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Loyola University Chicago, School of Law

Loyola Consumer Law Review

2022

Articles 1 - 20 of 20

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Tiktok Union: Unionization In The Age Of New Media, Sara Shiffman Jan 2022

The Tiktok Union: Unionization In The Age Of New Media, Sara Shiffman

Loyola Consumer Law Review

The National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (NLRA) is the cornerstone of employee's right to organize, collectively bargain and take collective action. As the act has been reviewed by the Supreme Court as well as the National Labor Relations Board, it has been seen as somewhat flexible, particularly when it comes to technology and how it can be used to for employee organization and communication. But as the labor market has shifted to a more technology based work-for-hire model, are those who choose to take part in new media, specifically influencer marketing technically employees entitled to the same rights and …


Deficiencies In The Disclosures Of Privacy Policies And In User Choice, Scott Jordan, Siddharth Narasimhan, Jina Hong Jan 2022

Deficiencies In The Disclosures Of Privacy Policies And In User Choice, Scott Jordan, Siddharth Narasimhan, Jina Hong

Loyola Consumer Law Review

Development of a comprehensive legal privacy framework in the United States should be based on identification of the common deficiencies of privacy policies. We attempt to delineate deficiencies by critically analyzing the privacy policies of mobile apps, application suites, social networks, Internet Service Providers, and Internet-of- Things devices. Whereas many studies have examined readability of privacy policies, few have specifically identified the information that should be provided in privacy policies but is not.

Privacy legislation invariably starts a definition of personally identifiable information. We find that privacy policies' definitions of personally identifiable information are far too restrictive, excluding information that …


Misleading Ai: Regulatory Strategies For Algorithmic Transparency In Technologies Augmenting Consumer Decision-Making, Jeannie Marie Paterson Jan 2022

Misleading Ai: Regulatory Strategies For Algorithmic Transparency In Technologies Augmenting Consumer Decision-Making, Jeannie Marie Paterson

Loyola Consumer Law Review

Increasingly, consumers' decisions about what to buy are mediated through digital tools promoted as using "AI", "data" or "algorithms" to assist consumers in making decisions. These kinds of digital information intermediaries include such diverse technologies as recommender systems, comparison sites, virtual voice assistants, and chatbots. They are promoted as effective and efficient ways of assisting consumers making decisions in the face of otherwise insurmountable volumes of information. But such tools also hold the potential to mislead consumers, amongst other possible harms, including about their capacity, efficacy, and identity. Most consumer protection regimes contain broad and flexible prohibitions on misleading conduct …


Table Of Contents, Loyola Consumer Law Review Jan 2022

Table Of Contents, Loyola Consumer Law Review

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Consumer Protection In The Face Of Smart Contracts, Lucas Forbes Jan 2022

Consumer Protection In The Face Of Smart Contracts, Lucas Forbes

Loyola Consumer Law Review

As smart contracts increase in popularity and use, there is a greater importance for the European Union to ensure that consumers are adequately protected under their consumer protection regime. This Article evaluates the extent to which the principal European consumer protection directives can respond to the use of smart contracts. After providing background on what 'smart contracts' are and their potential benefits, this Article assesses the use of smart contracts under the Unfair Contract Terms Directive, the Consumer Rights Directive, the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, and the directives on defective and non-conforming goods. This Article finds that while there are …


Regulation "Best Interest's" Reduction Of Consumer Access To Investment Advice, Justin Deffenbacher Jan 2022

Regulation "Best Interest's" Reduction Of Consumer Access To Investment Advice, Justin Deffenbacher

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Failures Of Electric Utility Regulation In Illinois And The Case For Public Ownership, Jackson Paller Jan 2022

Failures Of Electric Utility Regulation In Illinois And The Case For Public Ownership, Jackson Paller

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Consumer News: Fertility Tracking Apps, Dna Testing, And... Vending Machines? Developments In Ftc And State Protections On Certain Health Information, Kiana Baharloo Jan 2022

Consumer News: Fertility Tracking Apps, Dna Testing, And... Vending Machines? Developments In Ftc And State Protections On Certain Health Information, Kiana Baharloo

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Reconceptualizing Behaviorally Informed Consumer Law And Policy, Martin Brenncke Jan 2022

Reconceptualizing Behaviorally Informed Consumer Law And Policy, Martin Brenncke

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


What Is Consumer Protection For?, Luke Herrine Jan 2022

What Is Consumer Protection For?, Luke Herrine

Loyola Consumer Law Review

When law and economics barreled its way into consumer protection scholarship two score years ago, it brought with it the consumer sovereignty framework: an approach to analysis in which actual markets are compared to an ideal market in which consumers optimize exogenous welfare functions by choosing between optimally competitive sellers. Even after two decades of behavioralist critique and even with increasingly critical perspectives taking root since the Global Financial Crisis, this consumer sovereignty ideal continues to serve as both a descriptive and normative baseline for consumer protection scholarship. This Article argues that it is time to reconsider the consumer sovereignty …


Privacy, Attention, And Competition. How To Apply Competition Law To Big Tech Companies? The European Perspective, Lukasz Grzejdziak Jan 2022

Privacy, Attention, And Competition. How To Apply Competition Law To Big Tech Companies? The European Perspective, Lukasz Grzejdziak

