
TL;DR
This paper analyzes the legal patterns enabling digital deception, arguing that focusing on these patterns rather than the technologies themselves can improve regulation and combat online fraud more effectively.
Contribution
It identifies specific legal patterns of digital deception that current laws fail to address, proposing a shift in regulatory focus to improve consumer protection.
Findings
Current laws inadequately address patterns of deception.
Focusing on legal patterns can improve regulation.
Enhanced regulation can better combat online fraud.
Abstract
Current consumer-protection debates focus on the powerful new data-analysis techniques that have disrupted the balance of power between companies and their customers. Online tracking enables sellers to amass troves of historical data, apply machine-learning tools to construct detailed customer profiles, and target those customers with tailored offers that best suit their interests. It is often a win-win. Sellers avoid pumping dud products and consumers see ads for things they actually want to buy. But the same tools are also used for ill -- to target vulnerable members of the population with scams specially tailored to prey on their weaknesses. The result has been a dramatic rise in online fraud that disproportionately impacts those least able to bear the loss. The law's response has been technology centric. Lawmakers race to identify those technologies that drive consumer deception…
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