Home > Initiatives > E-Commerce > Comments on the Federal Reserve Board's Interim Regulations Allowing Electronic disclosures under the Electronic Funds Transfer Act
NATIONAL CONSUMER LAW CENTER
CONSUMERS UNION
CONSUMER ACTION
CONSUMER FEDERATION OF AMERICA
CONSUMER LAW CENTER OF THE SOUTH
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF CONSUMER ADVOCATES
NATIONAL CONSUMERS LEAGUE
U.S. PUBLIC INTEREST RESEARCH GROUP
on
Electronic Fund Transfers, Regulation E; Docket No. R-1041
Introduction
On behalf of our low-income clients, the National Consumer Law Center1,
as well as Consumers Union2, Consumer
Action3, the Consumer Federation of
America4, the Consumer Law Center of the
South5, National Association of Consumer
Advocates6, the National Consumers League7,
and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group8
provide the following comments regarding the Federal Reserve Board's proposals
to allow disclosures required under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act to be made
electronically.
First, on behalf of our clients and constituents, we would like to express
our appreciation for these new Proposed Regulations on Electronic Disclosure.
While we believe there remain several areas of significant concern, we recognize
the length to which the Board has already gone to address concerns that we and
other representatives of consumers have raised. We hope that the issues raised
in these comments will inspire a similar responsive reaction.
First, we would like to emphasize that our comments regarding improvements to
the proposed regulations should not be construed to indicate that we are opposed
in any way to facilitating electronic commerce. We are not. Indeed, we believe
that once access to the Internet is more widely available to all Americans,
especially the nation's poor and elderly, there may be many new and beneficial
opportunities made available. However, for electronic commerce to benefit
consumers, the same basic assumptions that protect consumers in the physical
world must apply to electronic transactions. Although the Board has addressed
some of our significant concerns, still, as currently written, the Proposed
Regulations do not adequately protect consumers who are engaging in electronic
financial transactions.
Electronic disclosures must in no way undermine consumers’ ability to
receive or retain their Electronic Fund Transfer notices and disclosures. Some
financial institutions will undoubtedly take advantage of the loopholes created
by allowing electronic disclosures to effectively avoid providing consumers with
the required information under the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
Standards and Proposed Changes
1. Electronic disclosures should only be permitted when the transaction is
initiated and consummated electronically and not in person. The Board has
already recognized the necessity to permit electronic disclosures in only truly
electronic transactions. However, exceptions are still permitted. The gaps
should be closed to prevent abuses.
Electronic disclosures should only be permitted to replace paper writings in
those situations where the parties are truly communicating electronically. In
all transactions where the consumer and the financial institution are on the
same premises -- the disclosures should be provided the old fashioned way, on
paper. To allow otherwise is to extend a golden invitation to those elements of
the leasing industry whose business is to take advantage of unwitting consumers.
The bottom line is that electronic disclosures should only be allowed in
situations where the transaction is truly electronic.
2. The consumer should be given the specific and optional opportunity
to consent -- or to refuse -- to accept disclosures electronically. The
separate and optional consent form must be electronic, and must require the
consumer to do something more than simply click a few times. The disclosures in
the consent form should include, at a minimum, the following information to
ensure affirmative consent:
a. A description of each of the disclosures that will be provided
electronically.
b. A series of questions that require the consumer to check the hardware and
software capacity of the computer being used to access the electronic
disclosures, to ensure that it meets the requirements of Paragraph 3.
c. The cost (see Paragraph 4 below), if any, of providing paper copies of the
disclosures if the consumer is mistaken regarding the computer’s capacity to
access, retain, or print the disclosures provided electronically.
The list of required provisions should also include disclosures on the cost
if any of providing paper copies of the disclosures if the consumer is mistaken
regarding the computer's capacity to access, retain, or print the disclosures
provided electronically. (see #4 below)
Further, when a consumer agrees to have notices sent by e-mail, the financial
institution should send the following notice by regular mail:
a. This is to confirm that you have given us permission to send all future
notices by e-mail at the following e-mail address: _______.
b. We may be sending you very important messages by e-mail. Therefore, it is
important that you check your e-mail regularly.
c. It is important that you make sure your e-mail is operating properly and
you are able to received messages. If your e-mail is not working, then notify us
at 1-800-XXXX, so we can send you notices by regular mail until you notify us
that your e-mail is working properly again. There is no charge for your
temporarily changing to regular mail notice.
d. You must notify us immediately if you change your e-mail address. Notify
us at: XXXX There is no charge for changing your e-mail address.
e. You may change your mind at any time and notify us that you no longer want
to receive notices by e-mail. Call us at 1-800-XX or write to us at: XXX, or
e-mail us at XXX. There will be no charge for changing to regular mail or to
receiving future notices by regular mail.
