View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

l l★K

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

March 8, 2000

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 2000-15

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Proposed Regulation Implementing the
Privacy Provision of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision
(the agencies) have requested public comment on proposed privacy rules published in accordance with section 504 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (G-L-B Act).
Section 504 authorizes the agencies to issue regulations as may be necessary to
implement notice requirements and restrictions on a financial institution’s ability to disclose
nonpublic personal information about consumers to nonaffiliated third parties. Pursuant to
section 503 of the G-L-B Act, a financial institution must provide its customers with a notice of
its privacy policies and practices. Section 502 prohibits a financial institution from disclosing
nonpublic personal information about a consumer to nonaffiliated third parties unless the institution satisfies various disclosure and opt-out requirements and the consumer has not elected to opt
out of the disclosure.
The Board must receive comments by March 31, 2000. Please address comments to
Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street
and C Streets, N.W., Washington, DC 20551. Also, you may mail comments electronically to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. All comments should refer to Docket No. R-1058.
MORE INFORMATION
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 8770–8816, Vol. 65, No. 35 of the
Federal Register dated February 22, 2000, can be located at the following Internet address:

For additional copies, bankers and others are encouraged to use one of the following toll-free numbers in contacting the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas: Dallas Office (800) 333-4460; El Paso Branch Intrastate (800) 592-1631, Interstate (800) 351-1012;
Houston Branch Intrastate (800) 392-4162, Interstate (800) 221-0363; San Antonio Branch Intrastate (800) 292-5810.

-2-

www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/aces140.html
Please use the search phrase “12 CFR Part 216.” The quotation marks should be included.
Also, you may obtain a copy of the document by contacting the Public Affairs Department at (214) 922-5254.
For more information regarding the proposed regulation, contact Donna Parker in this
Bank’s Banking Supervision Department at (214) 922-6269.

Tuesday,
February 22, 2000

Part II

Department of the
Treasury
Officer of the Comptroller of the
Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Parts 40 and 573

Federal Reserve
System
12 CFR Part 216

Federal Deposit
Insurance
Corporation
12 CFR Part 332
Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information; Proposed Rule
VerDate 16<FEB>2000

19:23 Feb 18, 2000

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00001

Fmt 4717

Sfmt 4717

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

8770

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 40
[Docket No. 00–05 ]
RIN 1557–AB77

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 216
[Docket No. R–1058]

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 332
RIN 3064–AC32

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 573
[Docket No. 2000–13]
RIN 1550–AB36

Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, Treasury; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation; and Office of Thrift
Supervision, Treasury.
ACTION: Joint notice of proposed
rulemaking.
SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the
Office of Thrift Supervision,
(collectively, the Agencies) are
requesting comment on proposed
privacy rules published pursuant to
section 504 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act (the G-L-B Act or Act). Section 504
authorizes the Agencies to issue
regulations as may be necessary to
implement notice requirements and
restrictions on a financial institution’s
ability to disclose nonpublic personal
information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties. Pursuant to
section 503 of the G-L-B Act, a financial
institution must provide its customers
with a notice of its privacy policies and
practices. Section 502 prohibits a
financial institution from disclosing
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer to nonaffiliated third parties
unless the institution satisfies various
disclosure and opt-out requirements and
the consumer has not elected to opt out

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

of the disclosure. These proposed rules
implement the requirements outlined
above.
DATES: Comments must be received by
March 31, 2000.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
directed to: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC): Communications
Division, Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, 250 E Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20219, Attention:
Docket No. 00–05; FAX number (202)
874–5274 or Internet address:
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
Comments may be inspected and
photocopied at the same location.
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board): Comments,
which should refer to Docket No. R–
1058, may be mailed to Ms. Jennifer J.
Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and
C Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20551 or
mailed electronically to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Comments addressed to Ms. Johnson
also may be delivered to the Board’s
mail room between 8:45 a.m. and 5:15
p.m. and to the security control room
outside of those hours. Both the mail
room and the security control room are
accessible from the courtyard entrance
on 20th Street between Constitution
Avenue and C Street, NW. Comments
may be inspected in Room MP–500
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., pursuant to
§ 261.12, except as provided in § 261.14,
of the Board’s Rules Regarding the
Availability of Information, 12 CFR
261.12 and 261.14.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC): Send written
comments to Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments/OES, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20429. Comments
may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 17th Street
building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
(Fax number (202) 898–3838).
Comments may be inspected and
photocopied in the FDIC Public
Information Center, Room 100, 801 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429,
between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on
business days.
Comments may be submitted to the
FDIC electronically over the Internet at
www.fdic.gov. Further information
concerning this option may be found
below at ‘‘FDIC’s New Electronic Public
Comment Site.’’ Comments also may be
mailed electronically to
comments@fdic.gov.
Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS):
Send comments to Manager,

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00002

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

Dissemination Branch, Information
Management & Services Division, Office
of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20552, Attention
Docket No. 2000–13. Hand deliver
comments to Public Reference Room,
1700 G Street, NW., lower level, from
9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. on business days.
Send facsimile transmissions to FAX
Number (202) 906–7755 or (202) 906–
6956 (if the comment is over 25 pages).
Send e-mails to
public.info@ots.treas.gov and include
your name and telephone number.
Interested persons may inspect
comments at 1700 G Street, NW., from
9 a.m. until 4 p.m. on business days.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
0CC
Amy Friend, Assistant Chief Counsel
(202) 874–5200
Mark Tenhundfeld, Assistant Director,
Legislative and Regulatory Activities
Division (202) 874–5090
Michael Bylsma, Director, Community
and Consumer Law (202) 874–5750
Steve Van Meter, Senior Attorney,
Community and Consumer Law (202)
874–5750
Karen Furst, Policy Analyst, Economic
and Policy Analysis (202) 874–4509
Paul Utterback, National Bank
Examiner, Bank Supervision Policy
(202) 874–5461, or
Jeffery Abrahamson, Attorney,
Legislative and Regulatory Activities
Division (202) 874–5090
Board
Oliver I. Ireland, Associate General
Counsel (202) 452–3625
Stephanie Martin, Managing Senior
Counsel (202) 452–3198, or
Thomas Scanlon, Attorney (202) 452–
3594, Legal Division, or
Adrienne D. Hurt, Assistant Director
(202) 452–2412
Jane J. Gell, Managing Counsel (202)
452–3667, or
James H. Mann, Attorney (202) 452–
2412, Division of Consumer and
Community Affairs.
For the hearing impaired only, contact
Diane Jenkins, Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf (TDD) (202) 452–
3544, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC
Deanna Caldwell, Community Affairs
Officer, Division of Compliance and
Consumer Affairs, (202) 736–0141
James K. Baebel, Senior Review
Examiner, Division of Compliance
and Consumer Affairs, (202) 736–0229
Robert A. Patrick, Counsel, Regulations
and Legislation Section, (202) 898–
3757

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
Marc J. Goldstrom, Counsel, Regulations
and Legislation Section, (202) 898–
8807
Marilyn E. Anderson, Senior Counsel,
Regulations and Legislation Section,
(202) 898–3522
Nancy Schucker Recchia, Counsel,
Regulations and Legislation Section,
(202) 898–8885.
OTS
Christine Harrington, Counsel (Banking
and Finance), (202) 906–7957
Paul Robin, Assistant Chief Counsel,
(202) 906–6648, Regulations and
Legislation Division; or
Cindy Baltierra, Program Analyst,
Compliance Policy (202) 906–6540,
Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G
Street, NW., Washington DC 20552.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
contents of this preamble are listed in
the following outline:
I. Background
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
III. FDIC’s New Electronic Public Comment
Site
IV. Regulatory Analysis
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
C. Executive Order 12866
D. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
V. Solicitation of Comments on Use of ‘‘Plain
Language’’

I. Background
On November 12, 1999, President
Clinton signed the G–L–B Act (Pub. L.
106–102, codified at 15 U.S.C. 6801 et
seq.) into law. Subtitle A of Title V of
the Act, captioned Disclosure of
Nonpublic Personal Information, limits
the instances in which a financial
institution may disclose nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to nonaffiliated third parties, and
requires a financial institution to
disclose to all of its customers the
institution’s privacy policies and
practices with respect to information
sharing with both affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties. Title V also
requires the Agencies, the Secretary of
the Treasury, the National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA), the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), and the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), after consulting with
representatives of State insurance
authorities designated by the National
Association of Insurance
Commissioners, to prescribe such
regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes of the provisions in
Title V that govern disclosure of
nonpublic personal information.
The Agencies have prepared proposed
rules to implement Subtitle A that are
consistent and comparable to the extent

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

possible, as is required by the statute.1
Except where noted in the discussion of
the proposed definitions of ‘‘nonpublic
personal information,’’ ‘‘personally
identifiable financial information,’’ and
‘‘publicly available information,’’ the
texts of the Agencies’’ proposed
regulations are substantively identical.
The Agencies request comment on all
aspects of the proposed rules as well as
comment on the specific provisions and
issues highlighted in the section-bysection analysis below.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis
The discussion that follows applies to
each of the Agencies’ proposed rules.
Given that each agency will assign a
different part to its privacy rule, the
citations are to sections only, leaving
citations to part numbers blank.
§

l.1

Purpose and Scope
Proposed paragraph (a) of this section
identifies three purposes of the rules.
First, the rules require a financial
institution to provide notice to
consumers about the institution’s
privacy policies and practices. Second,
the rules describe the conditions under
which a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party. Third, the rules provide a
method for a consumer to ‘‘opt out’’ of
the disclosure of that information to
nonaffiliated third parties, subject to the
exceptions in proposed §§ .9, .10,
and .11, as discussed below.
Proposed paragraph (b) sets out the
scope of the banking agencies’ rules and
tracks the scope of enforcement set out
in section 505(a) of the G–L–B Act. This
paragraph notes that the rules apply
only to information about individuals
who obtain a financial product or
service from a financial institution to be
used for personal, family, or household
purposes.
The G–L–B Act and the proposed
rules apply to domestic offices of United
States banks and domestic branches and
agencies of foreign banks. The Agencies
request comment on whether the rules
should apply to foreign financial
institutions that solicit business in the
United States but that do not have an
office in the United States.

l l

l

§

l.2

Rule of Construction
Proposed § .2 of the rules sets out a
rule of construction intended to clarify
the effect of the examples used in the
rules. Given the wide variety of
transactions that Title V of the G–L–B

l

1 The NCUA, FTC, SEC, and the Treasury
Department also have participated in the
rulemaking process, and the NCUA, FTC, and SEC
will separately issue comparable proposed rules.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00003

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8771

Act covers, the Agencies propose to
adopt rules of general applicability and
provide examples of conduct that
would, and would not, comply with the
rule. While the general rules are
consistent among the Agencies’
proposals to the extent possible, the
examples used by the Federal banking
agencies differ on occasion from those
used by the other agencies in order to
provide guidance that may be most
meaningful to entities within a given
agency’s jurisdiction.
The examples are provided in
furtherance of the Federal banking
agencies’ obligation under section 722
of the G–L–B Act to use ‘‘plain
language’’ in all proposed and final
rules published after January 1, 2000.
These examples are not intended to be
exhaustive; rather, they are intended to
provide guidance about how the rules
would apply in specific situations. The
Agencies invite comment on whether
including examples in the rule is useful
and suggestions on additional or
different examples that may be helpful
in illustrating compliance with the rule.
§

l.3

Definitions
a. Affiliate. The proposed rules adopt
the definition of ‘‘affiliate’’ that is used
in section 509(6) of the G–L–B Act. An
affiliation will be found when one
company ‘‘controls’’ (which is defined
in § .3(g), below), is controlled by, or
is under common control with another
company. The definition includes both
financial institutions and entities that
are not financial institutions.
b. Clear and conspicuous. Title V of
the G–L–B Act and the proposed rules
require that various notices be ‘‘clear
and conspicuous.’’ The proposed rules
define this term to mean that the notice
is reasonably understandable and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
contained in the notice.
The proposed rules do not mandate
the use of any particular technique for
making the notices clear and
conspicuous, but instead allow each
financial institution the flexibility to
decide for itself how best to comply
with this requirement. Ways in which a
notice may satisfy the clear and
conspicuous standard would include,
for instance, using a plain-language
caption, in a type set easily seen, that is
designed to call attention to the
information contained in the notice.
Other plain language principles are
provided in the examples that follow
the general rule.
c. Collect. The proposed rules define
‘‘collect’’ to mean obtaining any
information that is organized or
retrievable on a personally identifiable

l

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8772

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

basis, irrespective of the source of the
underlying information. Several
sections of the proposed rule (see, e.g.,
§§ .6 and .7) impose obligations that
arise when a financial institution
collects information about a consumer.
This proposed definition clarifies that
these obligations arise when the
information enables the user to identify
a particular consumer. It also clarifies
that the obligations arise regardless of
whether the financial institution obtains
the information from a consumer or
from some other source.
d. Company. The proposed rules
define ‘‘company,’’ which is used in the
definition of ‘‘affiliate,’’ as any
corporation, limited liability company,
business trust, general or limited
partnership, association, or similar
organization.
e. Consumer. The proposed rules
define ‘‘consumer’’ to mean an
individual who obtains, from a financial
institution, financial products or
services that are to be used primarily for
personal, family, or household
purposes. An individual also will be
deemed to be a consumer for purposes
of a financial institution if that
institution purchases the individual’s
account from some other institution.
The definition also includes the legal
representative of an individual.
The G–L–B Act distinguishes
‘‘consumers’’ from ‘‘customers’’ for
purposes of the notice requirements
imposed by the Act. As explained more
fully in the discussion of proposed
§ .4, below, a financial institution is
required to give a ‘‘consumer’’ the
notices required under Title V only if
the institution intends to disclose
nonpublic personal information about
the consumer to a nonaffiliated third
party for a purpose that is not
authorized by one of several exceptions
set out in proposed §§ .10 and .11.
By contrast, a financial institution must
give all ‘‘customers,’’ at the time of
establishing a customer relationship and
annually thereafter during the
continuation of the customer
relationship, a notice of the institution’s
privacy policy.
A person is a ‘‘consumer’’ under the
proposed rules if he or she obtains a
financial product or service from a
financial institution. The definition of
‘‘financial product or service’’ in
proposed § .3(k), below, includes,
among other things, the evaluation by a
financial institution of an application
that a person submits to obtain a
financial product or service. Thus, a
financial institution that intends to
share nonpublic personal information
about a consumer with nonaffiliated
third parties outside of the exceptions

