In April, FDCPA (+12.7%) and FCRA (+12.7%) suits were up over March, and TCPA (+26.2%), FDCPA (+15.2%) and FCRA (+27.4%) suits were all up YTD. CFPB complaints were also up for the month (+2%) and the year (77.9%!). The only holdup from a complete sweep was April TCPA suits, which ticked down -2.9% from March.
In a notable move to ease the pressures of medical debt and protect consumers’ financial well-being, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) has introduced a proposal. This proposal aims to update credit reporting practices by removing medical bills from most credit reports, enhancing privacy protections, improving credit scores and loan approvals, and curbing coercive debt collection tactics.
Apple today introduced a groundbreaking new service called Private Cloud Compute (PCC), designed specifically for secure and private AI processing in the cloud. PCC represents a generational leap in cloud security, extending the industry-leading privacy and security of Apple devices into the cloud. With custom Apple silicon, a hardened operating system, and unprecedented transparency measures, PCC sets a new standard for protecting user data in cloud AI services.
Minnesota’s governor has now signed into law that state’s comprehensive privacy law. For those keeping count – that is number 19 of state “comprehensive” privacy laws, with six in 2024 alone. The Minnesota law will go into effect on July 31, 2025, thirty days after Tennessee’s.
So Rocket Enterprises (not Rocket Mortgage, for once) was just sued in a TCPA class action down in Texas and this is the weirdest one I have seen in a while. In Grovano Inc. v. Rocket, a liquidation sales website company– yes a business–is suing Rocket for allegedly illegal text messages.