I’m Too Sexy It Hurts… My Employment

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Studies often show that attractive workers tend to get hired sooner, get promotions more quickly, and are paid more handsomely than their less-attractive co-workers. But can good looks get you fired without any job protection? According to a unanimous decision by the Iowa Supreme Court, they can.

In Nelson v. Knight, the Iowa Supreme Court considered whether a female employee could be lawfully terminated because her boss believed that she was an irresistible attraction and keeping her employed was a threat to his marriage. Nelson, the terminated employee, had worked for Knight’s dental practice for ten years along with Knight’s wife.  Ultimately, Knight’s wife became jealous and demanded that Knight terminate Nelson.  Knight too believed that if Nelson remained employed he would likely have (or attempt to have) an affair with her.  Consequently, Knight notified Nelson that she was terminated because she was too irresistible and a threat to his marriage.  Nelson then brought a cause of action against Knight alleging that she was terminated because of her gender in violation of the Iowa Civil Rights Act.  Nelson did not allege at any time that Knight sexually harassed her.

The Iowa Supreme Court upheld Nelson’s termination.  In doing so, the Court drew an important distinction between an isolated employment decision based on personal relationship issues (which is lawful in most cases) and an employment decision based strictly on one’s gender (which is unlawful in most cases).  The court reasoned that this case fell under the first scenario in which Knight terminated Nelson because of personal relationship issues and not because of her gender.  Therefore, the court found that Nelson’s termination was lawful under the Iowa Civil Rights Act.

Although this may seem like a novel decision, it should not be a surprise.  In New Jersey, it is well-established that physical attractiveness is not a protected class under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination.  It is also well established that an employee can be terminated because of relationship issues stemming from a consensual workplace relationship with his or her employer absent sexual harassment. In applying these principles, it is fair to conclude that a similar decision might have been rendered by a court in New Jersey.  On the other hand, Nelson was a threat to Knight’s marriage only because she is a woman; thus, it is not difficult to imagine that a court in New Jersey might have gone the other way.

© 2013 Giordano, Halleran & Ciesla, P.C.

Rainmaker Retreat: Law Firm Marketing Boot Camp

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming Law Firm Marketing Boot Camp:

rainmaker ad January 2013

WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?

Have you ever gone to a seminar that left you feeling motivated, but you walked out with little more than a good feeling? Or taken a workshop that was great on style, but short on substance?

Ever been to an event that was nothing more than a “pitch fest” that left a bad taste in your mouth? We know exactly how you feel. We have all been to those kinds of events and we hate all those things too. Let me tell you right up front this is not a “pitch fest” where speaker after speaker gets up only trying to sell you something.

We have designed this 2 day intensive workshop to be content rich, loaded with practical content.

We are so confident you will love the Rainmaker Retreat that we offer a 100% unconditional money-back guarantee! At the end of the first day of the Rainmaker Retreat if you don’t believe you have already received your money’s worth, simply tell one of the staff, return your 70-page workbook and the CD set you received and we will issue you a 100% refund.

We understand making the decision to attend an intensive 2-day workshop is a tough decision. Not only do you have to take a day off work (all Rainmaker Retreats are offered only on a Friday-Saturday), but in many cases you have to travel to the event. As a business owner you want to be sure this is a worthwhile investment of your time and money.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

Partners at Small Law Firms (less than 25 attorneys) Solo Practitioners and Of Counsel attorneys who are committed to growing their firm. Benefits you will receive:

Solo practitioners who need to find more clients fast on a shoe-string budget. In addition to all the above benefits, solo attorneys will receive these massive benefits:

Law Firm Business Managers and Internal Legal Marketing Staff who are either responsible for marketing the law firm or manage the team who handles the law firm’s marketing. In addition to all the above benefits, Law Firm Business Managers and Internal Legal Marketing Staff will also receive these benefits:

Of Counsel Attorneys who are paid on an “eat what you kill” basis. In addition to all the above benefits, Of Counsel attorneys will also receive these benefits:

Associates who are either looking to grow their book of new clients in the next 6-12 months or want to launch their own private practice. In addition to all the above benefits, Associates will also receive these benefits:

Key Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) Regulatory Focus of 2013: Retail Sales of Complex Products, According to Annual Letter [VIDEO]

The National Law Review recently published an article, Key Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) Regulatory Focus of 2013: Retail Sales of Complex Products, According to Annual Letter [VIDEO], written by Mark T. Carberry with Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP:

Neal Gerber

In January, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) published its annual letter identifying its regulatory and examination priorities for 2013, a document intended to “represent [FINRA’s] current assessment of the key investor protection and market integrity issues on which [FINRA] will focus in the coming year.”

Although numerous such issues were identified by FINRA in its letter, including issues relating to the sale of private placement securities, anti-money laundering compliance, insider trading, margin lending practices, and algorithmic trading, a substantial focus for 2013 relates to suitability concerns and the sale of complex products to retail investors.

Economic Environment Sharpens FINRA’s Concern

FINRA specified in its letter a number of current general economic factors giving rise to concerns about retail investors purchasing complex products:

  • FINRA believes the “slow growth, low-interest rate environment…” has challenged retail customers to seek returns outside their stated risk tolerance;
  • “[A]n unprecedented compression of credit risk premiums and yields…;”
  • The fact that retail investors are, therefore, increasingly transferring funds from equity to debt markets;
  • Retail investor “appetite for yield…” has increased prices on investment-grade and high-yield debt issues, limiting substantially upside growth while exacerbating risk of loss.

In light of the above factors, FINRA expressed its particular concern “about sales practice abuses, yield-chasing behaviors and the potential impact of any market correction, external stress event or market dislocation on market prices.”

3 Complex Products Earn Particular FINRA Scrutiny

While FINRA’s assessment again identifies numerous complex products in previous annual reviews, including non-traded REITs and leveraged and inverse ETFs, FINRA singled-out the following three “recently surfaced…” products as potentially unsuitable for retail investors in the current economic environment, given their underlying market, credit and liquidity risk factors:

  • Business Development Companies (BDCs): BDCs, typically closed-end investment companies, are highlighted due to, among other things, their investment in the corporate debt and equity of private companies;
  • Leveraged Loan Products: These adjustable-rate loans are extended by financial institutions to companies with low credit quality;
  • Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities: FINRA is concerned retail investors are not being advised by their registered representatives of the “considerable risks given today’s low-interest-rate, low-yield environment.”

FINRA’s Recommended Supervisory Points of Emphasis

Supervisory policies and procedures regarding the sale of complex products to retail investors will be subject to particular scrutiny in 2013. FINRA’s Regulatory Notice 12-03 (“Complex Products-Heightened Supervision of Complex Products”), offers substantial guidance regarding heightened supervisory procedures that may be appropriate. In brief, some of these supervisory procedures may include:

  • Suitability: Is there a process to ensure the mandatory suitability analyses have been undertaken, particularly in light of FINRA’s revised suitability rule (FINRA Rule 2111)?
  • Post-Approval Review: Is there a supervisory process in place to reassess – post-sale – the performance and risk profile of existing complex products? Does this process also capture any complaints received from customers relating to a particular complex product?
  • Training: Registered representatives who recommend complex products must have a thorough understanding of all features and risks of a given product to enable them to articulate such features and risks to retail clients. Have sufficient resources been allocated to such training, and is there a process in place to ensure this training was utilized and effective?
  • Financial Sophistication of Clients: FINRA recommends that firms adopt the approach mandated for options trading accounts – that financial advisors must have a reasonable basis to believe that a retail client is sufficiently knowledgeable in financial matters, that he or she is capable of evaluating the risks of a recommended transaction and that the client can bear the associated financial risks.
  • Discussions with the Client: In recommending a complex product, a registered representative should thoroughly discuss all features of the product, how the product is expected to perform under different market conditions, the risks of the product and potential returns and the costs of the product. Fundamentally this should be undertaken in a manner most likely to facilitate the client’s understanding of the product.

