Adding Insult to Injury: How Article III Standing Minimizes Privacy Harms to Victims and Undermines Legislative Authority

Adding Insult to Injury: How Article III Standing Minimizes Privacy Harms to Victims and Undermines Legislative Authority

By Kristin Hebert, Nicole Onderdonk, Mark A. Sayre, and Deirdre Sullivan

ABSTRACT

            Victims of data breaches and other privacy harms have frequently encountered significant challenges when attempting to pursue relief in the federal courts. Under Article III standing doctrine, plaintiffs must be able to show a concrete and imminent risk of injury. This standard has proved especially challenging to victims of privacy harms, for whom the harm may be more difficult to define or may not yet have occurred (for example, in the case of a data breach where the stolen data has not yet been used). The Supreme Court’s recent decision in TransUnion appears on its fact to erect an even higher barrier for victims of privacy harms to seek relief. In this article, the authors provide a background on Article III standing doctrine and its applicability to cases involving privacy harms. Next, the recent TransUnion decision is discussed in detail, along with an overview of the evidence that TransUnion has failed to resolve the ongoing circuit splits in this area. Finally, the authors propose a test from the Second Circuit as a standard that may be able to resolve the ongoing split and support increased access to the courts for the victims of privacy harms.

 

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Balanced Scrutiny – The Necessity of Adopting a New Standard to Combat the Rising Harm of Invasive Technology

Balanced Scrutiny – The Necessity of Adopting a New Standard to Combat the Rising Harm of Invasive Technology

By Roosevelt S. Bishop, University of Maine School of Law, Class of 2023

ABSTRACT

The current First Amendment jurisprudence of strict scrutiny is wholly insufficient in fostering a healthy legal landscape regarding the freedom of speech in cyberspace. Technology is outpacing the legislative action to address these increasing harms that are prevalent in a society that practically lives online. Consequently, if we, as a society, are to effectively begin addressing the growing danger of the practically protected “expression” of Privacy Invaders, we need to first explore the possibility of a new tier of scrutiny; we need balance. This blueprint for balanced scrutiny will begin by highlighting the harms suffered unequally through the invasion of Intimate Privacy, a term originally coined by premiere privacy scholar Danielle Keats Citron. It will then touch on the historical standing and flexibility of the First Amendment. After edifying how cyber harassment and the First Amendment intersect, this study will conclude by proposing a new standard of judicial review to be utilized when addressing laws targeting cyber expression.  Continue reading