Consumer Financial Protection Circular 2022-04

Insufficient data protection or security for sensitive consumer information

Question presented

Can entities violate the prohibition on unfair acts or practices in the Consumer Financial Protection Act (CFPA) when they have insufficient data protection or information security?

Summary answer

Yes. In addition to other federal laws governing data security for financial institutions, including the Safeguards Rules issued under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), “covered persons” and “service providers” must comply with the prohibition on unfair acts or practices in the CFPA. Inadequate security for the sensitive consumer information collected, processed, maintained, or stored by the company can constitute an unfair practice in violation of 12 U.S.C. 5536(a)(1)(B). While these requirements often overlap, they are not coextensive.

Acts or practices are unfair when they cause or are likely to cause substantial injury that is not reasonably avoidable or outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or competition. Inadequate authentication, password management, or software update policies or practices are likely to cause substantial injury to consumers that is not reasonably avoidable by consumers, and financial institutions are unlikely to successfully justify weak data security practices based on countervailing benefits to consumers or competition. Inadequate data security can be an unfair practice in the absence of a breach or intrusion.


More

Dark Reading: Is SMS 2FA Enough Login Protection?

Dark Reading reports on the Reddit breach, citing FIDO Security Keys as a more secure…

Read More →

Engadget: Microsoft Edge now supports passwordless sign-ins

Edge users will soon be able to securely sign into websites without having to remember…

Read More →

ZDNet: Windows 10 moves closer to killing off passwords with Edge WebAuthn logins

Through Microsoft Edge’s support of WebAuthn, users will be able to sign in using a…

Read More →