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markhoofnagle.jpg Mark Hoofnagle has a MD and PhD in physiology from the University of Virginia, and is now a general surgery resident. His interest in denialism concerns the use of denialist tactics to confuse public understanding of scientific knowledge.

Chris Hoofnagle Chris Hoofnagle is a recovering Washington, DC lawyer and information privacy law expert at UC-Berkeley Law School. Denialism became apparent to him while working on consumer protection laws in Washington. The Denialists' Deck of Cards is essentially a how-to guide for being an industry lobbyist.

PalMD.jpgPalMD is a practicing internist in the Midwestern United States. Aside from the great joy he finds in his family and his work, he likes communicating some of that joy to others. He has a special interest in the ways patients---and we are all patients at one time or another---are deceived by charlatans. He aims to change the world, one reader at a time. Previous writings can still be found here.

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    « Making A Business of Going Out of Business | Main | The Taxman Cometh via Ticketing! »

    Financial Data & Prescription Records Use Limited

    Category: Privacy
    Posted on: June 29, 2009 7:35 PM, by Chris H

    If you are a resident of California, rejoice, because the Supreme Court let stand a decision in the 9th Circuit finding that SB 1 (California's Financial Information Privacy Act) was not preempted by the Fair Credit Reporting Act. In plain English, this means that California residents can opt-out of "affiliate sharing" among banks. Thus, if you have an account at Bank of America, you can ask the bank not to share information about your account with the company's 2,000 affiliates! This sets the stage for other states to limit affiliate sharing, and in all likelihood, it means that some banks will simply stop affiliate sharing without direction from the consumer. Why is this important? Say that you are in charge of buying drinks for office parties, and that you regularly purchase large amounts of beer on your credit card for that purpose. Later, you apply for life insurance at Traveler's. These entities are jointly owned, and they can make inferences from your purchase history information.

    The Supreme Court also refused to review an important case from the 1st Circuit, involving the use of prescription records. In IMS Health, marketers challenged a prescription confidentiality law, which prohibited the sale of prescriber-identified prescription records. The 1st Circuit upheld the law, holding that it did not violate the free speech rights of prescription drug marketing companies. The 1st Circuit decision is important in particular because the court viewed the sale of records as mere conduct, rather than expression. If the sale of personal information is viewed in this way, marketing companies will have great difficulty framing privacy laws as restrictions on free speech. It also will mean that marketers will no longer see what drugs are prescribed on a per-physician basis in New Hampshire. Will this lower drug prices? Stay tuned!

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    Comments

    1

    Hopefully that will improve health for all on this, the government must give force to the health sector, as there are many people who suffer from chronic illnesses and who need help to cover expenses stronger as fibromyalgia, cancer, producing a series very heavy cost to those who suffer as they must take powerful drugs such as oxycodone, Vicodin, Lortab, drugs that are highly controlled and that findrxonline indicate that opioids are very strong and anxiolytics do not know if that can be given life-threatening that consumes, that is why many times the costs are too high to be able to obtain and soothe the intense pain.

    Posted by: Pain management | July 2, 2009 2:43 PM

    2

    Chris:I think the "Slealthy Ads" people have commented above,@1 and 2- you are so totally the *wrong* target.

    Posted by: Denice Walter | July 9, 2009 11:04 AM

    3

    Chris: Still! Check line#5 of comment 1,near right margin- I won't type out the website's name.

    Posted by: Denice Walter | July 10, 2009 10:06 AM

    4

    I have to say, sadly, that this site is becoming nigh unto unusable because of all the b*stard spammers. It is difficult to follow a conversation when there are a dozen spam comments to wade through.

    Posted by: LanceR, JSG | July 10, 2009 12:03 PM

    5

    All, I'm sorry about the spam! I've been deleting it ASAP--it comes in waves.

    Posted by: Chris H Author Profile Page | July 10, 2009 7:40 PM

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