In sum, as advised in its letter, FINRA is “particularly concerned about firms’ and registered representatives’ full understanding of complex or high-yield products, potential failures to adequately explain the risk-versus-return profile of certain products, as well as a disconnect between customer expectations and risk tolerances.”

For these reasons, supervisory procedures regarding sales of complex products to retail investors in large part must be designed – and enforced – with the intent to give financial advisors the ability to provide credible, substantive responses to the regulatory inquiry, “How did you educate yourself regarding the particular features and risk factors of this product?” and “How did you effectively communicate that information to your (suitable) client?”

© 2013 Neal, Gerber & Eisenberg LLP

3rd Annual Upstream Oil and Gas Contract Management Conference – March 12-14, 2013

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming 3rd Annual Upstream Oil and Gas Contract Management Conference:

Upstream Oil and Gas Contract Mgmt March 12-14 2013

 

 

March 12-14, 2013

Houston, Texas

 

Key Features
 

  • Pre-Conference Workshop A: Tactics to sustain the relationship between operator and service provider when drafting global contracts
  • Pre-Conference Workshop B: Drafting robust service level agreements in a post Macondo world with WeatherFord International

 

Event Focus

3rd Annual Upstream Oil and Gas Contract Management

As organizations go back to the Gulf for exploration, the allocation of liability in E&P projects have become vaster. The laws around the world have been unpredictably changing, leading the oil and gas industry question the quality of their contracts. The changes within the industry have all parties in a contract concerned about liability, risk and overall validity of their contracts. With contracts being the nexus of any successful job, it is important to review and analyze the changes within the industry.

The marcus evans 3rd Annual Upstream Oil and Gas Contract Management Conference will go through the entire lifecycle of a contract. We will determine the after effects of post Macondo, demystify the changes in indemnity and warranty clauses and develop tactics to diminish risk in these contracts. By analyzing both domestic and international contracts, we will bring the most current and pressing issues to the forefront of this conference to help troubleshoot the core issues of contract.

Attending this Premier marcus evans Conference will enable you to:

  • Identify the changes in risk allocation since the Gulf reopened for exploration with Eni US Operating Company
  • Investigate insurance protection to ensure a more balanced and reasonable contract with Seneca Resources
  • Implement Preferential Rights to Purchase clauses in contracts and avoid pitfalls when drafting these clauses with Apache Corporation
  • Analyze issues in drilling contracts to mitigate risks with Occidental Oil and Gas Corporationand Superior Energy Services, Inc.
  • Review the positive and negative implications to contracts when an organization undergoes mergers and acquisitions with GE Oil & Gas.

Industry leaders attending this conference will benefit from a dynamic presentation format consisting of workshops, panel discussions, and industry-specific case studies that provide accurate, real-world knowledge. Attendees will experience highly interactive conference sessions, 10-15 minutes of Q&A time after each presentation, 4+ hours of networking, and exclusive online access to materials post-event.

Advancement of Women Lawyers In Private Practice: Learning From Their Sisters in Corporate Legal Departments and from Senior Lawyers In Private Practice

The National Law Review recently published an article, Advancement of Women Lawyers In Private Practice: Learning From Their Sisters in Corporate Legal Departments and from Senior Lawyers In Private Practice, written by Beth L. Kaufman of the National Association of Women Lawyers:

National Association of Women Lawyers

 

As the voice of women in the law, National Association of Women Lawyers (“NAWL”) in 2006, challenged corporations and law firms to double their number of women general counsel and equity partners from 15% to 30% by 2015.  Recent statistics indicate that the “NAWL Challenge” for corporate legal departments in Fortune 500 corporations already has been met.

Women today comprise 30% of General Counsels, when only a few years ago they comprised only 15% of the General Counsels in the same companies.   This achievement is in sharp contrast to the fate of women lawyers in the 200 largest U.S. law firms (“AmLaw 200”), where women have stagnated at 17% or less of those law firms’ equity partners since NAWL’s annual survey of the advancement of women lawyers began.