l

l

l

l

l

l

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

l

l

described in §§ .10 and .11 will have
to give the requisite notices, even if the
consumer does not enter into a customer
relationship with the institution.
The examples that follow the
definition of ‘‘consumer’’ clarify when
someone is a consumer. They include
situations where someone applies for a
loan or provides information for the
purpose of determining whether he or
she prequalifies for a loan, a person
providing information in connection
with seeking to obtain financial
advisory services, and a person who
negotiates a workout of a loan. The
examples also clarify the status of
someone whose loan has been sold.
f. Consumer reporting agency. The
proposed rules adopt the definition of
‘‘consumer reporting agency’’ that is
used in section 603(f) of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681a(f)). This
term is used in proposed §§ .11
and .13.
g. Control. The proposed rules define
‘‘control’’ using the tests applied in
section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act
(12 U.S.C. 371c). This definition is used
to determine when companies are
affiliated (see discussion of proposed
§ .3(a), above), and would result in
financial institutions being considered
as affiliates regardless of whether the
control is by a company or individual.
h. Customer. The proposed rules
define ‘‘customer’’ as any consumer
who has a ‘‘customer relationship’’ with
a particular financial institution. As is
explained more fully in the discussion
of proposed § .4, below, a consumer
becomes a customer of a financial
institution at the time of entering into a
continuing relationship with the
institution. Thus, for instance, a
consumer would become a customer at
the time the consumer executes the
documents needed to open a deposit
account or borrow money from a
financial institution.
The distinction between consumers
and customers determines what notices
a financial institution must provide. If a
consumer never becomes a customer,
the institution is not required to provide
any notices to the consumer unless the
institution intends to disclose
nonpublic personal information about
that consumer to nonaffiliated third
parties outside of the exceptions as set
out in §§ .10 and .11. By contrast, if
a consumer becomes a customer, the
institution must provide a copy of its
privacy policy prior to the time it
establishes the customer relationship
and at least annually thereafter during
the continuation of the customer
relationship.
i. Customer relationship. The
proposed rules define ‘‘customer

l

l

l

Jkt 190000

l

l

PO 00000

l

Frm 00004

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

relationship’’ as a continuing
relationship between a consumer and a
financial institution whereby the
institution provides a financial product
or service that is to be used by the
consumer primarily for personal, family,
or household purposes.2 Because the G–
L–B Act requires annual notices of the
financial institution’s privacy policies to
its customers, the Agencies have
interpreted the Act as requiring more
than isolated transactions between a
bank and a consumer to establish a
customer relationship, unless it is
reasonable to expect further contact
about that transaction between the bank
and consumer afterwards. Thus, the
proposed rules define ‘‘customer
relationship’’ as one that generally is of
a continuing nature. As noted in the
examples that follow the definition, this
would include, for instance,
maintaining a deposit, loan, trust, or
investment account.
A one-time transaction may be
sufficient to establish a customer
relationship, depending on the nature of
the transaction. The examples that
follow the definition of ‘‘customer
relationship’’ clarify, for instance, that a
purchase of an insurance policy would
be sufficient to establish a customer
relationship because of the continuing
nature of the product, whereas using an
automated teller machine (ATM) at a
bank at which a consumer transacts no
other business, purchasing traveler’s
checks or money orders, or cashing a
check would not. While a person
engaging in one of these latter types of
transactions would be a consumer under
the regulation (thereby requiring the
financial institution to provide notices if
the institution intends to disclose
nonpublic personal information about
the consumer to nonaffiliated third
parties outside of the exceptions), the
consumer would not be a customer. A
consumer would not necessarily become
a customer simply by repeatedly
engaging in isolated transactions, such
as withdrawing funds at regular
intervals from an ATM owned by an
institution with whom the consumer
has no account.
The examples also clarify that a
consumer will have a customer
relationship with a financial institution
that makes a loan to the consumer and
then sells the loan but retains the
servicing rights. In that case, the person
will be a customer of both the
institution that sold the loan and the
institution that bought it.
2 A ‘‘customer’’ may be defined differently for
purposes of other regulations. See, e.g., 12 CFR
7.4002.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
j. Financial institution. The proposed
rules define ‘‘financial institution’’ as
any institution the business of which is
engaging in activities that are financial
in nature, or incidental to such financial
activities, as described in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)). The proposed rules
also exempt from the definition of
‘‘financial institution’’ those entities
specifically excluded by the G–L–B Act.
k. Financial product or service. The
proposed rules define ‘‘financial
product or service’’ as a product or
service that a financial institution could
offer as an activity that is financial in
nature, or incidental to such a financial
activity, under section 4(k) of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended. An activity that is
complementary to a financial activity, as
described in section 4(k), is not
included in the definition of ‘‘financial
product or service’’ under this part. The
proposed rules’ definition includes the
financial institution’s evaluation of
information collected in connection
with an application by a consumer for
a financial product or service even if the
application ultimately is rejected or
withdrawn. It also includes the
distribution of information about a
consumer for the purpose of assisting
the consumer to obtain a financial
product or service.
l. Government regulator. The
proposed rules adopt the definition of
‘‘government regulator’’ that includes
each of the Agencies participating in
this rulemaking, the Secretary of the
Treasury, the NCUA, FTC, SEC, and
State insurance authorities under the
circumstances identified in the
definition. This term is used in the
exception set out in proposed
§ .11(a)(4) for disclosures to law
enforcement agencies, ‘‘including
government regulators.’’
m. Nonaffiliated third party.
Paragraph (1) of the proposed definition
of ‘‘nonaffiliated third party’’ provides
that the term means any person (which
includes natural persons as well as
corporate entities such as corporations,
partnerships, trusts, and so on) except:
(1) An affiliate of a financial institution,
and (2) a joint employee of a financial
institution and a third party. This
paragraph is intended to be
substantively the same as the definition
used in section 509(5) of the G–L–B Act.
Paragraph (2) of the proposed definition
provides that ‘‘nonaffiliated third party’’
includes any company that is an affiliate
by virtue of the direct or indirect
ownership or control of the company by
the financial institution or one of its
affiliates in conducting merchant
banking or investment banking activities

l

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

of the type described in section
4(k)(4)(H) or insurance company
activities of the type described in
section 4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding
Company Act, whether or not the
financial institution is affiliated with a
bank or is relying on the authority of
those sections.
n. Nonpublic personal information.
Section 509(4) of the G–L–B Act defines
‘‘nonpublic personal information’’ to
mean ‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ (which term is not defined
in the Act) that is provided by a
consumer to a financial institution,
results from any transaction with the
consumer or any service performed for
the consumer, or is otherwise obtained
by the financial institution. Any list,
description, or other grouping of
consumers—and ‘‘publicly available
information’’ (which also is undefined
in the G–L–B Act) pertaining to them—
that is derived using any nonpublic
personal information other than
publicly available information also is
included in the definition of ‘‘nonpublic
personal information.’’
The proposed rules implement this
provision of the G–L–B Act by restating,
in paragraph (1) of proposed § .3(n),
the categories of information described
above. However, the proposed rules
present two alternatives concerning the
treatment, for purposes of the definition
of ‘‘nonpublic personal information,’’ of
information that can be obtained from
sources available to the general public.
The alternatives are based on
differences in the definitions of
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ and ‘‘publicly available
information’’ which, when read
together, result in more information
being treated as ‘‘nonpublic personal
information’’ under Alternative A than
would be the case under Alternative B.
Alternative A excludes publicly
available information from the scope of
‘‘nonpublic personal information’’ only
in two circumstances. The first is when
the information is part of a list,
description, or other grouping of
consumers that is derived without using
personally identifiable financial
information. The second is when
information, not provided by a
consumer and not resulting from a
transaction with the consumer, is
otherwise obtained by a financial
institution in connection with providing
a financial product or service to the
consumer. However, in order for the
information to be considered ‘‘publicly
available’’ under Alternative A, the
information must be obtained from
government records, widely distributed
media, or government-mandated
disclosures. The fact that the

Jkt 190000

l

PO 00000

Frm 00005

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8773

information is available from those
sources is immaterial if the financial
institution does not actually obtain the
information from one of them.
Alternative B 3 similarly excludes
publicly available information from the
scope of ‘‘nonpublic personal
information’’ when the information is
part of a list, description, or other
grouping of consumers that is derived
without using personally identifiable
financial information. However,
Alternative B also excludes any other
publicly available information, unless
the information is part of a list,
description, or other grouping of
consumers that is derived using
personally identifiable financial
information. Under Alternative B,
information need only be available from
a public source for it to be considered
‘‘publicly available.’’ If the information
is lawfully available to the general
public, then it will be publicly available
and excluded from the scope of
‘‘nonpublic personal information’’
regardless of whether the institution
obtains it from a publicly available
source (unless, as previously noted, it is
part of a list of consumers that is
derived using personally identifiable
information). As a result of this
approach, the fact that information has
been given to a financial institution by
a consumer does not automatically
extend to that information the
protections afforded to nonpublic
personal information.
The two alternatives will produce the
same results in many instances. Under
Alternative A, a person’s name, address,
and other information that typically is
thought of as publicly available is
treated as nonpublic if that information
is provided by the person to a bank in
connection with obtaining a financial
product or service. Thus, a bank would
be unable to disclose such information
under Alternative A to a nonaffiliated
third party unless the bank complies
with the notice and opt out
requirements discussed below. Under
Alternative B, if the person’s name and
address were available from public
sources, they would be publicly
available information. However, even
under Alternative B, the bank would
have to comply with the notice and opt
out requirements before sharing that
information with nonaffiliated third
parties if the information was included
on a customer list.
The two alternatives will produce
different results, however, in the
situation where a bank wants to disclose
the name, address, or other information
3 The Board’s proposed rule sets out Alternative
B only.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8774

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

available to the general public about an
individual. In that situation, Alternative
A would require compliance with the
notice and opt out requirements.
Alternative B would not, because the
information would not be part of a list,
description, or other grouping of
consumers. The Agencies invite
comment on both alternatives.
The Agencies also specifically invite
comment on whether either definition
of ‘‘nonpublic personal information’’
would cover information about a
consumer that contains no indicators of
a consumer’s identity. For instance, if a
mortgage lender provided information
about its mortgage loans (such as loanto-value ratios, interest rates, census
tracts of mortgaged property, payment
history, credit scores, and income) to a
nonaffiliated third party for the purpose
of preparing market studies, would the
lender, without notice or opt out to the
consumer, be permitted to do so if the
information contains no personal
identifiers?
o. Personally identifiable financial
information. As discussed above, the
G–L–B Act defines ‘‘nonpublic personal
information’’ to include, among other
things, ‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ but does not define the
latter term.
As a general matter, the proposed
rules treat any personally identifiable
information as financial if it is obtained
by a financial institution in connection
with providing a financial product or
service to a consumer. The Agencies
believe that this approach reasonably
interprets the word ‘‘financial’’ and
creates a workable and clear standard
for distinguishing information that is
financial from other personal
information. The Agencies recognize
that this interpretation may result in
certain information being covered by the
rules that may not be considered
intrinsically financial, such as health
status, and specifically invite comment
on the proposed definition of
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information.’’
The proposed rules define
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ to include three categories
of information. While these three
categories are for the most part identical
in both alternatives (see discussion of
category 3, below, concerning a
difference between the categories), the
differences in how Alternatives A and B
treat publicly available information
result in different applications of what
personally identifiable financial
information is included within the
definition of ‘‘nonpublic personal
information.’’

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

18:02 Feb 18, 2000

The first category of information
considered to be ‘‘personally
identifiable financial information’’ is
any information that a consumer
provides a financial institution in order
to obtain a financial product or service.
As noted in the examples that follow the
definition, this would include
information provided on an application
to obtain a loan, credit card, or other
financial product or service. If, for
instance, medical information is
provided on an application to obtain a
financial product or service (such as
would be the case if a consumer applies
for a life insurance policy), that
information would be considered
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ for purposes of the
proposed rules.
The second category of information
covered by the proposed definition of
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ includes any information
resulting from any transaction between
the consumer and the financial
institution involving a financial product
or service. This would include, as noted
in the examples following the
definition, account balance information,
payment or overdraft history, and credit
or debit card purchase information.
The third category includes any
financial information about a consumer
otherwise obtained by the financial
institution in connection with providing
a financial product or service to the
consumer. This would include, for
example, information obtained from a
consumer report or from an outside
source to verify information a consumer
provides on an application to obtain a
financial product or service. There is a
difference in the statement of the third
category between Alternatives A and B.
Alternative A expressly excludes from
this category publicly available
information, while Alternative B does
not. However, given the definitions of
‘‘nonpublic personal information’’ and
‘‘publicly available information’’ in
Alternative B, the result is that any of
the three categories of personally
identifiable information in Alternative B
will exclude publicly available
information from the personally
identifiable financial information that is
considered ‘‘nonpublic personal
information.’’
The examples clarify that the
definition of ‘‘personally identifiable
financial information’’ does not include
a list of names and addresses of people
who are customers of an entity that is
not a financial institution. Thus, the
names and addresses of people who
subscribe, for instance, to a particular
magazine fall outside the definition. If,
however, a financial institution includes

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00006

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

those names and addresses as part of a
list of the institution’s customers, then
the names and addresses become
nonpublic personal information.
The Agencies note that there are other
laws that may impose limitations on
disclosures of nonpublic personal
information in addition to those
imposed by the G-L-B Act and these
proposed rules. For instance, the Fair
Credit Reporting Act imposes
conditions on the sharing of application
information between affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties. The recently
proposed Department of Health and
Human Services regulations 4 that
implement the Health Insurance
Portability and Accountability Act of
1996 would, if adopted in final form,
limit the circumstances under which
medical information may be disclosed.
There may be State laws that affect a
financial institution’s ability to disclose
information. Thus, financial institutions
will need to monitor and comply with
applicable legislative and regulatory
developments that affect the disclosure
of consumer information.
The Agencies seek comment on
whether further definition of
‘‘personally identifiable financial
information’’ would be helpful.
p. Publicly available information. The
proposed rules contain two versions of
the definition of ‘‘publicly available
information.’’ For the most part, the
definitions are identical, and differ only
in that Alternative A does not treat
information as publicly available unless
it is obtained from one of the public
sources listed in the proposed rules.
Alternative B, by contrast, treats
information as publicly available if it
could be obtained from one of the public
sources listed in the rules, even if it was
obtained from a source not listed in the
definition. The Agencies invite
comments on which alternative is more
appropriate.
The remaining parts of the two
alternative versions are identical. Thus,
under either alternative, the definition
of ‘‘publicly available information’’
includes information from official
public records, such as real estate
recordations or security interest filings.
It also includes information from widely
distributed media (such as a telephone
book, television or radio program, or
newspaper) and information that is
required to be disclosed to the general
public by Federal, State, or local law
(such as securities disclosure
documents). The proposed rules state
that information obtained over the
Internet will be considered publicly
available information if the information
4 64

FR 59918 (Nov. 3, 1999).

