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Harris v. Blockbuster

Concerning the Substitution of Privacy Rights by Arbitration

  • EPIC Urges Court to Enforce Video Privacy Law: Today, EPIC filed a friend of the court brief with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, urging the Court to enforce federal privacy protections for Facebook users who rented videos from Blockbuster, a Facebook business partner. The Video Privacy Protection Act prohibits companies from revealing consumers' video rental histories. EPIC wrote, "Congress established a private right of action to ensure that there would be a meaningful remedy when companies failed to safeguard the data they collected" and warned, "absent a private right of action, there would be no effective enforcement, no remedy for violations, and no way to ensure that companies complied with the intent of the Act." The lawsuit was filed by Cathryn Harris and other Facebook users after Blockbuster made public their private video rental information. Blockbuster, a participant in Facebook's Beacon program, claimed that consumers cannot sue the company and must submit to mandatory arbitration. EPIC's brief, which includes a detailed history of the video privacy law, urges the appeals court to uphold a lower court ruling, which held that the plaintiffs are allowed to pursue their claim that a federal law was violated. For more information, see EPIC Harris v. Blockbuster, EPIC The Video Privacy Protection Act, and EPIC Facebook Privacy. (Nov. 4, 2009)
  • More top news »
  • Court Dismisses Video Privacy Case Against Redbox » (Nov. 5, 2014)
    A federal court of appeals has ruled that a lawsuit against Redbox will not continue. The plaintiffs argued that Redbox's disclosure of personal information to a customer service center violated the Video Privacy Protection Act of 1988. The Seventh Circuit ruled that since customer service is part of Redbox's "ordinary course of business," the disclosure is permissible under the Act. The Court also determined that the statute created standing and that it was unnecessary to show additional harm. Earlier this year, a federal court ruled that a privacy class action lawsuit against Hulu, the video streaming service, could continue. In that case, Hulu shared user data with Facebook for advertising purposes, in violation of the VPPA. EPIC has supported the Video Privacy law since its inception and has defend the statute in Congressional testimony and amicus briefs. For more information, see EPIC: Harris v. Blockbuster; EPIC: Lane v. Facebook; and EPIC: Video Privacy Protection Act.
  • Court Denies Hulu's Motion to Dismiss Privacy Case » (May. 1, 2014)
    A federal court has ruled that a privacy class action lawsuit against Hulu, the video streaming service, may continue. Hulu users allege that the company violated the Video Privacy Protection Act by transferring personally identifiable information to both Facebook and the advertising company comScore. The Judge ruled that Hulu's transfer to Facebook of unique IDs, including the user's IP address and Facebook ID, as well as specific video titles would violate the video privacy law. However, the judge determined that Hulu only transmitted anonymized user IDs to comScore and that therefore there could be no legal violation. In 2009, EPIC filed an amicus brief in a similar case in which a company disclosed consumers' identities and video rental histories to Facebook. For more information, see Harris v. Blockbuster and EPIC: Video Privacy Protection Act.
  • Facebook Users Object to Beacon Settlement » (Feb. 2, 2010)
    Facebook users filed papers in federal court objecting to a proposed deal that would extinguish the company's liability for disclosing personal information in violation of federal law. Users criticized the class action settlement, stating "the class receives no meaningful relief." Other objectors alleged "in effect, Facebook is paying itself the benefit but class members are releasing their individual privacy claims." EPIC previously submitted a letter to the judge hearing the case. EPIC's letter opposes the settlement and proposes alternatives that would enable stronger privacy safeguards for Facebook users in the future. For more information, see EPIC Facebook Privacy, EPIC Harris v. Blockbuster.
  • EPIC Urges Court to Enforce Video Privacy Law » (Nov. 4, 2009)
    Today, EPIC filed a friend of the court brief with the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, urging the Court to enforce federal privacy protections for Facebook users who rented videos from Blockbuster, a Facebook business partner. The Video Privacy Protection Act prohibits companies from revealing consumers' video rental histories. EPIC wrote, "Congress established a private right of action to ensure that there would be a meaningful remedy when companies failed to safeguard the data they collected" and warned, "absent a private right of action, there would be no effective enforcement, no remedy for violations, and no way to ensure that companies complied with the intent of the Act." The lawsuit was filed by Cathryn Harris and other Facebook users after Blockbuster made public their private video rental information. Blockbuster, a participant in Facebook's Beacon program, claimed that consumers cannot sue the company and must submit to mandatory arbitration. EPIC's brief, which includes a detailed history of the video privacy law, urges the appeals court to uphold a lower court ruling, which held that the plaintiffs are allowed to pursue their claim that a federal law was violated. For more information, see EPIC Harris v. Blockbuster, EPIC The Video Privacy Protection Act, and EPIC Facebook Privacy.