Ask anyone in corporations –from mid-sized to the largest in the country — and they will tell you that they have embraced diversity and inclusion — their customers, their audience, their constituents are diverse– and their leadership, including their lawyers, must be diverse.    Many have overhauled their in-house legal departments and the way they deal with and select their outside counsel.  They have created comfortable and welcoming environments in which their dedicated and loyal women lawyers can thrive.

Apparently not so in the highest echelons of the largest law firms in this country (indeed, globally).   For the first time, this year, there has been a decrease in the number of first year women law students and the number of women in entering classes of associates at AmLaw 200 firms.   Is this an aberration or is this the result of the disillusionment of women with a legal profession that is viewed by many as inhospitable to women.?

To be sure, there are thousands of women lawyers in this country in many different practice settings who have advanced, are leaders, and love the practice of law.  I am one of them and have spent almost 35 years loving what I do as a professional each and every day.   Many of NAWL’s leaders and members have similar feelings. As an organization, NAWL brings those lawyers together whenever it can to share their experiences with younger lawyers and impart views as to how the practice of law can be a nurturing professional experience for women, and one in which they can achieve whatever success they desire.


This year’s NAWL Mid-Year Meeting at Disney World in Orlando promises to make its own significant contribution to that effort.  STRETCHED & BALANCED:  A Holistic Approach to Law Practice for the Woman Lawyer, will be held at the Grand Floridian from February 14-16.  Highlighting the event will be programs for both in-house and outside counsel, including:

  • The Male Factor:  What Every Woman Lawyer needs to Know about How Men and Clients View Women Attorneys in the Workplace
  • Ethical Issues for Inside and Outside Counsel
  • Circuit Training:  10 Legal Issues Every Lawyer Should Understand
  • Do You Want to Make More Money?  Negotiating Your Compensation
  • From Daunting to Doable: How to Build Positive Client Relationships and Become a Rainmaker in the Process

The timeliness of the educational programs, the wisdom imparted by the speakers and the unparalleled networking opportunities will offer significant guidance and assistance to lawyers both in private practice and in-house, as they strive to achieve continued success for themselves, their law firms and their companies.   For more information on the Mid-Year Meeting, go to www.nawl.org.

Copyright ®, 2013 National Association of Women Lawyers

The IP Strategy Summit (TIPSS): Monetization – Harvesting Your IP

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming Monetization:  Harvesting Your IP conference:

Monetization IP - April 23-24 2013

April 23-24, 2013

New York

KEY TOPICS THAT WILL BE COVERED:

  • Evaluation of your IP
  • Monetization Models
  • Building a Monetization Strategy
  • Managing and communication across your organization
  • Selling your IP
  • Running a licensing program
  • Discover the Best Enforcement Strategies
  • Multi-National Litigation
  • Financial reporting of revenues

Building a Ready for Action Intellectual Property Portfolio Strategy for In-House Counsel

The National Law Review recently published an article by Marcus Evans Summits regarding Intellectual Property Portfolio Strategies:

Marcus Evans

 

In-house counsel and clients would have a better relationship if attorneys sent clients Intellectual Property (IP) reports on a more regular basis, according to Jeffrey Scott Leaning and Timothy B. Donaldson, Partners, at MH2 Technology Law Group. “This partnership makes for the ideal management of an IP portfolio,” they add.

Jeffrey Scott Leaning and Timothy B. Donaldson share their thoughts with  Maria Gregoriou on why the managed legal services approach is mutually beneficial for attorneys and clients.

How can legal department management increase operational efficiency?

Timothy B. Donaldson: Open communication between attorneys and clients is key to building a strong business partnership. One way to keep clients informed about ongoing IP prosecution is through the use of regular status reports. These reports can include budgetary information issues, upcoming due dates, a summary of actions performed, or a projection of future action items, and can be customized to a client’s specific needs. Fostering this business partnership through open communication and recognizing a client’s specific needs makes for the ideal management of an IP portfolio.

Under a flat or fixed-fee arrangement, a team of attorneys can be assembled to review and share expertise on individual cases. Each team member brings his or her own technical, legal, and professional experiences to the table, making IP analysis more efficient and productive. In addition, each team member becomes familiar with a client’s technology and can be ready to respond as needs arise.

