators may also sue to block a company from operating in Europe.  If this route is taken against Google and/or others it may harm a company's ability to operate in Europe.   

How will the EU's continued privacy law investigations into Google's practices affect Google's users in the United States?  When will the FTC follow the EU's lead and request more information about Google's updated privacy policies?  While it is too soon to speculate on the FTC's next move, it would not surprise me if the FTC eventually investigates Google and/or others who change their privacy policies to better enable the data mining of users' content. 

The EU data protection authorities and the FTC must properly balance the personal privacy rights of citizens with the ability of digital companies to be able to continue to thrive and expand.  Should Apple, Facebook, Google, etc.. be allowed to collect, archive, and utilize user data without any limits?  Last December, there was a major outcry when Instagram (Facebook bought it last year for $1 billion dollars) changed its privacy policy so it would be able to better data mine/monetize the personal content of its users.  Only after a very public uproar, did Instagram reverse course on most of its proposed privacy policy changes.       

What if Instagram followed through with all of its planned privacy policy changes?  Would users have any real recourse against the service absent deleting their account?  Should digital platforms be able to change their privacy policies to enable them to better data mine their users' personal data at any time?  Some digital services/platforms have become so intertwined in our lives (Ex:  Apple, Facebook, Google, etc...) that users may be willing to agree to any updated terms to continue to participate.

The television show South Park had an interesting observation about what happens when a company changes its policies in an episode last year titled the Human Centipad. This episode demonstrated to the extreme of what may happen when a company is able to unilaterally change its policies and its users must agree to them to continue to utilize the service.  

When Apple, Facebook, Google, etc... update their policies and these changes appear to erode personal privacy protections and/or enable more data mining that does not appear to be in the best interest of users should regulatory authorities around the world, including the FTC, stop or modify these changes?  If Google's privacy policy changes are not legal in Europe should they be legal in the United States?  Should European digital users be afforded greater privacy protections than those in the United States?    

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved. 

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Utah Bans Student-Athlete Social Media Monitoring Firms

Utah recently became the latest state to enact legislation that bans schools from deploying social media monitoring firms that require students verify their social media user names and/or passwords. Utah joins Delaware, California, Michigan, and New Jersey in protecting their schools, students, and taxpayers from social media snake oil salesmen who are selling legal liability time bombs. 

The Utah legislation appears to have been prompted because of a Time Magazine article that discussed the student-athlete social media policy of one Utah school.  This academic institution appeared to require student-athletes sign a social media policy that stated, "To the extent that any federal, state, or local law prohibits the Athletic Department from accessing my social networking accounts, I hereby waive any and all such rights and protections."  According to constitutional law expert Professor Phil Closius, this student-athlete social media policy was "clearly suspect".  Under Utah's new law (H.B. 100), this policy is not just clearly suspect but against the law.

What does Utah's new law along with similar laws across the country mean for schools?  In short, academic institutions need to re-examine their student-athlete social media policies and education programs to ensure compliance with all applicable state and federal laws.  Athletic departments need to understand that social media is not just a public relations issue but a serious legal matter that requires the counsel of social media law experts who understand college athletics and NCAA compliance.  Drafting and implementing improper student-athlete social media policies may create millions of dollars in legal liability. 

Consultants who sell "student-athlete social media monitoring services" to athletic departments are selling legal liability time bombs.  Deadspin has already exposed several companies as having no connection to college athletics before starting their "social media monitoring firms". Some companies that are approaching colleges appear to be making material misrepresentations to market their services.  For example, how does someone transition from being a health care recruiter to a social media student-athlete compliance and education consultant overnight? 

The bottom line is that states across the country are banning schools from being able to deploy firms to monitor and archive their students' personal digital content.  These laws may cumulatively save schools around the United States hundreds of millions of dollars in monitoring, legal, compliance, and insurance costs.

In order for social media monitoring services to properly function students must at least verify their social media user names.  Absent student verification these services are unable properly work.  Furthermore, athletic departments should not be fooled into believing these services are compliant with all state and/or federal laws.  In general, these companies also claim their services are educational tools while others claim they want to protect the online reputation of schools and/or students.  Has anyone asked those who are approaching schools for their teaching credentials?

It appears that the founders of these companies have no verifiable experience that would lend any credibility to their claims.  Consultants who are marketing student-athlete social media monitoring services to athletic departments do not understand social media, NCAA compliance, public policy, or the law; and they apparently care more about making a sale than protecting schools and student-athletes.     

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Arkansas Bans NCAA Student-Athlete Social Media Monitoring Companies

Arkansas has became the latest state to enact legislation that bans schools from deploying social media monitoring firms to track their students' personal digital accounts.  Arkansas joins Delaware, California, Michigan, New Jersey and Utah in protecting their schools, students, and taxpayers from fear and misinformation.

Consultants who sell student-athlete social media monitoring services to athletic departments are selling legal liability time bombs.  Deadspin has already exposed several companies as having no connection to college athletics before starting their "social media monitoring firms". Some companies that are approaching colleges appear to be making material misrepresentations to market their services.