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
is obtainable from a site available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction. The
Agencies invite comment on what
information is appropriately considered
publicly available, particularly in the
context of information available over the
Internet.
q. You. For those Agencies that use
the pronoun ‘‘you’’ to refer to entities
within their primary jurisdiction,5 the
definition of this term will vary with
each of the Agencies’ regulations based
upon the financial institutions under
their jurisdictions.

l

§ .4 Initial Notice to Consumers of
Privacy Policies and Practices Required
Initial notice required. The G–L–B Act
requires a financial institution to
provide an initial notice of its privacy
policies and practices in two
circumstances. For customers, the
notice must be provided at the time of
establishing a customer relationship.
For consumers who do not become
customers, the notice must be provided
prior to disclosing nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party.
Paragraph (a) of proposed § .4 states
the general rule regarding these notices.
Pursuant to that paragraph, a financial
institution must provide a clear and
conspicuous notice (i.e., a notice that is
reasonably understandable and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information it
provides) that accurately reflects the
institution’s privacy policies and
practices. Thus, a financial institution
may not fail to maintain the protections
that it represents in the notice that it
will provide. The Agencies expect that
financial institutions will take
appropriate measures to adhere to their
stated privacy policies and practices.
The proposed rules do not prohibit
affiliated institutions from using a
common initial, annual, or opt out
notice, so long as the notice is delivered
in accordance with the rule and is
accurate for all recipients. Similarly, the
rules do not prohibit an institution from
establishing different privacy policies
and practices for different categories of
consumers, customers, or products, so
long as each particular consumer or
customer receives a notice that is
accurate with respect to him or her.
Notice to customers. The proposed
rules require that a financial institution
provide an individual a privacy notice
prior to the time that it establishes a
customer relationship. Thus, the notices
may be provided at the same time a

l

5 The OCC has used the term ‘‘bank’’ instead of
‘‘you’’ in its regulation.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

financial institution is required to give
other notices, such as those required by
the Board’s regulations implementing
the Truth in Lending Act (12 CFR
226.6). This approach is intended to
strike a balance between: (1) Ensuring
that consumers will receive privacy
notices at a meaningful point along the
continuum of ‘‘establishing a customer
relationship’’; and (2) minimizing
unnecessary burdens on financial
institutions that may result if a financial
institution is required to provide a
consumer with a series of notices at
different times in a transaction. Nothing
in the proposed rules is intended to
discourage a financial institution from
providing an individual with a privacy
notice at an earlier point in the
relationship if the institution wishes to
do so in order to make it easier for the
individual to compare its privacy
policies and practices with those of
other institutions in advance of
conducting transactions.
Paragraph (c) of proposed § .4
identifies the time a customer
relationship is established as the point
at which a financial institution and a
consumer enter into a continuing
relationship. The examples that are
provided after the statement of the
general rule inform the reader that, for
customer relationships that are
contractual in nature (including, for
instance, deposit accounts, loans, or
purchases of a nondeposit product), a
customer relationship is established
upon the execution by the consumer of
the contract that is necessary to conduct
the transaction in question. In the case
of a credit card account, the customer
relationship is established when the
consumer opens the account. A
consumer opens a credit card account
when he or she becomes obligated on
the account, such as when he or she
makes the first purchase, receives the
first advance, or becomes obligated for
any fee or charges under the account
other than an application fee or
refundable membership fee. For
transactions that may not involve a
contract (including, for instance,
providing investment advisory services),
a customer relationship will be
established if the consumer pays or
agrees to pay a fee or commission for the
service.
Notice to consumers. For consumers
who do not establish a customer
relationship, the initial notice may be
provided at any point before the
financial institution discloses nonpublic
personal information to nonaffiliated
third parties. As provided in paragraph
(b) of the proposed rule, if the
institution does not intend to disclose
the information in question or intends

Jkt 190000

l

PO 00000

Frm 00007

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8775

to make only those disclosures that are
authorized by one of the exceptions set
out in §§ .10 and .11 of the
proposed rule, it is not required to
provide the initial notice.
How to provide notice. Paragraph (d)
of proposed § .4 sets out the rules
governing how financial institutions
must provide the initial notices. The
general rule requires that the initial
notice be provided so that each
recipient can reasonably be expected to
receive actual notice. The Agencies
invite comment on who should receive
a notice in situations where there is
more than one party to an account.
The notice may be delivered in
writing or, if the consumer agrees,
electronically. Oral notices alone are
insufficient. In the case of customers,
the notice must be given in a way so
that the customer may either retain it or
access it at a later time. This
requirement that the notice be given in
a manner permitting access at a later
time does not preclude a financial
institution from changing its privacy
policy. See proposed § .8(c), below.
Rather, the rules are intended only to
require that a customer be able to access
the most recently adopted privacy
policy.
Examples of acceptable ways the
notice may be delivered include handdelivering a copy of the notice, mailing
a copy to the consumer’s last known
address, or sending it via electronic mail
to a consumer who obtains a financial
product or service from the institution
electronically. It would not be sufficient
to provide only a posted copy of the
notice in a lobby. Similarly, it would
not be sufficient to provide the initial
notice only on a Web page, unless the
consumer is required to access that page
to obtain the product or service in
question. Electronic delivery generally
should be in the form of electronic mail
so as to ensure that a consumer actually
receives the notice. In those
circumstances where a consumer is in
the process of conducting a transaction
over the Internet, electronic delivery
also may include posting the notice on
a Web page as described above. If a
financial institution and consumer
orally agree to enter into a contract for
a financial product or service over the
telephone, the institution may provide
the consumer with the option of
receiving the initial notice after
providing the product or service so as
not to delay the transaction. The
Agencies invite comment on the
regulatory burden of providing the
initial notices and on the methods
financial institutions anticipate using to
provide the notices.

l

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

l

l

l

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8776

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

The Agencies recognize that in some
circumstances a customer does not have
a choice as to the institution with which
he or she has a customer relationship,
such as when an institution purchases
the customer’s loan in the secondary
market. In these situations, it may not be
practicable for the institution to provide
a notice prior to establishing the
customer relationship. The proposed
rules provide that if a financial
institution purchases a loan or assumes
a deposit liability from another financial
institution or in the secondary market
and the customer does not have a choice
about the purchase or assumption, the
acquiring financial institution may
provide the initial notice within a
reasonable time thereafter. The Agencies
invite comment on whether there are
other similar situations for which an
exception is necessary.
The Agencies also recognize that
certain consumers may have requested
that a financial institution not send
statements, notices, or other
communications to them, such as in
certain private banking relationships.
The Agencies request comment on
whether and how the rules should
address these situations with respect to
the notices required by these rules. The
Agencies also request comment on
whether there are other situations where
providing notice by mail is
impracticable.

assets sold without retaining servicing
rights.
There will be certain customer
relationships (such as obtaining
investment advice from a stock broker)
that do not present a clear event after
which there is no longer a customer
relationship. The proposed rules
contain an example intended to cover
these situations, stating that a
relationship will no longer be deemed
continuing for purposes of the proposed
rules if the financial institution has not
communicated with a customer, other
than providing an annual privacy policy
notice, for a period of 12 consecutive
months.
The Agencies invite comment
generally on whether the examples
provided in proposed § .5 are
adequate and on whether the proposed
standard deeming an account
relationship to have terminated after 12
months of no communication is
appropriate. The Agencies specifically
request comment on whether, in the
example of dormant accounts, the
applicable standard should be the
institution’s policies or applicable State
law. The Agencies also invite comment
on the regulatory burden of providing
the annual notices and on the methods
financial institutions anticipate using to
provide the notices.

§ .5 Annual Notice to Customers
Required

§ .6 Information To Be Included in
Initial and Annual Notices of Privacy
Policies and Practices

l

Section 503 of the G–L–B Act requires
a financial institution to provide notices
of its privacy policies and practices at
least annually to its customers. The
proposed rules implement this
requirement by requiring a clear and
conspicuous notice that accurately
reflects the privacy policies and
practices then in effect to be provided
at least once during any period of
twelve consecutive months. The rules
governing how to provide an initial
notice also apply to annual notices.
Section 503(a) of the G–L–B Act
requires that the annual notices be
provided ‘‘during the continuation’’ of a
customer relationship. To implement
this requirement, the proposed rules
state that a financial institution is not
required to provide annual notices to a
customer with whom it no longer has a
continuing relationship. The examples
that follow this general rule provide
guidance on when there no longer is a
continuing relationship for purposes of
the rules. These include, for instance,
deposit accounts that are treated as
dormant by a financial institution, loans
that are paid in full or charged off, or

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

l

l

Section 503 of the G–L–B Act
identifies the items of information that
must be included in a financial
institution’s initial and annual notices.
Section 503(a) of the G–L–B Act sets out
the general requirement that a financial
institution must provide customers with
a notice describing the institution’s
policies and practices with respect to,
among other things, disclosing
nonpublic personal information to
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties.
Section 503(b) of the Act identifies
certain elements that must be addressed
in that notice.
The required content is the same for
both the initial and annual notices of
privacy policies and practices. While
the information contained in the notices
must be accurate as of the time the
notices are provided, a financial
institution may prepare its notices based
on current and anticipated policies and
practices.
The information to be included is as
follows:

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00008

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

1. Categories of Nonpublic Personal
Information That a Financial Institution
May Collect
Section 503(b)(2) requires a financial
institution to inform its customers about
the categories of nonpublic personal
information that the institution collects.
The proposed rules implement this
requirement in § .6(a)(1) and provide
an example of how to comply with this
requirement that focuses the notice on
the source of the information collected.
As noted in the example, a financial
institution will satisfy this requirement
if it categorizes the information
according to the sources, such as
application information, transaction
information, and consumer report
information. Financial institutions may
provide more detail about the categories
of information collected but are not
required to do so by the proposed rules.

l

2. Categories of Nonpublic Personal
Information That a Financial Institution
May Disclose
Section 503(a)(1) of the G–L–B Act
requires the financial institution’s initial
and annual notice to provide
information about the categories of
nonpublic personal information that
may be disclosed either to affiliates or
nonaffiliated third parties.
The proposed rules implement this
requirement in proposed § .6(a)(2).
The examples of how to comply with
this rule focus on the content of
information to be disclosed. As stated in
the relevant examples, a financial
institution may satisfy this requirement
by categorizing information according to
source and providing illustrative
examples of the content of the
information. These categories might
include application information (such
as assets and income), identifying
information (such as name, address, and
social security number), transaction
information (such as information about
account activity, account balances, and
purchases), and information from
consumer reports (such as credit
history).
Financial institutions are free to
provide more detailed information in
the initial and annual notices if they
choose to do so. Conversely, if a
financial institution does not disclose,
and does not intend to disclose,
nonpublic personal information to
affiliates or nonaffiliated third parties,
its initial and annual notices may
simply state this fact without further
elaboration about categories of
information disclosed.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

l

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8777

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
3. Categories of Affiliates and
Nonaffiliated Third Parties to Whom a
Financial Institution Discloses
Nonpublic Personal Information
As previously noted, section 503(a)
includes a general requirement that a
financial institution provide a notice to
its customers of the institution’s policies
and practices with respect to disclosing
nonpublic personal information to
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties.
Section 503(b) states that the notice
required by section 503(a) shall include
certain specified items. Among those is
the requirement, set out in section
503(b)(1), that a financial institution
inform its customers about its policies
and practices with respect to disclosing
nonpublic personal information to
nonaffiliated third parties. The Agencies
believe that, when read together,
sections 503(a) and 503(b) of the G–L–
B Act require a financial institution’s
notice to address disclosures of
nonpublic personal information to both
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties.
The proposed rules implement this
requirement in § .6(a)(3). The example
illustrating how a financial institution
may comply with the rules states that a
financial institution will adequately
categorize the affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom it
discloses nonpublic personal
information about consumers if it
identifies the types of businesses in
which they engage. Types of businesses
may be described by general terms, such
as financial products or services, if the
financial institution provides
illustrative examples of the significant
lines of businesses of the recipient, such
as retail banking, mortgage lending, life
insurance, or securities brokerage.
The G–L–B Act does not require a
financial institution to list the categories
of persons to whom information may be
disclosed pursuant to one of the
exceptions set out in proposed §§ .10
and .11. The proposed rules state that
a financial institution is required only to
inform consumers that it makes
disclosures as permitted by law to
nonaffiliated third parties in addition to
those described in the notice. The
Agencies invite comment on whether
such a notice would be adequate.
If a financial institution does not
disclose, and does not intend to
disclose, nonpublic personal
information to affiliates or nonaffiliated
third parties, its initial and annual
notices may simply state this fact
without further elaboration about
categories of third parties.

l

l

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

l

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

4. Information About Former Customers

6. Right to Opt Out

Section 503(a)(2) of the Act requires
the financial institution’s initial and
annual privacy notices to include the
institution’s policies and practices with
respect to disclosing nonpublic personal
information of persons who have ceased
to be customers of the institution.
Section 503(b)(1)(B) requires that this
information be provided with respect to
information disclosed to nonaffiliated
third parties.
The Agencies have concluded that,
when read together, sections 503(a)(2)
and 503(b)(1)(B) require a financial
institution to include in the initial and
annual notices the institution’s policies
and practices with respect to sharing
information about former customers
with all affiliates and nonaffiliated third
parties. This requirement is set out in
the proposed rules at § .6(a)(4). This
requirement does not require a financial
institution to provide a notice and
opportunity to opt out to a former
customer before sharing nonpublic
personal information about that former
customer with an affiliate.

As previously noted, sections
503(a)(1) and 503(b)(1) of the G–L–B Act
require a financial institution to provide
customers with a notice of its privacy
policies and practices concerning,
among other things, disclosing
nonpublic personal information
consistent with section 502 of the Act.
The proposed rules implement this
requirement, in proposed § .6(a)(6), by
requiring the initial and annual notices
to explain the right to opt out of
disclosures of nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties, including the methods available
to exercise that right.

l

5. Information Disclosed to Service
Providers
Section 502(b)(2) of the G–L–B Act
permits a financial institution to
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party for the purpose of the third
party performing services for the
institution, including marketing
financial products or services under a
joint agreement between the financial
institution and at least one other
financial institution. In this case, a
consumer has no right to opt out, but
the financial institution must inform the
consumer that it will be disclosing the
information in question unless the
service falls within one of the
exceptions listed in section 502(e) of the
Act.
The proposed rules implement these
provisions, in § .6(a)(5), by requiring
that, if a financial institution discloses
nonpublic personal information to a
nonaffiliated third party pursuant to the
exception for service providers and joint
marketing, the institution is to include
in the initial and annual notices a
separate description of the categories of
information that are disclosed and the
categories of third parties providing the
services. A financial institution may
comply with these requirements by
providing the same level of detail in the
notice as is required to satisfy the
requirements in proposed §§ .6(a)(2)
and (3).