3. The computer being used by the consumer must have the capacity to print
and/or retain in electronic form. The proposed rule requires only that the
disclosure notice include a description of the hardware and software necessary
to receive disclosure electronically. The issue must not be addressed simply by
including a description of the hardware and software necessary in the disclosure
provided to the consumer before the consumer consents to receive disclosures
electronically. Instead, the disclosure regarding the provision of information
electronically should lead the consumer through a series of questions which
enable the consumer to actually assess this capacity.
Specific questions must be asked of the consumer regarding:
Whether the consumer is accessing the data
electronically through a computer within his or her own control, and if
so, does it have the necessary hardware and software to allow the consumer to
access, retain and print the disclosures.
Or, if the access is from a public computer,
does this computer have the requisite hardware and
software to allow the consumer to access the disclosures; and
is there a working printer attached to the
computer; and
does the computer have a floppy drive which the
consumer can use to download the disclosures in electronic form, and does the
consumer have a disc on to which the consumer can download the disclosures.
4. If the consumer is wrong about the capacity of the computer to print
and/or retain the electronic record of the disclosures, the consumer must be
able to request paper copies to be provided at reasonable and bona fide cost,
and in a reasonable and timely manner. This is an extremely important point
for many consumers, and will ease the transition for many into electronic
commerce. Everyone who has ever used a computer has experienced the situation
where they were not able to open, download or print an electronic file sent to
them. Indeed, even consumers who are fairly knowledgeable about computer
software can find themselves stymied with some electronic transmissions.
The rule in its present form does not address this critical issue. It should
be amended to include a provision that if the consumer is unable to print or
retain the electronic disclosures and other information provided by the
financial institution, the consumer may request that the disclosures be provided
in paper form. The financial institution should be required to mail the paper
disclosures within three business days of the request. The EFTA disclosures
provided to consumers are important. If a consumer mistakenly consents to
receive disclosures electronically that the consumer cannot actually access, the
consumer should be provided the opportunity to request paper copies of these
disclosures.
The fee, if any, for these paper copies should be limited to a reasonable and
bonafide fee. The definition of reasonable and bonafide in this context should
be the lesser of i) the actual cost of printing out the paper disclosure
and mailing it to the consumer, and ii) the difference between the cost of the
electronic financial transaction and the same transaction with paper
disclosures.
Further, requiring the financial institution to provide paper copies is the
best deterrent to those financial institutions who might deliberately use the
electronic disclosure format to avoid providing accessible disclosures to
consumers. We know that some financial institutions (such as those engaged in
pay day lending) would use any possible opportunity to prevent consumers from
actually receiving their disclosures. One of the best ways of deterring this
behavior is require that the financial institution provide paper copies -- at
cost and no more -- to consumers who were unable to open, retain or print the
electronic disclosure.
5. The disclosures must actually be delivered to the consumer’s email
address with a manual reply return requested, or must be retained on the
financial institution’s website for 3 years. Delivering disclosures to a
consumer’s email address only works if the consumer has an email address. The
financial institution should not be permitted to establish an email address for
the consumer, because this would imply that the consumer may not really have
access to the information at a computer which has the capacity to retain and
print the disclosures. Different rules should be established for consumers who
have existing email addresses and those who intend to access the information at
the lessor’s website.
Delivery to an email address. In 1999, there is still a vast and
significant difference between the integrity of the email system and the U.S.
Postal Service. At least as an interim measure, until there have been formal
findings by reputable evaluators of the reliability of the email system, some
precautions are necessary to ensure that the consumer actually receives email
communications. The consumer must be required to manually email back to the
financial institution a reply that he has received and opened the disclosures.
Delivery through access at financial institution’s website. Presumably
this option will be the most effective for consumers who do not own personal
computers or have access to one through work. As of this time, over
two-thirds of U.S. households do not own computers.To allow these
consumers equal access to the available electronic transaction on the web,
providing the information through a financial institution's website may be
sufficient. The website information should be accessible only through a private
password.
The financial institution should not be permitted to satisfy the EFTA
requirement to provide disclosures to a consumer until the consumer has either
emailed a confirmation of receipt back to the financial institution or the
website information was accessed by consumer with the private password. If
neither occurs, the financial institution should have the option of proceeding
in one of the following three ways:
a. Revert to paper disclosures, and charge reasonable and bonafide fee for
sending the paper disclosures (as defined in Paragraph 4).
b. Contact the consumer, either electronically, via telephone or in writing,
to ask if the email address was correct and if the consumer still desires to
proceed electronically. Or
c. Cancel the transaction.
