Cerebral, accused by the FTC of sharing sensitive information of over 3.2 million users with third parties, is now banned ...
Monument will be banned from disclosing personal health information to third parties without consumer consent as a result of ...
The FTC has proposed restricting a mental telehealth service firm from sharing consumer data and requiring it to pay a $7 ...
And this one is even more sophisticated because the government agency you're meant to report these types of scams to – the FTC – is being impersonated. One reason this impersonation has been ...
The FTC fined mental telehealth service Cerebral over $7 million for deceptive data sharing practices and failing to honor ...
The Federal Trade Commission is sending refunds to consumers it says bought into fake health plans falsely marketed by Benefytt Technologies as comprehensive health insurance or an Obamacare plan ...
Monument revealed health information to third parties including Meta and Google without users’ consent, the FTC alleged, while misleading users into thinking their health data was kept confidential.
The FTC case is unrelated to the forced-sale bill. FTC spokesperson Douglas Farrar declined to comment, as did a DOJ spokesperson. A spokesperson for TikTok declined to comment. What happens next ...
The FTC recently hosted a virtual public workshop on private equity in healthcare. The commission said it held the event because it had “growing concerns” about the “harmful effects” of ...
“As the pandemic illustrated, a major shock to the supply chain have cascading effects on consumers, including the prices they pay for groceries,” FTC Chair Lina Kahn said in a statement.
Federal regulators said large grocery chains used their size and scale to keep shelves stocked during the pandemic, edging out smaller rivals when most stores struggled with product shortages and ...
More than most federal agencies today, the FTC embodies the old notion of a bureaucracy in search of a purpose. Precisely because the rather open U.S. economy is defined by relentless competition ...