One consultant quoted me (who appears to have no verifiable experience in college athletics, social media, law, or compliance before he started selling his services to NCAA schools) in a press release touting his social media monitoring service last year.  Quoting me to market a service that may create tremendous legal liability for NCAA schools is very troubling. Lawyers and risk professionals who understand this issue would never endorse a service that may increase a school's legal liability and/or may advise an academic institution to violate state and/or federal law.

The bottom line is that states across the country are banning schools from being able to deploy firms to monitor and archive their students' personal digital content.  These laws may cumulatively save schools around the United States hundreds of millions of dollars in monitoring, legal, compliance, and insurance costs.

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at www.shearlaw.com.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC All rights reserved.

Monday, April 1, 2013

University of Maryland Law School's Symposium on Social Media and the Law

On Friday, April 5, 2013, from 9:00 am to 3:30 pm the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law's Journal of Business & Technology Law is sponsoring a symposium titled, "Social Media and the Law: An Exploratory Look into the Legal Effects of Online Interconnectedness." The event is free, open to the general public, and lunch will be provided to those who RSVP.

Speakers will present on a range of topics, including: the constitutionality of student athlete social media policies; the relationship between social media interfaces and copyright law; and how social media laws are developing with respect to employment law, contracts, and privacy matters. Our speakers include private practitioners, a higher education media relations representative, and professors of law and communications. To RSVP please visit the Journal's website: http://www.law.umaryland.edu/academics/journals/jbtl/symposia.html .

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Will Google Glass Change Our Children's Expectation of Privacy?



Do children still have an expectation of privacy?  Every day our personal privacy is slowly being eroded because of advances in technology.  New inventions have enabled our society to more efficiently mass produce food; create the infrastructure to warm our homes and offices in the winter and cool them in the summer; and to invent digital devices that allow us to communicate and share information from around the world and outer space almost instantaneously. 

Frictionless sharing of information between digital platforms enables us to easily provide our thoughts and ideas without having to re-post the same content over and over.  A recent change to the U.S. Video Privacy Protection Act directly benefitted some cloud based computing platforms because the revision now allows them to easily enable their users to share their video viewing history to others online.  While frictionless sharing enables users to quickly post content across multiple digital platforms it may also change our expectation of privacy.  

In 1890, a seminal article co-authored by future Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis called "The Right to Privacy" was published in the Harvard Law Review.  The law review article stated, "[i]nstantaneous photographs and newspaper enterprises have invaded the sacred precincts of private and domestic life; and numerous mechanical devices threaten to make good the prediction that what is whispered in the closet shall be proclaimed from the house-tops."  Justice Brandies' thoughts about privacy are generally credited as the first modern scholarship about the right and expectation of privacy in the United States.

While new digital technologies have made it easier for us to communicate with others, many of these new services have made it more difficult to protect our privacy. Once content is converted into digital form, it may go viral and cause major personal embarrassment.  The digital sharing of inappropriate content may permanently destroy one's personal and/or professional reputation.  Student digital  gaffes have been around for years; however, the increased usage of mobile phones with digital cameras, social media, and cloud computing services over the past several years has only increased the potential for more electronic mistakes that may put personal privacy and security at risk.

According to a 2012 Pew Report entitled, "Parents, Teens, and Online Privacy", 81% of parents of teens say they are concerned about how much information advertisers can learn about their child's online behavior.  This Pew Report also found that 69% of parents of teens are concerned about how their child's online behavior may affect their future academic or employment opportunities.  This report was created before all of the recent media attention surrounding Google's Project Glass (aka Google Glasses).   

Project Glass is a virtual reality pair of glasses that contains many of the same features of a smart phone.  For example, Google Glasses have an embedded camera, microphone, and GPS.  While Google Glasses have the potential to become one of the first commercially viable augmented reality devices, there are some significant privacy concerns that may affect children and create legal liability for users.    

If a teacher or a student wears a pair of Google Glasses during class will those in the classroom feel comfortable knowing that every in class interaction may be streamed online?  How will this affect the learning process?  How will students react knowing that everything stated in class may also be converted to text and  stored in Google's cloud and eventually attached to their online profile forever.   How will students feel if their personal conversations and/or in class thoughts  and ideas are monetized by Google and/or advertisers?  How will Google's Voice Search and Search By Image technology be utilized to data mine the information obtained from Project Glass? 

Twelve states generally require all parties consent to their conversations being recorded.  Will Google Glass be required to post a warning label so consumers are fully informed about the potential legal risks of using this product?    

Many schools across the country are implementing digital media use policies that cover social and mobile technologies.  However, Google's Glass Project may require schools to also include augmented reality technologies in their policies. 

The Internet never forgets and content uploaded online is impossible to fully scrub from the web.  Since digital platforms have the ability to broadcast to the entire world audio and video of our children that may permanently damage their reputations should the law provide our children special protections against these situations?  Children under the age of 18 generally have the right to void agreements they enter into so should they also have the right to require that search engines delete personally identifiable information about them that may harm their ability to attend the school of their dreams or obtain gainful employment?    

To learn more about these issues you may contact me at http://shearlaw.com/attorney_profile.

Copyright 2013 by the Law Office of Bradley S. Shear, LLC. All rights reserved.