In view of the American Invents Act, what patent filing strategies can you recommend?

Jeffrey Scott Leaning: Clients should approach patent filing as if the US was an absolute novel country in this area. The ideal situation is that people who receive a disclosure should be under a confidentiality agreement. If this is not possible, the client should know who is going to be in the audience during disclosure.

What should legal departments keep in mind when dealing with pharmaceutical patents?

Timothy B. Donaldson: Patent term adjustments (PTAs) must not be overlooked when it comes to the pharmaceutical field. Unlike other technologies, the term of a pharmaceutical patent, including any PTA accrued during prosecution, can be critical to the patent’s ultimate value. Thus, the practitioner must keep up with current case law, like the recent Exelixis cases, as well as changes in United States Patent and Trademark Office policy and rules, to maximize any potential PTA and avoid unnecessarily losing valuable patent term during the course of prosecution.

Do you have any final thoughts?

Jeffrey Scott Leaning: Managed legal services approaches are currently being preferred as the law firm is closer in style to an in-house attorney, where a partnership is formed between the client and the law firm. A certain number of hours that expert attorneys should be on call every month for a fixed fee, would be part of the agreement. A good relationship is vital here as more time may be put into legal matters than was originally thought. Having this partnership model in place would be mutually beneficial and ensure that the client’s expectations are met.

Copyright Marcus Evans Conferences

2013 National Law Review Law Student Writing Competition

The National Law Review is pleased to announce their 2013 Law Student Writing Competition

NLR-Writing-Competition-2013

The National Law Review (NLR) consolidates practice-oriented legal analysis from a variety of sources for easy access by lawyers, paralegals, law students, business executives, insurance professionals, accountants, compliance officers, human resource managers, and other professionals who wish to better understand specific legal issues relevant to their work.

The NLR Law Student Writing Competition offers law students the opportunity to submit articles for publication consideration on the NLR Web site.  No entry fee is required. Applicants can submit an unlimited number of entries each month.

  • Winning submissions will be published according to specified dates.
  • Entries will be judged and the top two to four articles chosen will be featured on the NLR homepage for a month.  Up to 5 runner-up entries will also be posted in the NLR searchable database each month.
  • Each winning article will be displayed accompanied by the student’s photo, biography, contact information, law school logo, and any copyright disclosure.
  • All winning articles will remain in the NLR database for two years (subject to earlier removal upon request of the law school).

In addition, the NLR sends links to targeted articles to specific professional groups via e-mail. The NLR also posts links to selected articles on the “Legal Issues” or “Research” sections of various professional organizations’ Web sites. (NLR, at its sole discretion, maydistribute any winning entry in such a manner, but does not make any such guarantees nor does NLR represent that this is part of the prize package.)

Congratulations to our 2012 and 2011 Law Student Writing Contest Winners

Fall 2012: October Contest

Spring 2012:

Winter 2012:

Fall 2011:

Why Students Should Submit Articles:

  • Students have the opportunity to publicly display their legal knowledge and skills.
  • The student’s photo, biography, and contact information will be posted with each article, allowing for professional recognition and exposure.
  • Winning articles are published alongside those written by respected attorneys from Am Law 200 and other prominent firms as well as from other respected professional associations.
  • Now more than ever, business development skills are expected from law firm associates earlier in their careers. NLR wants to give law students valuable experience generating consumer-friendly legal content of the sort which is included for publication in law firm client newsletters, law firm blogs, bar association journals and trade association publications.
  • Student postings will remain in the NLR online database for up to two years, easily accessed by potential employers.
  • For an example of  a contest winning student written article from Northwestern University, please click here or please review the winning submissions from Spring 2011.

Content Guidelines and Deadlines

Content Guidelines must be followed by all entrants to qualify. It is recommended that articles address the following monthly topic areas:

March 2013 Suggested Topic:

  1. Labor Law
  • Submission Deadline:  Monday, March 4, 2013

Articles covering current issues related to other areas of the law may also be submitted. Entries must be submitted via email to lawschools@natlawreview.com by 5:00 pm Central Standard Time on the dates indicated above.