Jkt 190000

l

l

PO 00000

Frm 00009

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

l

7. Disclosures Made Under the Fair
Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)
Section 503(b)(4) of the G–L–B Act
requires a financial institution’s initial
and annual notice to include the
disclosures required, if any, under
section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of the FCRA.
Section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) excludes from
the definition of ‘‘consumer report’’ the
communication of certain consumer
information among affiliated entities if
the consumer is notified about the
disclosure of such information and
given an opportunity to opt out of that
information sharing. The information
that can be shared among affiliates
under this provision includes, for
instance, information from consumer
reports and applications for financial
products or services. In general, this
information represents personal
information provided directly by the
consumer to the institution, such as
income and social security number, in
addition to information contained
within credit bureau reports.
The proposed rules implement
section 503(b)(4) of the G–L–B Act by
including the requirement that a
financial institution’s initial and annual
notice include any disclosures a
financial institution makes under
section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of the FCRA.
8. Confidentiality, Security, and
Integrity
Section 503(a)(3) of the G–L–B Act
requires the initial and annual notices to
provide information about a financial
institution’s policies and practices with
respect to protecting the nonpublic
personal information of consumers.
Section 503(b)(3) of the Act requires the
notices to include the policies that the
institution maintains to protect the
confidentiality and security of
nonpublic personal information, in
accordance with section 501 (which
requires the Agencies to establish
standards governing the administrative,

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8778

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

technical, and physical safeguards of
customer information).
The proposed rules implement these
provisions by requiring a financial
institution to include in the initial and
annual notices the institution’s policies
and practices with respect to protecting
the confidentiality, security, and
integrity of nonpublic personal
information. The relevant example in
the proposed rules states that a financial
institution may comply with the
requirement as it concerns
confidentiality and security if the
institution explains matters such as who
has access to the information and the
circumstances under which the
information may be accessed. The
information about integrity should focus
on the measures the institution takes to
protect against reasonably anticipated
threats or hazards. The proposed rules
do not require a financial institution to
provide technical or proprietary
information about how it safeguards
consumer information.
The Agencies are in the process of
preparing the section 501 standards
relating to administrative, technical, and
physical safeguards, and anticipate
having those standards in place at the
time of the issuance of the final privacy
rules. This will enable financial
institutions to develop the initial and
annual notices in light of those
standards.

l

§ .7 Limitation on disclosure of
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.
Section 502(a) of the G–L–B Act
generally prohibits a financial
institution from sharing nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
with a nonaffiliated third party unless
the institution provides the consumer
with a notice of the institution’s privacy
policies and practices. Section 502(b)
further requires that the financial
institution provide the consumer with a
clear and conspicuous notice that the
consumer’s nonpublic personal
information may be disclosed to
nonaffiliated third parties, that the
consumer be given an opportunity to
opt out of that disclosure, and that the
consumer be informed of how to opt
out.
Section .7 of the proposed rules
implements these provisions. Paragraph
(a)(1) of § .7 sets out the criteria that
a financial institution must satisfy
before disclosing nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties. As stated in the text of the
proposed rules, these criteria apply to
direct and indirect disclosures through
an affiliate. The Agencies invite
comment on how the right to opt out

l
l

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

should apply in the case of joint
accounts. Should, for instance, a
financial institution require all parties
to an account to opt out before the opt
out becomes effective? If not and only
one of the parties opts out, should the
opt out apply only to information about
the party opting out or should it apply
to information about all parties to the
account? The Agencies also request
comment on how the opt out right
should apply to commingled trust
accounts, where a trustee manages a
single account on behalf of multiple
beneficiaries.
Paragraph (a)(2) defines ‘‘opt out’’ in
a way that incorporates the exceptions
to the right to opt out stated in proposed
§§ .9, .10, and .11.
The proposed rules implement the
requirement that a consumer be given
an opportunity to opt out before
information is disclosed by requiring
that the opportunity be reasonable. The
examples that follow the general rule
provide guidance in situations involving
notices that are mailed and notices that
are provided in connection with
isolated transactions. In the former case,
a consumer will have a reasonable
opportunity to opt out if the financial
institution provides 30 days in which to
opt out. In the latter case, an
opportunity will be reasonable if the
consumer must decide as part of the
transaction whether to opt out before
completing the transaction. The
Agencies invite comment on whether 30
days is a reasonable opportunity to opt
out in the case of notices sent by mail,
and on whether an example in the
context of transactions conducted using
an electronic medium would be helpful.
The requirement that a consumer
have a reasonable opportunity to opt out
does not mean that a consumer forfeits
that right once the opportunity lapses.
The consumer always has the right to
opt out (as discussed further in
proposed § .8, below). However, if an
individual does not exercise that opt out
right when first presented with an
opportunity, the financial institution
would be permitted to disclose
nonpublic personal information to
nonaffiliated third parties for the period
of time necessary to implement the
consumer’s opt out direction.
Paragraph (b) of proposed § .7
clarifies that the right to opt out applies
regardless of whether a consumer has
established a customer relationship with
a financial institution. As noted above,
all customers are consumers under the
proposed rules. Thus, the fact that a
consumer establishes a customer
relationship with a financial institution
does not change the institution’s
obligations to comply with the

Jkt 190000

l l

l

l

l

PO 00000

Frm 00010

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

l

requirements of proposed § .7(a)
before sharing nonpublic personal
information about that consumer with
nonaffiliated third parties. This also
applies in the context of a consumer
who had a customer relationship with a
financial institution but then terminated
that relationship. Paragraph (b) also
clarifies that the consumer protections
afforded by paragraph (a) of proposed
§ .7 apply to all nonpublic personal
information collected by a financial
institution, regardless of when
collected. Thus, if a consumer elects to
opt out of information sharing with
nonaffiliated third parties, that election
applies to all nonpublic personal
information about that consumer in the
financial institution’s possession,
regardless of when the information is
obtained.
Paragraph (c) of proposed § .7 states
that a financial institution may, but is
not required to, provide consumers with
the option of a partial opt out in
addition to the opt out required by this
section. This could enable a consumer
to limit, for instance, the types of
information disclosed to nonaffiliated
third parties or the types of recipients of
the nonpublic personal information
about that consumer. If the partial opt
out option is provided, a financial
institution must state this option in a
way that clearly informs the consumer
about the choices available and
consequences thereof.

l

l

l

§ .8 Form and Method of Providing
Opt Out Notice to Consumers
Paragraph (a) of proposed § .8
requires that any opt out notice
provided by a financial institution
pursuant to proposed § .7 be clear and
conspicuous and accurately explain the
right to opt out. The notice must inform
the consumer that the institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
to nonaffiliated third parties, state that
the consumer has a right to opt out, and
provide the consumer with a reasonable
means by which to opt out.
The examples that follow the general
rule state that a financial institution will
adequately provide notice of the right to
opt out if it identifies the categories of
information that may be disclosed and
the categories of nonaffiliated third
parties to whom the information may be
disclosed and that the consumer may
opt out of those disclosures. A financial
institution that plans to disclose only
limited types of information or to only
a specific type of nonaffiliated third
party may provide a correspondingly
narrow notice to consumers. However,
to minimize the number of opt out
notices a financial institution must
provide, the institution may wish to

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

l

l

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8779

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
base its notices on current and
anticipated information sharing plans. A
new opt out notice is not required for
disclosures to different types of
nonaffiliated third parties or of different
types of information, provided that the
most recent opt out notice is sufficiently
broad to cover the entities or
information in question. Nor is a
financial institution required to provide
subsequent opt out notices when a
consumer establishes a new type of
customer relationship with that
financial institution, unless the
institution’s opt out policies differ
depending on the type of customer
relationship.
The examples also suggest several
ways in which a financial institution
may provide reasonable means to opt
out, including check-off boxes, reply
forms, and electronic mail addresses. A
financial institution does not provide a
reasonable means to opt out if the only
means provided is for a consumer to
write his or her own letter to the
institution to exercise the right,
although an institution may honor such
a letter if received.
Paragraph (b) applies the same rules
to delivery of the opt out notice that
apply to delivery of the initial and
annual notices. In addition, paragraph
(b) clarifies that the opt out notice may
be provided together with, or on the
same form as, the initial and annual
notices. However, if the opt out notice
is provided after the initial notice, a
financial institution must provide a
copy of the initial notice along with the
opt out notice. If a financial institution
and consumer orally agree to enter into
a customer relationship, the institution
may provide the opt out notice within
a reasonable time thereafter if the
consumer agrees. The Agencies invite
comment on whether a more specific
time by which the notice must be given
would be appropriate.
Paragraph (c) sets out the rules
governing a financial institution’s
obligations in the event the institution
changes its disclosure policies. As
stated in that paragraph, a financial
institution may not disclose nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party unless the institution first
provides a revised notice and new
opportunity to opt out. The institution
must wait a reasonable period of time
before disclosing information according
to the terms of the revised notice in
order to afford the consumer a
reasonable opportunity to opt out. A
financial institution must provide the
revised notice of its policies and
practices and opt out notice to a
consumer using the means permitted for
providing the initial notice and opt out

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

l

l

notice to that consumer under § .4(c)
and § .8(b), respectively, which
require that the notices be given in a
manner so that each consumer can
reasonably be expected to receive actual
notice in writing or, if the consumer
agrees, in electronic form.
Paragraph (d) states that a consumer
has the right to opt out at any time. The
Agencies considered whether to include
a time limit by which financial
institutions must effectuate a
consumer’s opt out election, but
decided that the wide variety of
practices of financial institutions made
one limit inappropriate. Instead, the
Agencies’ rules require that disclosures
stop as soon as reasonably practicable.
Paragraph (e) states that an opt out
will continue until a consumer revokes
it. The rules require that such
revocation be in writing, or, if the
consumer has agreed, electronically.
The Agencies invite comment on the
likely burden of complying with the
requirement to provide opt out notices,
the methods financial institutions
anticipate using to deliver the opt out
notices, and the approximate number of
opt out notices they expect to deliver
and process.

l

§ .9 Exception to Opt Out
Requirements for Service Providers and
Joint Marketing
Section 502(b) of the G–L–B Act
creates an exception to the opt out rules
for the disclosure of information to a
nonaffiliated third party for use by the
third party to perform services for, or
functions on behalf of, the financial
institution, including the marketing of
the financial institution’s own products
or services or financial products or
services offered pursuant to a joint
agreement between two or more
financial institutions. A consumer will
not have the right to opt out of
disclosing nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to
nonaffiliated third parties under these
circumstances, if the financial
institution satisfies certain
requirements.
First, the institution must, as stated in
section 502(b), ‘‘fully disclose’’ to the
consumer that it will provide this
information to the nonaffiliated third
party before the information is shared.
This disclosure should be provided as
part of the initial notice that is required
by § .4. The Agencies invite comment
on whether the proposed rules
appropriately implement the ‘‘fully
disclose’’ requirement in section
502(b)(2).
Second, the financial institution must
enter into a contract with the third party
that requires the third party to maintain

Jkt 190000

l

PO 00000

Frm 00011

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

the confidentiality of the information.
This contract should be designed to
ensure that the third party: (a) Will
maintain the confidentiality of the
information at least to the same extent
as is required for the financial
institution that discloses it; and (b) will
use the information solely for the
purposes for which the information is
disclosed or as otherwise permitted by
§§ .10 and .11 of the proposed rules.
The Agencies invite comment on the
application of proposed § .9(a)(2)(ii)
in the context of financial institutions
that contract with credit scoring vendors
to evaluate borrower creditworthiness.
Specifically, would that section prohibit
the vendor from also using the
consumers’ information without the
indicators of personal identity to help
improve its scoring models?
The G–L–B Act allows the Agencies to
impose requirements on the disclosure
of information pursuant to the exception
for service providers beyond those
imposed in the statute. The Agencies
have not done so in the proposed rules,
but invite comment on whether
additional requirements should be
imposed, and, if so, what those
requirements should address. The
Agencies note, for instance, that joint
agreements have the potential to create
reputation risk and legal risk for a
financial institution entering into such
an agreement. The Agencies seek
comment on whether the rules should
require a financial institution to take
steps to assure itself that the product
being jointly marketed and the other
participants in the joint marketing
agreement do not present undue risks
for the institution. These steps might
include, for instance, ensuring that the
financial institution’s sponsorship of the
product or service in question is evident
from the marketing of that product or
service. The Agencies also invite
comments on any other requirements
that would be appropriate to protect a
consumer’s financial privacy, and on
whether the rules should provide
examples of the types of joint
agreements that are covered.

l

l

l

l

§ .10 Exceptions to Notice and Opt
Out Requirements for Processing and
Servicing Transactions
Section 502(e) of the G–L–B Act
creates exceptions to the requirements
that apply to the disclosure of
nonpublic personal information to
nonaffiliated third parties. Paragraph (1)
of that section sets out certain
exceptions for disclosures made,
generally speaking, in connection with
the administration, processing,
servicing, and sale of a consumer’s
account.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8780

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

l

Paragraph (a) of proposed § .10 sets
out those exceptions, making only
stylistic changes to the statutory text
that are intended to make the exceptions
easier to read. Paragraph (b) sets out the
definition of ‘‘necessary to effect,
administer, or enforce’’ that is contained
in section 509(7) of the G–L–B Act,
making only stylistic changes intended
to clarify the definition.
The exceptions set out in proposed
§ .10, and the exceptions discussed in
proposed § .11, below, do not affect a
financial institution’s obligation to
provide initial notices of its privacy
policies and practices prior to the time
it establishes a customer relationship
and annual notices thereafter. Those
notices must be provided to all
customers, even if the institution
intends to disclose the nonpublic
personal information only pursuant to
the exceptions in proposed § .10.

l

l

l

l

§ .11 Other exceptions to notice and
opt out requirements.
As noted above, section 502(e)
contains several exceptions to the
requirements that otherwise would
apply to the disclosures of nonpublic
personal information to nonaffiliated
third parties. Proposed § .11 sets out
those exceptions that are not made in
connection with the administration,
processing, servicing, and sale of a
consumer’s account, and makes stylistic
changes intended to clarify the
exceptions.
One of the exceptions stated in
proposed § .11 is for disclosures made
with the consent or at the direction of
the consumer, provided the consumer
has not revoked the consent. Following
the list of exceptions is an example of
consent in which a financial institution
that has received an application from a
consumer for a mortgage loan informs a
nonaffiliated insurance company that
the consumer has applied for a loan so
that the insurance company can contact
the person about homeowner’s
insurance. Consent in such a situation
would enable the financial institution to
make the disclosure to the third party
without first providing the initial notice
required by § .4 or the opt out notice
required by § .7, but the disclosure
must not exceed the purposes for which
consent was given. The example also
states that consent may be revoked by a
consumer at any time by the consumer
exercising the right to opt out of future
disclosures. The Agencies invite
comment on whether safeguards should
be added to the exception for consent in
order to minimize the potential for
consumer confusion. Such safeguards
might include, for instance, a
requirement that consent be written,

l

l

l
l

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

that it be indicated on a separate
signature line in a relevant document or
on a distinct Web page, or that it may
be effective for only a limited period of
time.

l

§ .12 Limits on Redisclosure and
Reuse of Information
Section .12 of the proposed rules
implements the Act’s limitations on
redisclosure and reuse of nonpublic
personal information about consumers.
Section 502(c) of the Act provides that
a nonaffiliated third party that receives
nonpublic personal information from a
financial institution shall not, directly
or indirectly through an affiliate,
disclose the information to any person
that is not affiliated with either the
financial institution or the third party,
unless the disclosure would be lawful if
made directly by the financial
institution. Paragraph (a)(1) sets out the
Act’s redisclosure limitation as it
applies to a financial institution that
receives information from another
nonaffiliated financial institution.
Paragraph (b)(1) mirrors the provisions
of paragraph (a)(1), but applies the
redisclosure limits to any nonaffiliated
third party that receives nonpublic
personal information from a financial
institution.
The Act appears to place the
institution that receives the information
into the shoes of the institution that
disclosed the information for purposes
of determining whether redisclosures by
the receiving institution are ‘‘lawful.’’
Thus, the Act appears to permit the
receiving institution to redisclose the
information to: (1) An entity to whom
the original transferring institution
could disclose the information pursuant
to one of the exceptions in §§ .9,
.10, or ; .11, or (2) an entity to whom
the original transferring institution
could have disclosed the information as
described under its notice of privacy
policies and practices, unless the
consumer has exercised the right to opt
out of that disclosure. Because a
consumer can exercise the right to opt
out of a disclosure at any time, the Act
may effectively preclude third parties
that receive information to which the
opt out right applies from redisclosing
the information, except pursuant to one
of the exceptions in §§ .9, .10, or
.11. The Agencies invite comment on
whether the rules should require a
financial institution that discloses
nonpublic personal information to a
nonaffiliated third party to develop
policies and procedures to ensure that
the third party complies with the limits
on redisclosure of that information.
Sections 502(b)(2) and 502(e) (as
implemented by §§ .9, .10, and

l

l

l

l

l l

l

Jkt 190000

l l

PO 00000

Frm 00012

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

l.11 of the proposed rules) describe

when a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
without providing the consumer with
the initial privacy notice and an
opportunity to opt out, but those
exceptions apply only when the
information is used for the specific
purposes set out in those sections.
Paragraph (a)(2) of proposed § .12
clarifies this limitation on reuse as it
applies to financial institutions.
Paragraph (a)(2) provides that a
financial institution may use nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
that it receives from a nonaffiliated
financial institution in accordance with
an exception under §§ .9, .10, or
.11 only for the purpose of that
exception. Paragraph (b)(2) applies the
same limits on reuse to any
nonaffiliated third party that receives
nonpublic personal information from a
financial institution. The Agencies
request comment on whether proposed
§§ .12(a)(2) and .12(b)(2) would
restrict a nonaffiliated third party from
using information obtained in
accordance with the exceptions in
§§ .9, .10, and .11 for purposes
beyond the scope of those exceptions if
the information is not used in a
personally identifiable form. This might
occur, for example, in the case of a
credit scoring vendor using information
to improve its scoring models.
The Agencies invite comments on the
meaning of the word ‘‘lawful’’ as that
term is used in section 502(c). The
Agencies specifically solicit comment
on whether it would be lawful for a
nonaffiliated third party to disclose
information pursuant to the exception
provided in proposed § .9 of the rules.
Under that exception, a financial
institution must comply with certain
requirements before disclosing
information to a nonaffiliated third
party. Given that the statute and
proposed rules impose those
requirements on the financial institution
making the initial disclosure, the
Agencies invite comment on whether
subsequent disclosures by the third
party could satisfy the requirement that
those disclosures be lawful when the
financial institution is not party to the
subsequent disclosure.

