Oren Bar-Gill of Harvard and Kevin E. Davis of NYU have written (Mis)perceptions of Law in Consumer Markets. Here's the abstract: There are good reasons to believe that consumers’ behavior is sometimes influenced by systematic misperceptions of legal norms that govern product quality. Consumers might misperceive specific rules, such as those found in food safety […]
It appears the FBI has another way to hack into the San Bernardino killer's phone. The good news for Apple is this avoids a court order that it must build a key for the FBI to unlock the iPhone. The bad news is that it suggests Apple's security perhaps isn't as good as touted. The […]
That's the issue on appeal in Pyle v. Woods, in which Public Citizen filed the opening brief today in the Tenth Circuit. Utah law directs the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing to create and maintain a state Controlled Substance Database of all prescriptions for controlled substances filled at pharmacies in the state. Pharmacists are […]
Today, the Supreme Court decided in Tyson Foods v. Bouaphakeo that a group of 3000-plus meat processing workers were properly permitted to proceed as a class in seeking unpaid wages from their employer. It's an important win for workers, consumers, and plaintiffs generally seeking to hold corporations accountable for wrongdoing. Just as important, in a case […]
Last year, we praised a Second Circuit decision holding that the National Bank Act doesn't preempt New York usury law in a claim against a debt buyer. In response to a cert petition, the Supreme Court has now asked for the Administration's views on the case. You can read more about it (from an industry source) here.
Ars Technica reports on a disturbing report out of Colorado that Denver cops are querying state and federal law enforcement databases for personal uses, such as "to help officers' in the romance department and to assist friends, according to an independent department monitor." Read the story here and the independent monitor's report here (go to page 16 for […]
NPR reports: Doctors have long disputed the accusation that the payments they receive from pharmaceutical companies have any relationship to how they prescribe drugs. There's been little evidence to settle the matter, until now. A ProPublica analysis has found that doctors who receive payments from the medical industry do indeed prescribe drugs differently on average […]
From Politico's Morning Money, by Ben White: M.M. hosted a panel at the ABA conference on Wednesday that generated some controversy when Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer (R-Mo.), a senior member of the House Financial Services Committee, said people needed to "find a way to neuter" Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), whom he called "the Darth Vader of […]
We have received the following Call for Papers: The three Consumer-Protection related committees of the ABA Antitrust Section (Consumer Protection, Privacy, and Advertising Disputes & Litigation Committees) are excited to announce a new initiative geared towards young lawyers and law students interested in the consumer protection and privacy fields – an opportunity to get published […]
Predictably, privacy groups like the idea; ISPs don't. NPR has the story.