Articles will be judged by NLR staff members on the basis of readability, clarity, organization, and timeliness. Tone should be authoritative, but not overly formal. Ideally, articles should be straightforward and practical, containing useful information of interest to legal and business professionals. Judges reserve the right not to award any prizes if it is determined that no entries merit selection for publication by NLR. All judges’ decisions are final. All submissions are subject to the NLR’s Terms of Use.

Students are not required to transfer copyright ownership of their winning articles to the NLR. However, all articles submitted must be clearly identified with any applicable copyright or other proprietary notices. The NLR will accept articles previously published by another publication, provided the author has the authority to grant the right to publish it on the NLR site. Do not submit any material that infringes upon the intellectual property or privacy rights of any third party, including a third party’s unlicensed copyrighted work.

Manuscript Requirements

  • Format – HTML (preferred) or Microsoft® Word
  • Length  Articles should be no more than 5,500 words, including endnotes.
  • Endnotes and citations – Any citations should be in endnote form and listed at the end of the article. Unreported cases should include docket number and court. Authors are responsible for the accuracy and proper format of related cites. In general, follow the Bluebook. Limit the number of endnotes to only those most essential. Authors are responsible for accuracy of all quoted material.
  • Author Biography/Law School Information – Please submit the following:
    1. Full name of author (First Middle Last)
    2. Contact information for author, including e-mail address and phone number
    3. Author photo (recommended but optional) in JPEG format with a maximum file size of 1 MB and in RGB color format. Image size must be at least 150 x 200 pixels.
    4. A brief professional biography of the author, running approximately 100 words or 1,200 characters including spaces.
    5. The law school’s logo in JPEG format with a maximum file size of 1 MB and in RGB color format. Image size must be at least 300 pixels high or 300 pixels wide.
    6. The law school mailing address, main phone number, contact e-mail address, school Web site address, and a brief description of the law school, running no more than 125 words or 2,100 characters including spaces.

To enter, an applicant and any co-authors must be enrolled in an accredited law school within the fifty United States. Employees of The National Law Review are not eligible. Entries must include ALL information listed above to be considered and must be submitted to the National Law Review at lawschools@natlawreview.com. 

Any entry which does not meet the requirements and deadlines outlined herein will be disqualified from the competition. Winners will be notified via e-mail and/or telephone call at least one day prior to publication. Winners will be publicly announced on the NLR home page and via other media.  All prizes are contingent on recipient signing an Affidavit of Eligibility, Publicity Release and Liability Waiver. The National Law Review 2011 Law Student Writing Competition is sponsored by The National Law Forum, LLC, d/b/a The National Law Review, 4700 Gilbert, Suite 47 (#230), Western Springs, IL 60558, 708-357-3317. This contest is void where prohibited by law. All entries must be submitted in accordance with The National Law Review Contributor Guidelines per the terms of the contest rules. A list of winners may be obtained by writing to the address listed above. There is no fee to enter this contest.

People Still Value Privacy. Get Over It. Online Privacy Alliance.

An article, People Still Value Privacy. Get Over It. Online Privacy Alliance., published in The National Law Review recently was written by Mark F. Foley with von Briesen & Roper, S.C.:

vonBriesen

 

Sun Microsystems’ CEO Scott McNealy famously quipped to reporters in 1999: “You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it.” Sun on Privacy: ‘Get Over It‘, WIRED, Jan. 26, 1999, http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/1999/01/17538.

 

At the time, Sun Microsystems was a member of the Online Privacy Alliance, an industry coalition seeking to head off government regulation of online consumer privacy in favor of industry self regulation. Although McNealy was widely criticized for his views at the time, it is fair to say that much of the technology world agreed then, or agrees now with his remark.

Have we gotten over it? Do we reside in a world in which individuals assign so little value to personal privacy that companies who collect, process, analyze, sell, and use personal data are free to do whatever they want?