l

l l

l

l

l

l l

l

l

l

§ .13 Limits on Sharing of Account
Number Information for Marketing
Purposes
Section 502(d) of the G–L–B Act
prohibits a financial institution from
disclosing, other than to a consumer
reporting agency, account numbers or
similar form of access number or access
code for a credit card account, deposit
account, or transaction account of a

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8781

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
consumer to any nonaffiliated third
party for use in telemarketing, direct
mail marketing, or other marketing
through electronic mail to the
consumer. Proposed § .13 applies this
statutory prohibition to disclosures
made directly or indirectly by a
financial institution.
The Agencies note that there is no
exception in Title V to the flat
prohibition established by section
502(d). The Statement of Managers
contained in the Conference Report to S.
900 encourages the Agencies to adopt an
exception to section 502(d) to permit
disclosures of account numbers in
limited instances. It states:

l

In exercising their authority under section
504(b) [which vests the Agencies with
authority to grant exceptions to section
502(a)–(d) beyond those set out in the
statute], the agencies and authorities
described in section 504(a)(1) may consider
it consistent with the purposes of this
subtitle to permit the disclosure of customer
account numbers or similar forms of access
numbers or access codes in an encrypted,
scrambled, or similarly coded form, where
the disclosure is expressly authorized by the
customer and is necessary to service or
process a transaction expressly requested or
authorized by the customer.

Managers’ Statement at 18. The
Agencies have not proposed an
exception to the prohibition of section
502(d) because of the risks associated
with third parties’ direct access to a
consumer’s account. The Agencies seek
comment on whether an exception to
the section 502(d) prohibition that
permits third parties access to account
numbers is appropriate, the
circumstances under which an
exception would be appropriate, and
how such an exception should be
formulated to provide consumers with
adequate protection. The Agencies also
seek comment on whether a flat
prohibition as set out in section 502(d)
might unintentionally disrupt certain
routine practices, such as the disclosure
of account numbers to a service
provider who handles the preparation
and distribution of monthly checking
account statements for a financial
institution coupled with a request by
the institution that the service provider
include literature with the statement
about a product. In addition, the
Agencies invite comment on whether a
consumer ought to be able to consent to
the disclosure of his or her account
number, notwithstanding the general
prohibition in section 502(d) and, if so,
what standards should apply. The
Agencies also seek comment on whether
section 502(d) prohibits the disclosure
by a financial institution to a marketing
firm of encrypted account numbers if

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

the financial institution does not
provide the marketer the key to decrypt
the number.

l

§ .14 Protection of Fair Credit
Reporting Act
Section 506 makes several
amendments to the FCRA to vest
rulemaking authority in various
agencies and to restore the Agencies’
regular examination authority.
Paragraph (c) of section 506 states that,
except for the amendments noted
regarding rulemaking authority, nothing
in Title V is to be construed to modify,
limit, or supersede the operation of the
FCRA, and no inference is to be drawn
on the basis of the provisions of Title V
whether information is transaction or
experience information under section
603 of the FCRA.
Proposed § .14 implements section
506(c) of the G–L–B Act by restating the
statute, making only minor stylistic
changes intended to make the rule
clearer.

l

§

l.15

Relation to State Laws
Section 507 of the G–L–B Act states,
in essence, that Title V does not
preempt any State law that provides
greater protections than are provided by
Title V. Determinations of whether a
State law or Title V provides greater
protections are to be made by the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) after
consultation with the agency that
regulates either the party filing a
complaint or the financial institution
about whom the complaint was filed.
Determinations of whether State or
Federal law afford greater protections
may be initiated by any interested party
or on the FTC’s own motion.
Proposed § .15 is substantively
identical to section 507, noting that the
proposed rules (as opposed to the
statute) do not preempt State laws that
provide greater protection for
consumers than do the rules.

l

§

l.16

Effective Date; Transition Rule
Section 510 of the G–L–B Act states
that, as a general rule, the relevant
provisions of Title V take effect 6
months after the date on which rules are
required to be prescribed. However,
section 510(1) authorizes the Agencies
to prescribe a later date in the rules
enacted pursuant to section 504.
Proposed § .16 states, in paragraph
(a), an effective date of November 13,
2000. This assumes that a final rule will
be adopted within the time frame
prescribed by section 504(a)(3). The
Agencies intend to provide at least six
months following the adoption of a final
rule for financial institutions to bring
their policies and procedures into

Jkt 190000

l

PO 00000

Frm 00013

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

compliance with the requirements of the
final rule. The Agencies invite comment
on whether six months following
adoption of final rules is sufficient to
enable financial institutions to comply
with the rules.
Paragraph (b) of proposed § .16
provides a transition rule for consumers
who were customers as of the effective
date of the rules. Since those customer
relationships already will have been
established as of the rules’ effective date
(thereby making it inappropriate to
require a financial institution to provide
those customers with a copy of the
institution’s initial notice at the time of
establishing a customer relationship),
the rules require instead that the initial
notice be provided within 30 days of the
effective date. The Agencies invite
comment on whether 30 days is enough
time to permit a financial institution to
deliver the required notices, bearing in
mind that the G–L–B Act contemplates
at least a six-month delayed effective
date from the date the rules are adopted.
If a financial institution intends to
disclose nonpublic personal information
about someone who was a consumer
before the effective date, the institution
must provide the notices required by
§§ .4 and .7 and provide a
reasonable opportunity to opt out before
the effective date. If, in this instance, the
institution already is disclosing
information about such a consumer, it
may continue to do so without
interruption until the consumer opts
out, in which case the institution must
stop disclosing nonpublic personal
information about that consumer to
nonaffiliated third parties as soon as
reasonably practicable.

l

l

l

III. FDIC’s New Electronic Public
Comment Site
The FDIC has developed a new page
on its web site to facilitate the
submission of electronic comments in
response to this general solicitation (the
EPC site). The EPC site provides an
alternative to the written letter and may
be a more convenient way for you to
submit your comments. Commenting
through the EPC site will assist the FDIC
to more accurately and efficiently
analyze comments submitted
electronically. If you submit your
comments through the EPC site your
comments will receive the same
consideration that they would receive if
submitted in hard copy to the FDIC’s
street address. Information provided
through the EPC site will be used by the
FDIC only to assist in its analysis of the
proposed regulation. The FDIC will not
use an individual’s name or any other
personal identifier of an individual to
retrieve records or information

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

8782

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

submitted through the EPC site. Like
comments submitted in hard copy to the
FDIC’s street address, EPC site
comments will be made available in
their entirety (including the
commenter’s name and address if the
commenter chooses to provide them) for
public inspection.
The EPC site will be available on the
FDIC’s home page at http://www.fdic.
gov. You will be able to provide general
comments or comments on any specific
sections of, or questions on, the
proposed rule. You will also be able to
view the regulation and Supplementary
Information sections that relate to your
comments directly on the site. Once you
have finished commenting on the
sections of interest to you, you may
indicate your general approval or
disapproval of the proposed regulation
by answering the following question:
Does the proposed regulation
appropriately implement the G–L–B Act
to provide the full extent of privacy
protections intended by the Act?
[Yes/No].
If you choose to answer this question,
your response will be used in the FDIC’s
analysis of public comment on the
regulation. The FDIC encourages you to
provide written comments in the spaces
provided in addition to responding to
this specific question. Written
comments enable the FDIC to
thoughtfully consider possible changes
to the proposed regulation.
The FDIC is also interested in your
feedback on the EPC site. We have
provided a space for you to comment on
the site itself. Answers to this question
will help the FDIC evaluate the EPC site
for use in future rulemaking.
At the conclusion of the EPC site you
will have an opportunity to provide us
with your name, indicate whether you
are an individual, bank, trade
association, or government agency, and
provide the name of the organization
you represent, if applicable. Whether
you choose to respond to these
questions is entirely up to you. Any
responses received may help the FDIC
to better understand the public
comments it receives.
IV. Regulatory Analysis
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Agencies invite comment on:
(1) Whether the collections of
information contained in this notice of
proposed rulemaking are necessary for
the proper performance of each
Agency’s functions, including whether
the information has practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of each Agency’s
estimate of the burden of the proposed
information collections;

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

19:28 Feb 18, 2000

(3) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the information collections on
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
(5) Estimates of capital or start-up
costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchases of services
to provide information.
Recordkeepers are not required to
respond to these collections of
information unless they display a
currently valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number. The
agencies are currently requesting their
respective control numbers for these
information collections from OMB.
This proposed regulation contains
several disclosure requirements. The
respondents must prepare and provide
the initial notice to all current
customers and all new customers at the
time of establishing a customer
relationship (proposed § .4(a)).
Subsequently, an annual notice must be
provided to all customers at least once
during a twelve-month period during
the continuation of the customer
relationship (proposed § .5(a)). The
opt out notice (and partial opt out
notice, if applicable; see proposed
§ .7(a)(1)(iii)) must be provided prior
to disclosing nonpublic personal
information to certain nonaffiliated
third parties. If a financial institution
wishes to disclose information in a way
that is inconsistent with the notices
previously given to a consumer, the
institution must provide consumers
with revised notices (proposed
§ .8(c)).
The proposed regulation also contains
consumer reporting requirements. In
order for consumers to opt out, they
must respond to the institution’s opt out
notice (proposed §§ .7(a)(2), (a)(3)(i),
and (c)). At any time during their
continued relationship with the
institution, consumers have the right to
change or update their opt out status
with the institution (proposed §§ .8(d)
and (e)). The Agencies request public
comment on all aspects of the
collections of information contained in
this proposed rule, including consumer
responses to the opt-out notice and
consumer changes to their opt-out status
with an institution. In light of the
uncertainty regarding what institutions
will do to comply with the opt-out
requirements and how consumers will
react, the Agencies estimate a nominal
burden stemming from consumer
responses of one hour per institution,

l
l

l

l

Jkt 190000

l

l

PO 00000

Frm 00014

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

and will revisit this estimate in light of
the comments received.
OCC: The collection of information
requirements contained in this notice of
proposed rulemaking have been
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget for review in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)). Comments on
the collections of information should be
sent to the Office of Management and
Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project
(1557—to be assigned), Washington, DC
20503, with copies to the Legislative
and Regulatory Activities Division
(1557—to be assigned), Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW, Washington, DC 20219.
The likely respondents are national
banks, District of Columbia banks, and
Federal branches and agencies of foreign
banks.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per bank respondent: 45.
Estimated number of bank
respondents: 2,400.
Estimated total annual reporting
burden: 108,000 hours.
Board: In accordance with section
3506 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. Ch. 35; 5 CFR 1320,
appendix A.1), the Board reviewed the
notice of proposed rulemaking under
the authority delegated to the Board by
the OMB. Comments on the collections
of information should be sent to Mary
M. West, Chief, Financial Reports
Section, Division of Research and
Statistics, Mail Stop 97, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Washington, DC 20551, with a
copy to the Office of Management and
Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project
(7100—to be assigned), Washington, DC
20503.
The likely respondents are state
member banks, bank holding
companies, affiliates and certain nonbank subsidiaries of bank holding
companies, uninsured state agencies
and branches of foreign banks,
commercial lending companies owned
or controlled by foreign banks, and Edge
and agreement corporations.
Estimated number of respondents:
9500.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per respondent: 45 hours.
Estimated total annual reporting and
disclosure burden: 427,500.
FDIC: The collections of information
contained in the notice of proposed
rulemaking will be submitted to the
OMB in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995. 44 U.S.C. 3507.
The FDIC will use any comments
received to develop its new burden
estimates. Comments on the collections

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
of information should be sent to Steven
F. Hanft, Office of the Executive
Secretary, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20429, with a copy to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Paperwork Reduction Project (3064—to
be assigned), Washington, DC 20503.
The likely respondents are insured
nonmember banks.
Estimated number of respondents:
5,764.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per respondent: 45 hours.
Estimated total annual reporting and
disclosure burden: 259,380 hours.
OTS: The collection of information
requirements contained in the notice of
proposed rulemaking will be submitted
to the OMB in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. 44
U.S.C. 3507. The OTS will use any
comments received to develop its new
burden estimates. Comments on the
collection of information should be sent
to the Dissemination Branch (1550–
AB36), Office of Thrift Supervision,
1700 G Street, NW, Washington, DC
20552, with a copy to the Office of
Management and Budget, Paperwork
Reduction Project (1550–AB36),
Washington, DC 20503.
The likely respondents are savings
associations.
Estimated number of respondents:
1,104.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per respondent: 45 hours.
Estimated total annual disclosure and
recordkeeping burden: 49,680 hours.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
OCC: Under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA), the OCC must either provide
an Initial Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (IRFA) with a proposed rule or
certify that the proposed rule would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The OCC has decided to publish the
following analysis and invites the
public’s comments on the propose rule’s
impact on small entities (i.e., for
purposes of RFA, small entities include
banks with less than $100 million in
assets).
A. Reasons for and Objectives of the
Proposed Rule; Legal Basis for Rule
The proposed rule implements
provisions of Title V, Subtitle A of the
G–L–B Act addressing consumer
privacy. In general, these statutory
provisions require banks to provide
notice to consumers about an
institution’s privacy policies and
practices, restrict the ability of a bank to
share nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

parties, and permit consumers to
prevent the institution from disclosing
nonpublic personal information about
them to certain non-affiliated third
parties by ‘‘opting out’’ of that
disclosure.
The notice and opt out requirements
are imposed by Title V, Subtitle A of the
G–L–B Act, and are to become effective
within one year from the date the Act
was signed into law. Section 504 of the
G–L–B Act authorizes the OCC to
prescribe ‘‘such regulations as may be
necessary’’ to carry out the purposes of
Title V, Subtitle A. The OCC believes
that a regulatory promulgation gives the
private sector greater certainty on how
to comply with the statute and clearer
guidance regarding how it will be
enforced.
B. Requirements of the Proposed Rule;
Description of Small Entities to Whom
Rule Would Apply
Subject to certain exceptions
explained below, the proposed rule
generally requires that a bank provide
all of its customers the following
notices: (1) An initial privacy notice
(prior to the time the customer
relationship is established or, for
existing customers, within 30 days of
the rule’s effective date); (2) an opt out
notice (prior to the disclosing of the
individual’s nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties); and (3) an annual privacy
notice for the duration of the customer
relationship. A bank’s ‘‘customer’’ is a
consumer with whom the bank has a
‘‘continuing relationship’’ (e.g., an
ongoing deposit or loan relationship—
but does not include a transient
relationship, such as the mere purchase
of traveler’s checks from the bank).
The proposed rule also requires a
bank to provide its consumers an initial
privacy notice and an opt out notice
prior to disclosing the individual’s
nonpublic personal information with
nonaffiliated third parties. If the bank
does not intend to share such
information about its consumers, then
no privacy or opt out notice need be
given. A bank’s ‘‘consumer,’’ which is a
broader concept than ‘‘customer,’’
includes: (1) Individuals who have
applied to the bank for a financial
service or product; and (2) individuals
who have purchased a product or
service that results in a transient (as
opposed to continuing) relationship
(e.g., mere purchase of traveler’s checks
from a bank).
There are a host of exceptions to the
general rules stated above. A bank may
share a consumer’s nonpublic personal
information with nonaffiliated third
parties without having to give a privacy