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Illuminating Manipulative Design: From "Dark Patterns" To Information Asymmetry And The Repression Of Free Choice Under The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Mark Leiser Jan 2022

Illuminating Manipulative Design: From "Dark Patterns" To Information Asymmetry And The Repression Of Free Choice Under The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, Mark Leiser

Loyola Consumer Law Review

Dark patterns' are defined as 'tricks used in websites and apps that make you do things that you didn't mean to, like buying or signing up for something.' The term describes 'deceptive' and 'manipulative' techniques implemented when designing an app, website, or platform to change a user's behaviour in a way that would not have happened without the dark pattern. Yet much of the academic scholarship on the regulation of manipulative design has focused on privacy and data protection legislation. This article identifies seventeen common types of 'dark patterns'. It facilitates critical, legal, and regulatory dialogue by proposing a new …


Misplaced Trust, Failure Of Contract, And The Need To Create Robust Options For Consumers, Anjanette H. Raymond, Inna Kouper Jan 2022

Misplaced Trust, Failure Of Contract, And The Need To Create Robust Options For Consumers, Anjanette H. Raymond, Inna Kouper

Loyola Consumer Law Review

Platform and application 'marketplaces' (app stores) serve an important function for the consumer. The 'marketplace' serves a single point of choice for applications that will be downloaded, and used, on either the apple or android cell phone. Over time, consumers have been reliant- almost dependent on these marketplaces. One can easily imagine, consumers trust the host, they trust the marketplace, they trust the ongoing updates and other technology 'fixes' when their applications begin to fail- one is undoubtedly aware of the loyalty that exists to these brands and marketplace hosts. Exercising full control, app stores engender extreme loyalty and high …


Ebay Frauds: Specific Illustrations And Analysis, Bret N. Bogenschneider, Arkadiusz Mironko Jan 2022

Ebay Frauds: Specific Illustrations And Analysis, Bret N. Bogenschneider, Arkadiusz Mironko

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Table Of Contents, Loyola Consumer Law Review Jan 2022

Table Of Contents, Loyola Consumer Law Review

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Exploring The Role Of Technology In Consumer Law Enforcement, Liz Coll, Christine Riefa Jan 2022

Exploring The Role Of Technology In Consumer Law Enforcement, Liz Coll, Christine Riefa

Loyola Consumer Law Review

No abstract provided.


Antitrust Privacy, Revisited, Gregory Day Jan 2022

Antitrust Privacy, Revisited, Gregory Day

Loyola Consumer Law Review

When large technology companies, known as "Big Tech," became prevalent, they engendered tremendous debate in antitrust circles. On one hand, many of the companies seemed to vanquish competition using methods that could hardly be described as fair or meritorious. But the problem with harnessing antitrust enforcement was that most tech markets appear to be innovative, high-quality, and cheaply priced (one could even say "free"). Since anticompetitive conduct must render high prices, diminished innovation, eroded quality, or otherwise harm "consumer welfare" to offend antitrust law, Big Tech was able to dodge antitrust scrutiny-for a while anyway.

Given the seemingly anticompetitive behaviors …


The Afterpay Hangover, Nathalie Martin, David Lynn Jan 2022

The Afterpay Hangover, Nathalie Martin, David Lynn

Loyola Consumer Law Review

Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) companies such as Afterpay, Klarna, Affirm, and Zilch, have grown faster than any other payment method during the pandemic and the BNPL payment method is expected to continue to grow exponentially well into the future. Under BNPL arrangements, consumers buy relatively moderately-priced items online and pay for them in installments, typically without interest. BNPL companies earn revenues from merchant fees. and late fees assessed to consumers, rather than traditional interest. Because consumers do not pay fees or interest if the scheduled installments are paid on time, these companies argue that they do not fall within …


Accreditation Information Produced By United States Law Schools To The American Bar Association Should Be Made Available To The Public From Both Law And Policy Perspectives, Henry Webb, Patrick R. Baker, Kaleb Byars Jan 2022

Accreditation Information Produced By United States Law Schools To The American Bar Association Should Be Made Available To The Public From Both Law And Policy Perspectives, Henry Webb, Patrick R. Baker, Kaleb Byars

Loyola Consumer Law Review

This article argues that, from a legal perspective, the American Bar Association ("ABA") is the functional equivalent of a government agency and so is subject to the United States Freedom of Information Act. Under Soucie v. David and related cases, the fact that the ABA has the final decision-making authority to decide whether a United States law school is or is not to be accredited renders it the functional equivalent of a government agency, and the ABA's refusal to make available to the public the voluminous amount of important information produced to the ABA by law schools going through the …


Declining Motor Fuel Tax Revenue Due To Electric Vehicles And Increased Fuel Efficiency, Madeline Melby Jan 2022

Declining Motor Fuel Tax Revenue Due To Electric Vehicles And Increased Fuel Efficiency, Madeline Melby

Loyola Consumer Law Review

The emergence of electric vehicles and increased fuel efficiency within traditional, internal combustion automobiles is an important step in combating climate change. Many state and federal officials have proposed different resolutions to encourage these types of cars and reduce carbon emissions. However, based on the growing number of electric vehicles, hybrids, and overall, more-fuel efficient vehicles, drivers are no longer purchasing fuel at historic levels, and this is effectively curbing the tax revenue once collected at the gas pump on both a state and federal level. Although these vehicles still contribute to the wear and tear associated with driving on …