There are indications that if it ever were true that consumers did not value privacy, their interest in privacy is making a comeback. Where commercial enterprises do not align their practices with consumer expectations and interests, a regulator will step in and propose something unnecessarily broad and commercially damaging, or outraged consumers will take matters into their own hands. Recent privacy tornadoes provide the proof.

For some time, employers have accessed public information from social media sites to monitor employee activities or to investigate the personal qualifications of prospective hires. But recently, companies have gone further, demanding that employees and prospects provide user names and passwords that would enable the company to access otherwise limited distribution material. Dave Johnson, a writer for CBS Money Watch, said employer demands for access to an employee’s or prospective hire’s Facebook username and password are “hard to see … as anything other than an absolutely unprecedented invasion of privacy.”  http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505143_162-57562365/states-protect-employees-social-media-privacy/

The reaction was predictable. In the past year, six states – California, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan and New Jersey – have reacted to public outcries by outlawing the practice of employers coercing employees into turning over social media account access information. At least eight more states have similar bills pending, including Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Washington. See National Conference of State Legislatures Legislation Summary as of Jan. 8, 2013 at http://www.ncsl.org/issues-research/telecom/employer-access-to-social-media-passwords.aspx.

Similarly, Congress enacted the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) in 1998 in response to the failure of self-regulation to limit the scope and nature of information collected from young children. COPPA and implementing regulations limited the collection of information from or about children less than 13 years old. In the past several years, it was widely conceded that this law was not effective in preventing the collection and use of personal information about our children, particularly where photographs and mobile phones were concerned. Companies collecting and using information about children took no action to satisfy parental concerns.

The reaction? In December 2012, the Federal Trade Commission issued amended regulations to make clear that COPPA rules apply to a child-oriented site or service that integrates outside services, such as plug-ins or advertising networks, to collect personal information from visitors. The definition of restricted personal information now includes geolocation as well as photos, videos, and audio files that contain a child’s image or voice, and “persistent identifiers” that recognize users over time and across different websites or services.

Parents and job counselors have been warning for years that teenagers and young adults must not post unflattering images to their Facebook pages because, even if deleted, they will persist somewhere on the internet and may be found by prospective colleges and employers. There were many anecdotes about teenagers committing suicide after nasty postings or the distribution of photos. There did not seem to be a practical solution to the problem.

Last year, the European Commission proposed a sweeping revision to its already difficult data privacy rules to include an explicit “right to be forgotten.” If the proposal is adopted, individuals can demand that websites remove personal photos or other data. Companies that fail or refuse to do so could be fined an amount based on their annual income. The rules, as proposed, would apply both to information the data subject posted about herself and embarrassing information others posted about her, unless the website can prove to a regulator that the information is part of a legitimate journalistic, literary, or artistic exercise. Such a new law would set up a dramatic clash between the European concept of privacy and the American concept of free speech.

For the past three years we’ve heard shocking stories about phone Apps that quietly collect information about our searches, interests, contacts, locations, and more without disclosure or a chance to opt out. The uproar led to only limited action that has not satisfied consumer concerns.

The reaction? U.S. Representative Hank Johnson has proposed The Application Privacy, Protection, and Security (APPS) Act of 2013, which would require App developers to disclose their information-gathering practices and allow users to require that their stored information be deleted.

Increasingly, consumers are not waiting for regulatory action, but are taking privacy protection into their own hands. For example, Instagram built a business on its photosharing App. Shortly after it became popular enough to be purchased by Facebook, Instagram issued new terms of service and privacy policies that appeared to give the company the right to use uploaded images without permission and without compensation. The Washington Post described consumer reaction as a “user revolt. . . on Twitter where shock and outrage mixed with fierce declarations swearing off the popular photo-sharing site for good.” http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2012-12-18/business/35908189_1_kevin-systrom-instagram-consumer-privacy. The Twitter response was so memorable that perhaps, in the future “insta-gram” will come to have a secondary meaning of “a massively parallel instantaneous complaint in cyberspace.”