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00015

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8783

and opt out notice if, for example, such
sharing is necessary: (1) To effect,
administer, or enforce a transaction
requested or authorized by the
consumer; (2) to protect the security of
records pertaining to the consumer,
service, product, or transaction; (3) to
protect against or prevent actual or
potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, claims or other liability; or
(4) to provide information to rating
agencies or the bank’s attorneys,
auditors, and accountants. Also, in cases
where a bank enters into a contract with
a nonaffiliated third party to undertake
joint marketing or to have the third
party perform certain functions on
behalf of the bank, no opt out notice
must be given. In such an instance, the
bank must disclose to the consumer that
it is providing the information and enter
into a contract with the third party that
restricts the third party’s use of the
information and requires the third party
to maintain confidentiality of the
information.
Because the relevant statute did not
provide a general exception for small
banks, the proposed rule would apply to
all banks, regardless of size, including
those with assets of $100 million or less.
As of September 30, 1999, 1213 (of
2,383 total) national banks had assets of
$100 million or less.
Compliance requirements will vary
depending, for example, upon a bank’s
information sharing practices, whether
the bank already has or discloses a
privacy policy, and whether the bank
already has an opt-out mechanism in
place pursuant to the Fair Credit
Reporting Act.
As part of the requirement to provide
a privacy notice, a bank’s practices
regarding its collection, sharing, and
safeguarding of certain nonpublic
personal information must be
summarized in writing in a form that is
required or permitted by the proposed
regulation. However, if the bank does
not share such information (or shares
only to the extent permitted under the
exceptions), its privacy notice may be
streamlined. Various surveys suggest
that a majority of banks already have
privacy policies in place as part of usual
and customary business practices. For
these institutions, the costs for
translating that policy into a notice
format should be minimal.
Further, to minimize the burden and
costs of distributing privacy policies,
the proposed regulation allows each
bank to choose the method by which it
will distribute required notices. For
example, banks may include an annual
privacy notice with periodic account
statements that the bank already sends
to the customer. Also, the initial privacy

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8784

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

notice may be provided with other
already-required disclosure statements,
such as those required under the Truth
in Lending Act.
The OCC believes that the burden
imposed by the opt out requirement will
be minimized to the extent that a bank
must give opt out notices under the
FCRA. Under the FCRA, a bank must
have an opt out mechanism in place if
the bank: (1) Shares certain consumer
information (i.e., application or credit
report information) with its affiliates,
and (2) does not want to be treated as
a consumer reporting agency (as will
usually be the case). For a bank that
gives FCRA notices and that wants to
share nonpublic personal information
with nonaffiliated third parties, the
bank should be able to adapt its existing
opt out mechanism to accommodate the
requirements of the proposed rule. Of
course, a bank need not provide any
opt-out notices or set up any opt-out
mechanism if it will only be sharing
nonpublic information with
nonaffiliated third parties to the extent
permitted by one of the many
exceptions permitted in the proposed
rule.
Professional skills needed to comply
with the proposed rule may include
clerical, computer systems, personnel
training, as well as legal drafting and
advice. The information collection
requirements imposed by the G–L–B Act
and the proposed rule are further
addressed in the section titled,
‘‘Paperwork Reduction Act.’’
C. Relevant Federal Rules Which May
Duplicate, Overlap or Conflict With the
Proposed Rule
While the scope of the proposed
regulation (pursuant to the G–L–B Act)
is unique, there may be some overlap in
certain circumstances with the
following: As noted above, the Fair
Credit Reporting Act requires a bank
that: (1) Does not want to be treated as
a consumer reporting agency; and (2)
desires to share certain consumer
information (i.e., application or credit
report information) with its affiliates, to
provide the consumer with a clear and
conspicuous notice and an opportunity
to opt out of such information sharing.
Also, at the time a consumer contracts
for an electronic fund transfer service,
the Electronic Funds Transfer Act
requires the terms and conditions of
such transfer to be disclosed, including
under what circumstances the bank will
in the ordinary course of business
disclose information concerning the
consumer’s account to third persons.
The recently proposed Department of
Health and Human Services

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

18:17 Feb 18, 2000

regulations 6 that implement the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 would, if
adopted in final form, limit the
circumstances under which medical
information may be disclosed. Finally,
the Children’s Online Privacy Protection
Act (under which the Federal banking
agencies are charged with enforcement
of implementing regulations
promulgated by the Federal Trade
Commission) generally requires online
service operators collecting personal
information from a child to obtain
parental consent and post a privacy
notice on the web site. The OCC seeks
comment on additional Federal rules
that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with the proposal.
D. Significant Alternatives to the
Proposed Rule That Minimize the
Impact on Small Entities
As previously noted, the proposed
rule’s requirements are expressly
mandated by the G–L–B Act. The
proposed rule attempts to clarify,
consolidate, and simplify the statutory
requirements for all covered entities,
including small entities. The proposed
rule also provides substantial flexibility
so that any bank, regardless of size, may
tailor its practices to its individual
needs. While the OCC may grant
exceptions to the opt out requirements
set out in sections 502 (a) through (d),
section 504(b) of the G–L–B Act requires
such exceptions to be ‘‘consistent with
the purposes of this subtitle [i.e.,
Subtitle A of Title V].’’ As stated in
section 501(a) of the Act, ‘‘It is the
policy of the Congress that each
financial institution has an affirmative
and continuing obligation to respect the
privacy of its customers and to protect
the security and confidentiality of those
customers’ nonpublic personal
information.’’ (Emphasis added.) The
OCC believes that an exception that
would create different levels of
protections for consumers based on the
size of the institution with whom they
conduct business would not be
consistent with the purposes of Subtitle
A. The OCC welcomes comment on any
significant alternatives, consistent with
the G–L–B Act, that would minimize the
impact on small entities.
Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 603) requires an agency to
publish an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis with any notice of proposed
rulemaking. A description of the reasons
why action by the agency is being
considered and a statement of the
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
proposed rule, are contained in the
6 64

Jkt 190000

FR 59918 (Nov. 3, 1999).

PO 00000

Frm 00016

Fmt 4701

supplementary material above. The
Board’s proposed rule will apply to the
following institutions (numbers
approximate):
Type of institution
State member banks ..................
Bank holding companies ............
Bank holding company subsidiaries ........................................
U.S. branches and agencies of
foreign banks ..........................
Edge/Agreement corporations,
commercial lending companies

1,000
5,900

Total .....................................

9,500

2,100
400
100

The Board estimates that over 4,500 of
the respondents could be considered
small institutions with assets less than
$100 million.
Overlap with other Federal rules.
While the scope of the proposed
regulation (pursuant to the G–L–B Act)
is unique, it may, in certain
circumstances, overlap with the
following statutes and regulations:
1. The Fair Credit Reporting Act (15
U.S.C. 1681a(d)(2)) requires a bank that:
(1) Does not want to be treated as a
consumer reporting agency; and (2)
desires to share certain consumer
information (that is, application or
credit report information) with its
affiliates, to provide the consumer with
a clear and conspicuous notice and an
opportunity to opt out of such
information sharing.
2. At the time a consumer contracts
for an electronic fund transfer service,
the Electronic Funds Transfer Act (15
U.S.C. 1693c(a)(9)) requires the terms
and conditions of such transfer to be
disclosed, including under what
circumstances the bank will in the
ordinary course of business disclose
information concerning the consumer’s
account to third persons.
3. The recently proposed Department
of Health and Human Services
regulations 7 that implement the Health
Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act of 1996 (42 U.S.C.
3120d–1 et seq.) would, if adopted in
final form, limit the circumstances
under which medical information may
be disclosed.
4. The Children’s Online Privacy
Protection Act of 1998 (15 U.S.C. 6502)
(under which the Federal banking
agencies are charged with enforcement
of implementing regulations
promulgated by the Federal Trade
Commission) generally requires online
service operators collecting personal
information from a child to obtain
7 64

Sfmt 4702

Approx.
No.

FR 59918 (Nov. 3, 1999).

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
parental consent and post a privacy
notice on the web site.
New compliance requirements. The
proposed rule contains new compliance
requirements for all covered
institutions, most of which are required
by the G–L–B Act. The institutions will
be required to prepare notices of their
privacy policies and practices and
provide those notices to consumers as
specified in the rule. Institutions that
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties will be required to provide opt
out notices to consumers as well as a
reasonable opportunity to opt out of
certain disclosures. These institutions
will have to develop systems for
keeping track of consumers’ opt out
directions. Some institutions,
particularly those that disclose
nonpublic information about consumers
to nonaffiliated third parties, will likely
need the advice of legal counsel to
ensure that they comply with the rule,
and may also require computer
programming changes and additional
staff training. The Board does not have
a practicable or reliable basis for
quantifying the costs of the proposed
rule or any alternatives, but seeks
comment on the potential costs.
Exemptions for small institutions. The
Board believes the requirements of the
Act and this rule will create additional
burden for covered institutions,
particularly those that disclose
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.
The rule applies to all covered
institutions, regardless of size. The Act
does not provide the Board with the
authority to exempt a small institution
from the requirement to provide a notice
of its privacy policies and practices to
a consumer with whom it establishes a
customer relationship. Although the
Board could exempt small institutions
from providing a notice and opportunity
for consumers to opt out of certain
information disclosures, the Board does
not believe that such an exemption
would be appropriate, given the purpose
of the Act to protect the confidentiality
and security of nonpublic personal
information about consumers. The
Board believes that the burden is
relatively small for institutions that do
not disclose nonpublic personal
information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties. These
institutions may provide relatively
simple initial and annual notices to
consumers with whom they establish
customer relationships.
The Board recognizes that the
Congressional Conferees on the Act
wished to ensure that smaller financial
institutions are not placed at a

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

competitive disadvantage by a statutory
regime that permits certain information
to be shared freely within an affiliate
structure while limiting the ability to
share that same information with
nonaffiliated third parties. The
Conferees stated that, in prescribing
regulations, the federal regulatory
agencies should take into consideration
any adverse competitive effects upon
small commercial banks, thrifts, and
credit unions.8 At this time, it is not
clear the extent to which small
institutions will be placed at a
disadvantage by information-sharing
among affiliates in large institutional
families. The Board believes that further
experience under the regulation would
be appropriate before considering any
exemptions in this area for small
institutions.
The Board requests comment on the
burdens associated with the proposed
rule and whether any exemptions for
small institutions would be appropriate.
FDIC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) (RFA) requires an
agency to publish an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis with this proposed
rule, except to the extent provided in
the RFA, whenever the agency is
required to publish a general notice of
proposed rulemaking for a proposed
rule. The FDIC cannot at this time
determine whether the proposed rule
would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities as defined by the RFA.9
Therefore, pursuant to subsections 603
(b) and (c) of the RFA, the FDIC
provides the following initial regulatory
flexibility analysis.
Reasons for Proposed Rule
The FDIC is requesting comment on
proposed privacy rules published
pursuant to section 504 of the G–L–B
Act. Section 504 requires the Agencies
in consultation with representatives of
State insurance authorities to issue
regulations implementing notice
requirements and restrictions on a
financial institution’s ability to disclose
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.
These requirements are expressly
mandated by the G–L–B Act. It is the
view of the FDIC that the G–L–B Act’s
requirements account for most, if not,
all of the economic impact of the
proposed rule.
8 H.

R. Conf. Rep. No. 106–434, at 173 (1999).
RFA defines the term ‘‘small entity’’ in 5
U.S.C. 601 by reference to definitions published by
the Small Business Administration (SBA). The SBA
has defined a ‘‘small entity for banking purposes as
a national or commercial bank, savings institution
or credit union with less than $100 million in
assets.’’ See 13 CFR 121.201.
9 The

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00017

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8785

Statement of Objectives and Legal Basis
The SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section above contains this information.
The legal basis for the proposed rule is
the G–L–B Act.
Description/Estimate of the Small
Entities to Which the Rule Applies
The proposed rule would apply to all
FDIC-insured State nonmember banks,
approximately 3,700 of which are small
entities as defined by the RFA.
Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping and
Other Compliance Requirements
The information collection
requirements imposed by G–L–B Act
and the proposed rule are discussed
above in the section titled, ‘‘Paperwork
Reduction Act.’’
General Requirements
Pursuant to section 503 of the G–L–
B Act and §§ 332.4—332.6 of the
regulation, a financial institution must
provide its customers with a notice of
its privacy policies and practices.
Section 502 of the G–L–B Act and
§§ 332.7–332.12 of the regulation
prohibit a financial institution from
disclosing nonpublic personal
information about a consumer to
nonaffiliated third parties unless the
institution satisfies various disclosure
requirements and the consumer has
elected not to opt out of the disclosure.
The statute and proposed rule require
a financial institution to disclose to all
of its customers the institution’s privacy
policies and practices with respect to
information sharing with both affiliates
and non-affiliated third parties.
Institutions are required to provide this
notice at the time of establishing a
customer relationship and annually
thereafter. Recent experience has shown
that it is a usual and customary business
practice of financial institutions. KPMG
reported in a recent industry survey of
large and small banks that 71% of
bankers said their institutions already
had privacy policies in place either
company-wide or in some selected
units.10 Another recent survey of
Internet banking sites conducted by
federal banking regulators concluded
that over 62% of financial institutions
that collected personal information
online provided a privacy policy or
information practice statement.11
Furthermore, a number of industry
groups have developed model privacy
policies that are available as part of their
10 ‘‘KPMG Analysis Consumer Privacy Policies:
Write Now.’’ Online Reuters 19 Jan. 2000.
11 ‘‘Interagency Financial Institution Web Site
Privacy Survey Report.’’ FDIC Press Release 9
November 1999.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8786