6. When disclosures are provided to consumers through a financial
institution’s website, they must be retained for the three years. This is
a particularly crucial issue to provide equal access to electronic disclosures
and the savings that they presumably represent for lower income people who do
not have their own computers on which to retain the disclosures electronically.
There is no reason for there to be any limit on the amount of time these
disclosures are retained on the financial institution’s website. We know that
the financial institution will be retaining an electronic record of the
disclosures for the duration of the transaction. The cost, if any, of retaining
the consumer’s ability to access the disclosures through the website, can only
be minuscule9.
7. The integrity of the electronic disclosures must be assured. Whether
the disclosures are given to the consumer through delivery at an email address,
or through the financial institution’s website, they must be provided in a
format which is reasonably assured to be tamper proof. If the disclosures are
not required to be provided in a locked format, they will be useless to the
consumer, should there be a dispute about the terms or format of the disclosure.
To translate the law’s requirement for a writing to the electronic arena,
several assumptions about paper writings must be made explicit for the
electronic medium. A paper writing is by its nature tangible, once handed to a
person it will not disappear unless the person makes it disappear. The printed
matter on the paper writing will not change every time someone looks at it, and
the writing can be used at a later to prove its contents.
None of those assumptions apply to an electronic record. An electronic record
could be provided in a format which is not retainable by the viewer. Even
consumer is able to download the electronic record, it may not be printable in
the same format in which it was viewed. electronic record is provided in a word
processing format, the electronic record may be inadvertently changed by the
consumer every time it is brought up on the screen. If this is possible the
electronic record thus becomes useless to prove its contents in a court of law.
Electronic disclosures must be provided in an electronic record which is
a. accessible to the consumer to download and print;
b. in a form which is designed to be unalterable, so that the consumer can
use the electronic record to prove the terms of the disclosures;
c. time and date stamped so that both the financial institution and the
consumer have access to proof of the time and date the disclosures were
electronically provided.
9. There must be an effective remedy for violating these rules. The
failure to follow the requirements for providing disclosures electronically has
the effect of preventing the consumer from actually receiving the disclosures in
the mandated form. The Board needs to explicitly state that a failure to follow
the electronic disclosure requirements carries the same remedy under the
Electronic Funds Transfer Act as the failure to provide the disclosures in
writing.
The proposed rule provides no specific remedy for the failure to comply with
its requirements. Failing to follow any final rule is tantamount to failing to
provide the disclosures at all. The rule should say so.
___________________
1 The National Consumer
Law Center, Inc. (NCLC) is a nonprofit Massachusetts Corporation, founded in
1969, specializing in consumer issues, with an emphasis on consumer credit. Its
primary focus and mission are the interests of low-income consumers. On a daily
basis, NCLC provides legal and technical consulting and assistance on consumer
law issues to legal services, government, and private attorneys representing
low-income consumers across the country. NCLC publishes a series of thirteen
practice treatises and annual supplements on consumer credit laws, including Truth
In Lending, 3rd ed. (NCLC 1995) and Cost of Credit (NCLC 1995), as
well as bimonthly newsletters on a range of topics related to consumer credit
issues and low-income consumers.
2 Consumers Union is the
publisher of Consumer Reports.
3 Consumer Action is a
California based information and advocacy organization.
4 The Consumer
Federation of America is a nonprofit association of some 250 pro-consumer
groups, with a combined membership of 50 million people. CFA was founded in 1968
to advance consumers' interests through advocacy and education.
5 The Consumer Law
Center of the South is a non-profit, public interest organization, incorporated
in Georgia in 1995. The Center's mission is to advocate for consumer protection
through consumer education, legislative reform, involvement in the regulatory
process and litigation and support. Professor Mark Budnitz of Georgia State
School of Law is the Chairman of the Board.
6 The National
Association of Consumer Advocates is a nationwide membership organization of
advocates dedicated to seeking economic justice for consumers.
7 The National Consumers
League, is America’s pioneer consumer organization. NCL is a private,
non-profit membership organization dedicated to representing consumers.
8The
U.S. Public Interest Research Group is the national lobbying office for state
PIRGs, which are non-profit, non-partisan consumer advocacy groups with half a
million citizen members around the country.
9 If the Board is not
convinced of the necessity of requiring that the disclosures be retained on the
financial institution's website for a term of three years, then at the least the
financial institution should be required to provide the electronic record to a
consumer upon request. The financial institution will have these records stored
electronically, and should be able to provide them to consumers at no cost at a
later time.