The blogosphere and Twitterterra were filled with apologies and explanations by Instagram and others stating the company was not a bad actor and truly had no intention of using photos of your naked child to sell diapers without your permission. Even some of the harshest critics admitted, “it’s [not] quite as dramatic as everyone . . . made it seem like on Twitter.” See Theron Humphrey quoted in David Brancaccio’s Marketplace Tech Report for December 19, 2012, http://www.marketplace.org/topics/tech/instagrams-privacy-backlash-and-dirty-secret-data-caps. But the truth about the revised terms and conditions may not matter because consumer goodwill toward Instagram had been destroyed by the perception.

Instagram users are not alone in their disapproval of commercial uses of personal information. Consumer analytics company LoyaltyOne released a July 2012 survey that shows U.S. consumers are increasingly protective of personal information. Of the 1,000 consumers responding, only about 50% said they would be willing to give a trusted company their religious or political affiliation or sexual orientation, only 25% were willing to share commonly commercialized data such as their browsing history, and only 15% were willing to share their smart phone location. See summary of findings at http://www.retailcustomerexperience.com/article/200735/Consumers-still-value-privacy-survey-shows. USA Today reported that an ISACA survey of adults 18 years and older showed that 35% would not share any personal information if offered 50% off a $100 item, 52% would not share any personal information if offered 50% off a $500 item, and 55% would not share any personal information if offered 50% off a $1,000 item. USA TODAY, Bigger Discount, Less Sharing, January 21, 2013.

I’m confident everyone reading this Update has been sufficiently careful and prudent in their own personal and professional lives; but who among us has not had an, ahem, family member, who does not regret a photo posted to a social media site, an unappreciated email joke, or a comment in a tweet or blog that looks much less “awesomely insightful” after the passage of a few days. (Is there an emoticon meaning “I’m being really facetious”?) Such brief moments of indiscretion can lead to disproportionately bad results.

Have commercial collectors, users, and resellers of such information shown sufficient willingness to respond to consumer’s widespread discomfort with the permanent retention and uncontrolled access to their personal information, candid photos, and musings?

We no longer inhabit a Wild West without limit on the collection and use of personal information for commercial purposes. Be assured, that when something perceived to be bad happens, there will be a violent, goodwill damaging, market value destroying, throw-out-the-baby-with-the-bath-water Instagram-like response that will obliterate some current business models and corporate franchises. Notwithstanding terms and conditions of service that try contractually to deprive users of any right to complain about your use of their data, they will complain and they will vote, with both their Feet and their Tweets.

There are very good social, psychological, religious, and political reasons why privacy should be protected. See Wolfgang Sofsky, PRIVACY: A MANIFESTO (Princeton Univ. Press 2008). As consumers and parents we instinctively know that privacy is important, even if we can’t precisely define it and can’t say exactly why. Even though we’ve sometimes been too foolishly willing to let go of privacy protections in exchange for the convenience of a nifty new website or clever new App, we do, in the end, still care. We know there is something important at issue here. We should not forget this insight when we change hats and become business people deciding what data to collect and how to use it.

Companies that want to avoid receiving an “insta-gram,” that want to build long term relationships with consumers, need to accept that sentiment has changed when designing their programs, analytics, and business models. It’s time to throw out McNealy’s aphorism. Businesses need to recognize that today consumers increasingly do value their privacy, and get over it.

©2013 von Briesen & Roper, s.c

IP Law Summit – March 21-23, 2013

The National Law Review is pleased to bring you information about the upcoming IP Law Summit:

IP-LAW Sept 13-15 2012

The IP Law Summit is the premium forum for bringing senior IP Counsel and service providers together. As an invitation-only event taking place behind closed doors, the Summit offers an intimate environment for a focused discussion of cutting edge technology, strategy and products driving the IP market place.

The one-on-one business meetings provide access to Senior IP Counsel within the largest corporations across the United States. A thorough selection process ensures a qualified audience, which grants unparalleled business and networking opportunities in a luxurious and stimulating environment.

March 21-23, 2013

The Broadmoor, Colorado Springs, CO