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

self-regulatory efforts in the privacy
area.12 The FDIC believes the
establishment of a privacy policy is a
usual and customary business practice
and the costs for translating that policy
into a disclosure format should be
minimal. The FDIC seeks any
information or comment on the costs for
creating privacy policy disclosures.
To minimize the burden and costs to
financial institutions of distributing
privacy policies, the proposed
regulation allows each bank to choose
the method by which it will distribute
required disclosure statements.
Institutions may provide customers with
a privacy disclosure statement with
periodic statements, with other required
disclosure statements, via electronic
mail to consumers who obtain a
financial product or service
electronically, and other acceptable
means described in the proposed
regulation. The FDIC believes that the
cost of distributing privacy disclosure
statements will be minimal and seeks
any information or comment on the
costs for distributing privacy policy
disclosures.
The statute and proposed rule
describe the conditions under which a
financial institution may disclose
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer to a nonaffiliated third party.
A number of exceptions are provided for
nonaffiliated third parties performing
services for the institution. The rules
require institutions to develop a method
to allow customers to opt out of nonaffiliated third party information
sharing. Only those institutions that
intend to share nonpublic personal
information with third parties outside of
the exemptions provided are required to
establish ‘‘opt out’’ disclosure and
processing procedures. Furthermore,
only those institutions that share
nonpublic personal information with
third parties outside of the exemptions
provided could be expected to
encounter any reduction in revenue as
a result of the diminished value of
information sales. The FDIC informally
surveyed its regional offices to
determine the costs of implementing the
opt out provisions of the proposed
regulation. Based on the observations by
FDIC examiners, the FDIC believes that
the costs to implement opt out
provisions of the regulation for small
insured nonmember banks will be
minimal. Few nonaffiliated third party
information sharing arrangements could
be identified that would fall outside the
exceptions provided in the regulation.
Congress recognized the lack of
12 ‘‘Banks Should Tell Customers of Policies to
Protect Privacy, Banking Groups Say.’’ Online BNA
Electronic Commerce & Law 16 September 1998.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

18:02 Feb 18, 2000

information available on affiliate
information sharing practices by
requiring the regulators to conduct a
‘‘Study of Information Sharing Among
Financial Affiliates’’ that focuses on the
practice of institutions sharing
confidential customer information with
affiliates and non-affiliated third parties.
This study is due subsequent to release
of this regulation. The FDIC seeks
further comment on the information
sharing practices and actual costs of
implementing the opt out disclosure
and processing requirements of the
proposed regulation.
Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Rules
While the scope of the proposed
regulation (pursuant to the G–L–B Act)
is unique, there may be some overlap in
certain circumstances with the
following: As noted above, the FCRA
requires a bank that: (1) Does not want
to be treated as a consumer reporting
agency; and (2) desires to share certain
consumer information (i.e., application
or credit report information) with its
affiliates, to provide the consumer with
a clear and conspicuous notice and an
opportunity to opt out of such
information sharing. Also, at the time a
consumer contracts for an electronic
fund transfer service, the Electronic
Funds Transfer Act requires the terms
and conditions of such transfer to be
disclosed, including under what
circumstances the bank will in the
ordinary course of business disclose
information concerning the consumer’s
account to third persons. Finally, the
Children’s Online Privacy Protection
Act (under which the Federal banking
agencies are charged with enforcement
of implementing regulations
promulgated by the Federal Trade
Commission) generally requires online
service operators collecting personal
information from a child to obtain
parental consent and post a privacy
notice on the web site. The FDIC seeks
comments and information about any
such rules, as well as any other state,
local, or industry rules or policies that
require financial institutions to
implement business practices that
would comply with the requirements of
the proposed rule.
Discussion of Significant Alternatives
As previously noted, the proposed
rule’s requirements are expressly
mandated by the G–L–B Act. The
proposed rule attempts to clarify,
consolidate, and simplify the statutory
requirements for all covered entities,
including small entities. The proposed
rule also provides substantial flexibility
so that any bank, regardless of size, may

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00018

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

tailor its practices to its individual
needs. While the FDIC may grant
exceptions to the opt out requirements
set out in sections 502(a) through (d),
section 504(b) of the G–L–B Act requires
such exceptions to be ‘‘consistent with
the purposes of this subtitle [i.e.,
Subtitle A of Title V].’’ As stated in
section 501(a) of the Act, ‘‘It is the
policy of the Congress that each
financial institution has an affirmative
and continuing obligation to respect the
privacy of its customers and to protect
the security and confidentiality of those
customers’ nonpublic personal
information.’’ (Emphasis added.) The
FDIC believes that an exception that
would create different levels of
protections for consumers based on the
size of the institution with whom they
conduct business would not be
consistent with the purposes of Subtitle
A. The FDIC welcomes comment on any
significant alternatives, consistent with
the G–L–B Act, that would minimize the
impact on small entities.
OTS: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires federal agencies to either
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) with this proposed rule
or certify that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities. 13 The OTS cannot, at this time,
determine whether the proposed rule
would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
institutions. Therefore, OTS includes
the following IRFA.
A description of the reasons why OTS
is considering this action, and a
statement of the objectives of, and legal
basis for, the proposed rule are in the
supplementary material above.
A. Small Entities to Which the Proposed
Rule Would Apply
The proposed rule would apply to all
financial institutions, without regard to
the institutions’ size. Small depository
institutions are generally defined, for
Regulatory Flexibility Act purposes, as
those with assets under $100 million. 14
This proposed rule would apply to
approximately 500 small savings
associations.
B. Requirements of the Proposed Rule
As described more fully above, the
proposed rule contains new compliance
requirements for all savings
associations. Most of the requirements
are mandated by the G–L–B Act.
Savings associations will be required to
prepare
13 5

U.S.C. 605(b).
CFR 121.201, Division H (1999).

14 13

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
notices of their privacy policies and
practices and provide those notices to
consumers. Savings associations that
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties will be required to provide opt
out notices to consumers as well as a
reasonable opportunity to opt out of
certain disclosures. These savings
associations will have to develop
systems for keeping track of consumers’
opt out directions.
C. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements
The proposed rule would require
savings associations to disclose their
privacy policies to consumers, and to
keep track of any opt out notices the
consumers submit.
Many financial institutions may
already have established privacy
policies and practices and may already
be partly or fully prepared to meet the
requirements of this proposed rule.
Additionally, OTS anticipates that trade
associations and others will prepare
compliance materials and guidance that
financial institutions can use to meet
the requirements of this proposed rule.
To the extent that existing practices
and available resources are insufficient,
financial institutions would need
professional skills to comply with this
proposed rule. To prepare the required
privacy disclosures and opt out notices,
financial institutions may need legal or
other professional advice and drafting.
This would be true for the initial
disclosures and notices, and for any
subsequent changes to those documents.
For financial institutions that publish
privacy notices electronically or accept
electronic opt outs, computer expertise
would be necessary to convert the
documents to the appropriate electronic
form.
The proposed regulation would allow
financial institutions to share
consumers’ nonpublic personal
information with a nonaffiliated third
party to perform services for the
financial institution. However,
§ 573.9(a)(2) of the regulation would
require institutions in that event to
contractually require the third party
recipient to maintain the privacy of
shared information. In these cases,
financial institutions may require legal
advice and drafting to ensure that their
contracts meet the requirements of the
proposed rule.
Financial institutions may further
need professional skills to process opt
out notices that consumers submit.
Some financial institutions may use
clerical or computer programmer skills
to perform these tasks. Some degree of
personnel training may be necessary,
such as to train staff on the procedures

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

19:23 Feb 18, 2000

for entering opt out data into a computer
database.
OTS does not have a practicable or
reliable basis for quantifying the costs of
this proposed rule, or of any alternative
to the rule. OTS cannot predict how
savings associations would comply with
the proposed notice requirements, or
how many opt out notices savings
associations would receive and need to
process. Some savings associations may
currently derive revenue from selling
information about their customers, and
this rule may decrease the amount of
that revenue. OTS has no reliable basis
for determining the amount of this
decrease in revenue at savings
associations. The costs of this proposed
rule or any alternative to the rule are
unpredictable for two reasons. First,
Congress has required this regulation to
be finalized within six months after
G–L–B’s enactment. This short time
period makes it difficult to survey
savings associations or trade
organizations for reliable information.
Second, and more importantly, the
G–L–B Act and this rulemaking are so
new that the industry has not had
enough time to learn what the law
requires and decide how to proceed.
Rather than merely guess at the
regulatory burden of this proposed rule,
OTS solicits comment on the burden
and on ways to minimize it, consistent
with the G–L–B Act.
D. Significant Alternatives
The requirements in the proposed
rule parallel those in the G–L–B Act.
The proposed regulation would clarify
the statutory requirements in certain
areas, and would restate the
requirements in a more understandable
manner, but would not impose any
substantially different requirements.
Congress has decided that ‘‘each’’
financial institution must protect
consumers’ privacy, without regard to
the size of the financial institutions with
which consumers interact. 15 OTS
believes it does not have authority to
exempt small entities from Subtitle V of
the G–L–B Act.
Although OTS could exempt small
savings associations from providing a
notice and opportunity for consumers to
opt out of certain information
disclosures, OTS does not believe that
such an exemption would be
appropriate, given the purpose of the
G–L–B Act to protect the confidentiality
and security of nonpublic personal
information about consumers. Savings
associations that do not disclose
nonpublic personal information about
15 G–L–B Act, Pub. Law. No. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, § 501(a) (1999) (to be codified at 15 USC
6801).

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00019

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8787

consumers to nonaffiliated third parties
may provide relatively simple initial
and annual notices to their customers.
OTS recognizes that the Congressional
Conferees on the Act wished to ensure
that smaller financial institutions are
not placed at a competitive
disadvantage by a statutory regime that
permits certain information to be shared
freely within an affiliate structure while
limiting the ability to share that same
information with nonaffiliated third
parties. The Conferees stated that, in
prescribing regulations, the federal
regulatory agencies should take into
consideration any adverse competitive
effects upon small commercial banks,
thrifts, and credit unions. 16 At this
time, it is not clear the extent to which
small institutions will be placed at a
disadvantage by information-sharing
among affiliates in large institutional
families. OTS believes that further
experience under the regulation would
be appropriate before considering any
exemptions in this area for small
institutions.
To reduce regulatory burden,
consistent with the statutory
requirements, this proposed regulation
would provide financial institutions
with substantial flexibility to use
privacy practices tailored to their
individual needs. For example, the
Agencies considered setting a certain
time within which financial institutions
that receive opt out notices must
comply with them. Because the
Agencies thought a certain time limit
might impose undue regulatory burden,
the proposed rule would require
compliance with opt out notices ‘‘as
soon as reasonably practicable.’’
§ 573.8(e). Similarly, the proposed rule
would become effective on November
13, 2000. This is designed to allow
financial institutions one year after
G–L–B was enacted, and six months
after this rule’s expected effective date,
to come into compliance. § 573.16(a).
The Agencies are soliciting comments
on whether these time limits would
allow financial institutions sufficient
time to comply with the rules.
OTS requests comment on the
burdens associated with the proposed
rule and whether any exceptions for
small institutions would be appropriate.
E. Other Matters
While the scope of the proposed
regulation (pursuant to the G–L–B Act)
is unique, there may be some overlap in
certain circumstances with certain
Federal rules. As noted above, the Fair
Credit Reporting Act requires a savings
16 H.

R. Conf. Rep. No. 106–434, at 173 (1999).

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

8788

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

association that (1) does not want to be
treated as a consumer reporting agency
and (2) desires to share certain
consumer information (i.e., application
or credit report information) with its
affiliates, to provide the consumer with
a clear and conspicuous notice and an
opportunity to opt out of such
information sharing. Also, at the time a
consumer contracts for an electronic
fund transfer service, the Electronic
Funds Transfer Act requires the terms
and conditions of such transfer to be
disclosed, including under what
circumstances the bank will in the
ordinary course of business disclose
information concerning the consumer’s
account to third persons. Finally, the
Children’s Online Privacy Protection
Act (under which the Federal banking
agencies are charged with enforcement
of implementing regulations
promulgated by the Federal Trade
Commission) generally requires online
service operators collecting personal
information from a child to obtain
parental consent and post a privacy
notice on the web site. OTS seeks
comment on additional Federal rules
that may duplicate, overlap or conflict
with the proposal.
C. Executive Order 12866
OCC: The Comptroller of the Currency
has determined that this proposed rule,
if adopted as a final rule, does not
constitute a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ for the purposes of Executive
Order 12866. The rule follows closely
the requirements of title V, subtitle A of
the G–L–B Act. Since, the G–L–B Act
establishes the minimum requirements
for this activity, the OCC has little
discretion to propose regulatory options
that might significantly reduce costs or
other burdens. However, even absent
the requirements of the G–L–B Act, if
the OCC issued the rule under its own
authority, the rule would not constitute
a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Nevertheless, the OCC acknowledges
that the rule would impose costs on
national banks by requiring them to
make notifications and take other
actions impacting their day to day
operations. Therefore, the OCC invites
national banks and the public to provide
any cost estimates and related data that
they think would be useful to the
agency in evaluating the overall costs of
the rule. The OCC will review carefully
the comments and cost data that you
provide and will revisit the cost aspects
of the G–L–B Act as implemented by
this proposal in developing the final
rule.
OTS: OTS has determined that this
proposed rule, if adopted as a final rule,

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

would not constitute a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866. The rule follows
closely the requirements of title V,
subtitle A of the G–L–B Act. Since the
G–L–B Act establishes the minimum
requirements for this activity, OTS has
little discretion to propose regulatory
options that might significantly reduce
costs or other burdens.
Nevertheless, OTS acknowledges that
the rule would impose costs on the
thrift industry by requiring savings
associations to make notifications and
take other actions impacting their day to
day operations. Therefore, OTS invites
the thrift industry and the public to
provide any cost estimates and related
data that they think would be useful to
the agency in evaluating the overall
costs of the rule. OTS will review
carefully the comments and cost data
that you provide and will revisit the
cost aspects of the G–L–B Act as
implemented by this proposal in
developing the final rule.
D. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C.
1532 (Unfunded Mandates Act),
requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating any rule likely to result in
a Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year. If a budgetary impact
statement is required, section 205 of the
Unfunded Mandates Act also requires
the agency to identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives before promulgating the
rule. However, an agency is not required
to assess the effects of its regulatory
actions on the private sector to the
extent that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law. 2 U.S.C. 1531. Most of the
proposed rule’s provisions are already
mandated by the applicable provisions
in Title V of the G–L–B Act, which
would become effective and binding on
the private sector without a regulatory
promulgation. Therefore, the OCC and
OTS have determined that this proposed
regulation will not result in
expenditures by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year. Accordingly, the OCC
and OTS have not prepared a budgetary
impact statement or specifically
addressed the regulatory alternatives
considered.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00020

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

V. Solicitation of Comments on Use of
‘‘Plain Language’’
Section 722 of the G–L–B Act requires
the Federal banking agencies to use
‘‘plain language’’ in all proposed and
final rules published after January 1,
2000. We invite your comments on how
to make this proposed rule easier to
understand. For example:
• Have we organized the material to
suit your needs? If not, how could the
material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated? If not, how could the rule
be more clearly stated?
• Does the rule contain technical
language or jargon that isn’t clear? If not,
which language requires clarification?
For example, is the phrase ‘‘opt out’’
confusing to the average reader? Should
the Agencies require financial
institutions to use a different phrase in
their notices, such as ‘‘choose not to
have information shared’’?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the rule easier to
understand? If so, what changes to the
format would make the rule easier to
understand?
• Would more (but shorter) sections
be better? If so, which sections should
be changed?
• What else could we do to make the
rule easier to understand?
• The Agencies solicit comment on
whether the inclusion of examples in
the regulation is appropriate. Elevating
the fact patterns to safe harbors in the
rule may generate certain problems over
time. For example, changes in
technology or practices may ultimately
impact the fact patterns contained in the
examples and require changes to the
regulation. Are there alternative
methods to offer illustrative guidance of
the concepts portrayed by the examples?
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 40
Banks, banking, Consumer protection,
National banks, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 216
Banks, banking, Consumer protection,
Federal Reserve System, Foreign
banking, Holding companies,
Information, Privacy, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 332
Banks, banking, Privacy.
12 CFR Part 573
Consumer protection, Privacy,
Savings associations.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, the OCC proposes to amend
chapter I of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations by adding a new
part 40 to read as follows:
PART 40—PRIVACY OF CONSUMER
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Sec.
40.1
40.2
40.3
40.4

Purpose and scope.
Rule of construction.
Definitions.
Initial notice to consumers of privacy
policies and practices required.
40.5 Annual notice to customers required.
40.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies
and practices.
40.7 Limitation on disclosure of nonpublic
personal information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties.
40.8 Form and method of providing opt out
notice to consumers.
40.9 Exception to opt out requirements for
service providers and joint marketing.
40.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and
servicing transactions.
40.11 Other exceptions to notice and opt
out requirements.
40.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse of
information.
40.13 Limits on sharing of account number
information for marketing purposes.
40.14 Protection of Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
40.15 Relation to State laws.
40.16 Effective date; transition rule.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a; 15 U.S.C. 6801 et
seq.
§ 40.1

Purpose and scope.