Background

In November 2007, social networking site Facebook launched its Beacon advertising program, which broadcasts a user's interaction with an advertiser to the feeds of that user's friends. Beacon broadcasts information from third party websites such as Overstock.com, Ebay, or Blockbuster. Facebook promises advertisers that all they need to do is "[a]dd 3 lines of code and reach millions of users." The advertisers determine which user actions on their website -- such as adding a movie to queue, or purchasing an item, or signing up for the site -- will generate feed messages.

In 2008, Cathryn Elaine Harris, a Facebook user, filed a class action complaint in the District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, against Blockbuster for violations of the Video Privacy Protection Act. The Video Privacy Protection Act bans the disclosure of personally identifiable rental information unless the consumer consents specifically in writing. Harris claimed that Blockbuster violated this provision by reporting the rental activity of users to Facebook, without their permission, and even when the users were not logged into the social networking site.

Blockbuster sought to keep the case out of court by invoking an arbitration clause in its “Terms and Conditions,” which stated that “[a]ll claims, disputes, or controversies . . . will be referred to and determined by binding arbitration.” The Terms and Conditions further prohibited the commencement of class actions, and stated that it “may at any time, and at its sole discretion, modify these Terms and Conditions of Use, including without limitation the Privacy Policy, with or without notice.” Before joining Blockbuster Online, customers were required to click a button to confirm that they read and agreed to the Terms and Conditions, including the arbitration clause. Plaintiffs argued, however, that Blockbuster Online’s Terms and Conditions were unenforceable, because they were illusory and unconscionable.

On April 15, 2009, the District Court for the Northern District of Texas ruled that Blockbuster Online’s Terms and Conditions were unenforceable because they gave Blockbuster too much discretion in modifying the terms of the agreement. Following the reasoning in a Fifth Circuit case, Morrison v. Amway Corp., the court found that Blockbuster’s arbitration provision was illusory, because there was nothing in the Terms and Conditions that would prevent Blockbuster from “unilaterally changing any part of the contract.” As a result of the decision, the class action would remain in the court system.

Blockbuster filed an interlocutory appeal in the Fifth Circuit. In its appeal, Blockbuster raised three issues: (1) "whether the district court erred in considering Plaintiff's claim that the change-in-terms provision rendered [Blockbuster's Terms and Conditions] illusory, because challenges to the contract as a whole, such as this one, must be heard in the first instance by an arbitrator; (2) whether the change-in-terms provision does in fact render Blockbuster's Terms and Conditions illusory; and (3) "whether Plaintiffs' other attacks on the Arbitration Clause, which the district court did not address, lack merit." Blockbuster ultimately withdrew its interlocutory appeal in February 2010 following a settlement with Appellees.

In a similar case brought against Facebook as a class-action lawsuit, Facebook entered into an agreement to end Facebook Beacon. Under the settlement terms, Facebook terminated Beacon and contributed $9.5 million towards the creation of a foundation dedicated to protecting online privacy. Despite objections, the 9th Circuit upheld the settlement and the Supreme Court declined to hear the case.

EPIC's Interest

EPIC has a strong interest in protecting consumers and consumer privacy. Mandatory arbitration clauses, like Blockbuster’s, are becoming increasingly prevalent in consumer contracts. Such clauses can be found in the Terms and Conditions of your cell phone or credit card agreements. Mandatory arbitration clauses prevent consumers from bringing a claim against a company in court. If the company sues the consumer, the consumer is bound to arbitration board rulings and in many cases must waive his right to an appeal.

Mandatory arbitration clauses implicate privacy interests, as they prevent consumers from availing themselves of strong statutory protections already in place. In Blockbuster, Harris sued under the Video Privacy Protection Act, which provides for civil penalties of at least $2,500 per violation. However, Blockbuster’s arbitration clause would have prevented users from litigating claims in court, and as a result, benefiting from the Act’s privacy protections. Consumers simply do not have the same privacy rights in arbitration proceedings than in court proceedings, where they are protected by state and federal statutes.

The enforcement of mandatory arbitration clauses has been a topic of discussion in Congress lately. On July 22, 2009, the House Oversight and Government Reform’s Domestic Policy Subcommittee held a hearing to discuss the fairness of mandatory arbitration clauses in consumer contracts. The House Subcommittee on Commercial and Administrative Law held another hearing on September 15, 2009 to discuss the same issue.

There is also legislation aimed at prohibiting mandatory arbitration clauses in consumer contracts. The Arbitration Fairness Act, introduced by Rep. Johnson (D-Ga.), is currently in the House. The act, if passed, would end the imposition of mandatory arbitration clauses on consumers, but would allow for voluntary arbitration if both parties consent.

Legal Documents

Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals

District Court

Articles

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