(a) Purpose. This part governs the
treatment of nonpublic personal
information about consumers by the
financial institutions listed in paragraph
(b) of this section. This part:
(1) Requires a financial institution to
provide notice to consumers about its
privacy policies and practices;
(2) Describes the conditions under
which a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties; and
(3) Provides a method for consumers
to prevent a financial institution from
disclosing that information to certain
nonaffiliated third parties by ‘‘opting
out’’ of that disclosure, subject to the
exceptions in §§ 40.9, 40.10, and 40.11.
(b) Scope. The rules established by
this part apply only to nonpublic
personal information about individuals
who obtain financial products or
services for personal, family or

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

household purposes from the
institutions listed below. This part does
not apply to information about
companies or about individuals who
obtain financial products or services for
business purposes. This part applies to
entities for which the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency has
primary supervisory authority. They are
referred to in this part as ‘‘the bank.’’
These are national banks, District of
Columbia banks, Federal branches and
Federal agencies of foreign banks, and
any subsidiaries of such entities except
a broker or dealer that is registered
under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934, a registered investment adviser
(with respect to the investment advisory
activities of the adviser and activities
incidental to those investment advisory
activities), an investment company
registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, an insurance
company that is subject to supervision
by a State insurance regulator (with
respect to insurance activities of the
company and activities incidental to
those insurance activities), and an entity
that is subject to regulation by the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
§ 40.2

Rule of construction.

The examples in this part are not
exclusive. Compliance with an example,
to the extent applicable, constitutes
compliance with this part.
§ 40.3

Definitions.

As used in this part, unless the
context requires otherwise:
(a) Affiliate means any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b)(1) Clear and conspicuous means
that a notice is reasonably
understandable and designed to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in the
notice.
(2) Examples. (i) The bank makes it
notice reasonably understandable if, to
the extent applicable, the bank:
(A) Presents the information
contained in the notice in clear, concise
sentences, paragraphs and sections;
(B) Uses short explanatory sentences
and bullet lists, whenever possible;
(C) Uses definite, concrete, everyday
words and active voice, whenever
possible;
(D) Avoids multiple negatives;
(E) Avoids legal and highly technical
business terminology; and
(F) Avoids boilerplate explanations
that are imprecise and readily subject to
different interpretations.
(ii) The bank designs its notice to call
attention to the nature and significance

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00021

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8789

of the information contained in the
notice if, to the extent applicable, the
bank:
(A) Uses a plain-language heading to
call attention to the notice;
(B) Uses a typeface and type size that
are easy to read; and
(C) Provides wide margins and ample
line spacing.
(iii) If the bank provides a notice on
the same form as another notice or other
document, the bank designs its notice to
call attention to the nature and
significance of the information
contained in the notice if the bank uses:
(A) Larger type size(s), boldface or
italics in the text;
(B) Wider margins and line spacing in
the notice; or
(C) Shading or sidebars to highlight
the notice, whenever possible.
(c) Collect means to obtain
information that is organized or
retrievable on a personally identifiable
basis, irrespective of the source of the
underlying information.
(d) Company means any corporation,
limited liability company, business
trust, general or limited partnership,
association or similar organization.
(e) (1) Consumer means an individual
who obtains or has obtained a financial
product or service from the bank that is
to be used primarily for personal, family
or household purposes, and that
individual’s legal representative.
(2) Examples. (i) An individual who
applies to a bank for credit for personal,
family or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the credit is
extended.
(ii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to a
bank in order to obtain a determination
about whether he or she may qualify for
a loan to be used primarily for personal,
family, or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the loan is
extended by the bank or another
financial institution.
(iii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to a
bank in connection with obtaining or
seeking to obtain financial, investment
or economic advisory services is a
consumer regardless of whether the
bank establishes an ongoing advisory
relationship.
(iv) An individual who negotiates a
workout with a bank for a loan that the
bank owns is a consumer regardless of
whether the bank originally extended
the loan to the individual.
(v) An individual who has a loan from
a bank is the bank’s consumer even if
the bank:
(A) Hires an agent to collect on the
loan;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8790

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(B) Sells the rights to service the loan;
or
(C) Bought the loan from the financial
institution that originated the loan.
(vi) An individual is not a bank’s
consumer solely because the bank
processes information about the
individual on behalf of a financial
institution that extended the loan to the
individual.
(f) Consumer reporting agency has the
same meaning as in section 603(f) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(f)).
(g) Control of a company means:
(1) Ownership, control, or power to
vote 25 percent or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of voting
security of the company, directly or
indirectly, or acting through one or
more other persons;
(2) Control in any manner over the
election of a majority of the directors,
trustees or general partners (or
individuals exercising similar functions)
of the company; or
(3) The power to exercise, directly or
indirectly, a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the
company, as determined by the OCC.
(h) Customer means a consumer who
has a customer relationship with a bank.
(i) (1) Customer relationship means a
continuing relationship between a
consumer and a bank under which the
bank provides one or more financial
products or services to the consumer
that are to be used primarily for
personal, family, or household
purposes.
(2) Examples. (i) A consumer has a
continuing relationship with a bank if
the consumer:
(A) Has a deposit, credit, trust or
investment account with the bank;
(B) Purchases an insurance product
from the bank;
(C) Holds an investment product
through the bank;
(D) Enters into an agreement or
understanding with the bank whereby
the bank undertakes to arrange or broker
a home mortgage loan for the consumer;
(E) Has a loan that the bank services
where the bank owns the servicing
rights;
(F) Enters into a lease of personal
property with the bank; or
(G) Obtains financial, investment or
economic advisory services from the
bank for a fee.
(ii) A consumer does not, however,
have a continuing relationship with a
bank if:
(A) The consumer only obtains a
financial product or service in an
isolated transaction, such as
withdrawing cash from the bank’s
automated teller machine (ATM) or

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

purchasing a cashier’s check or money
order;
(B) The bank sells the consumer’s
loan and does not retain the rights to
service that loan; or
(C) The bank sells the consumer
airline tickets, travel insurance or
traveler’s checks in an isolated
transaction.
(j) (1) Financial institution means any
institution the business of which is
engaging in activities that are financial
in nature or incidental to such financial
activities as described in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial institution does not
include:
(i) Any person or entity with respect
to any financial activity that is subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.);
(ii) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation or any entity chartered and
operating under the Farm Credit Act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.); or
(iii) Institutions chartered by Congress
specifically to engage in securitizations,
secondary market sales (including sales
of servicing rights) or similar
transactions related to a transaction of a
consumer, as long as such institutions
do not sell or transfer nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party.
(k) (1) Financial product or service
means any product or service that a
financial holding company could offer
by engaging in an activity that is
financial in nature or incidental to such
a financial activity under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial service includes a bank’s
evaluation, brokerage or distribution of
information that the bank collects in
connection with a request or an
application from a consumer for a
financial product or service.
(l) Government regulator means:
(1) The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System;
(2) The Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency;
(3) The Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(4) The Director of the Office of Thrift
Supervision;
(5) The National Credit Union
Administration Board;
(6) The Securities and Exchange
Commission;
(7) The Secretary of the Treasury,
with respect to 31 U.S.C. Chapter 53,
Subchapter II (Records and Reports on
Monetary Instruments and Transactions)
and 12 U.S.C. Chapter 21 (Financial
Recordkeeping);

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00022

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(8) A State insurance authority, with
respect to any person domiciled in that
insurance authority’s State that is
engaged in providing insurance; and
(9) The Federal Trade Commission.
(m) (1) Nonaffiliated third party
means any person except:
(i) A bank’s affiliate; or
(ii) A person employed jointly by a
bank and any company that is not the
bank’s affiliate (but nonaffiliated third
party includes the other company that
jointly employs the person).
(2) Nonaffiliated third party includes
any company that is an affiliate by
virtue of the direct or indirect
ownership or control of the company by
the financial institution or any affiliate
of the financial institution in
conducting merchant banking or
investment banking activities of the type
described in section 4(k)(4)(H) or
insurance company investment
activities of the type described in
section 4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)
and (I)).
Alternative A
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include any list, description, or
other grouping of consumers (and
publicly available information
pertaining to them) that is derived
without using any personally
identifiable financial information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
any information consumers provide to
you on an application for a financial
product or service.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to a bank
to obtain a financial product or service
from the bank;
(ii) Resulting from any transaction
involving a financial product or service
between a bank and a consumer; or
(iii) The bank otherwise obtains about
a consumer in connection with
providing a financial product or service
to that consumer, other than publicly
available information.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(A) Information a consumer provides
to a bank on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of a bank’s customers or
has obtained a financial product or
service from the bank, unless that fact
is derived using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about a bank’s
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been the bank’s consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by the
bank or its agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p) (1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public that
is obtained from:
(i) Federal, State or local government
records;
(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
Alternative B
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include any:

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(i) Publicly available information,
except as provided in paragraph
(n)(1)(ii) of this section; or
(ii) List, description, or other grouping
of consumers (and publicly available
information pertaining to them) that is
derived without using any personally
identifiable financial information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
personally identifiable financial
information, such as account numbers.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to a bank
to obtain a financial product or service
from the bank;
(ii) About a consumer resulting from
any transaction involving a financial
product or service between the bank and
a consumer; or
(iii) The bank otherwise obtains about
a consumer in connection with
providing a financial product or service
to that consumer.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to a bank on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of the bank’s customers or
has obtained a financial product or
service from the bank, unless that fact
is derived using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about a bank’s
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been the bank’s consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by a
bank or its agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p) (1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public
from:
(i) Federal, State or local government
records;

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00023

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8791

(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
§ 40.4 Initial notice to consumers of
privacy policies and practices required.

(a) When initial notice is required. A
bank must provide a clear and
conspicuous notice that accurately
reflects the bank’s privacy policies and
practices to:
(1) An individual who becomes the
bank’s customer, prior to the time that
the bank establishes a customer
relationship, except as provided in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section; and
(2) A consumer, prior to the time that
a bank discloses any nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party, if the bank
makes such a disclosure other than as
authorized by §§ 40.10 and 40.11.
(b) When initial notice to a consumer
is not required. The bank is not required
to provide an initial notice to a
consumer under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section if:
(1) The bank does not disclose any
nonpublic personal information about
the consumer to any nonaffiliated third
party, other than as authorized by
§§ 40.10 and 40.11; and
(2) The bank does not have a customer
relationship with the consumer.
(c) When the bank establishes a
customer relationship—(1) General rule.
A bank establishes a customer
relationship at the time the bank and the
consumer enter into a continuing
relationship.
(2) Examples. The bank establishes a
customer relationship when the
consumer:
(i) Opens a credit card account with
the bank;
(ii) Executes the contract to open a
deposit account with the bank, obtains
credit from the bank, or purchases
insurance from the bank;
(iii) Agrees to obtain financial,
economic or investment advisory
services from the bank for a fee; or
(iv) Becomes the bank’s client for the
purpose of the bank providing credit
counseling or tax preparation services.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8792

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(d) How to provide notice—(1)
General rule. A bank must provide the
privacy notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section so that each consumer
can reasonably be expected to receive
actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form.
(2) Exceptions to allow subsequent
delivery of notice. The bank may
provide the initial notice required by
paragraph (a)(1) of this section within a
reasonable time after it establishes a
customer relationship if:
(i) The bank purchases a loan or
assumes a deposit liability from another
financial institution and the customer of
that loan or deposit account does not
have a choice about the bank’s purchase
or assumption; or
(ii) The bank and the consumer orally
agree to enter into a customer
relationship and the consumer agrees to
receive the notice thereafter.
(3) Oral description of notice
insufficient. The bank may not provide
the initial notice required by paragraph
(a) of this section solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, the bank’s privacy policies
and practices.
(4) Retention or accessibility of initial
notice for customers. For customers
only, the bank must provide the initial
notice required by paragraph (a)(1) of
this section so that it can be retained or
obtained at a later time by the customer,
in a written form or, if the customer
agrees, in electronic form.
(5) Examples. (i) A bank may
reasonably expect that a consumer will
receive actual notice of its privacy
policies and practices if the bank:
(A) Hand-delivers a printed copy of
the notice to the consumer;
(B) Mails a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
consumer;
(C) For the consumer who conducts
transactions electronically, posts the
notice on the electronic site and
requires the consumer to acknowledge
receipt of the notice as a necessary step
to obtaining a particular financial
product or service;
(D) For an isolated transaction with
the consumer, such as an ATM
transaction, posts the notice on the
ATM screen and requires the consumer
to acknowledge receipt of the notice as
a necessary step to obtaining the
particular financial product or service.
(ii) A bank may not, however,
reasonably expect that a consumer will
receive actual notice of the bank’s
privacy policies and practices if the
bank:
(A) Only posts a sign in its branch or
office or generally publishes

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

advertisements of its privacy policies
and practices;
(B) Sends the notice via electronic
mail to a consumer who obtains a
financial product or service from the
bank in person or through the mail and
who does not agree to receive the notice
electronically.
(iii) A bank provides the initial
privacy notice to the customer so that it
can be retained or obtained at a later
time if the bank:
(A) Hand-delivers a printed copy of
the notice to the customer;
(B) Mails a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
customer upon request of the customer;
or
(C) Maintains the notice on a web site
(or a link to another web site) for the
customer who obtains a financial
product or service electronically and
who agrees to receive the notice
electronically.
§ 40.5 Annual notice to customers
required.

(a) General rule. A bank must provide
a clear and conspicuous notice to
customers that accurately reflects the
bank’s privacy policies and practices
not less than annually during the
continuation of the customer
relationship. Annually means at least
once in any period of 12 consecutive
months during which that relationship
exists.
(b) How to provide notice. A bank
must provide the annual notice required
by paragraph (a) of this section to a
customer using a means permitted for
providing the initial notice to that
customer under § 40.4(d).
(c) (1) Termination of customer
relationship. A bank is not required to
provide an annual notice to a customer
with whom the bank no longer has a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. A bank no longer has a
continuing relationship with an
individual if:
(i) In the case of a deposit account, the
account is dormant under the bank’s
policies;
(ii) In the case of a closed-end loan,
the consumer pays the loan in full, the
bank charges off the loan, or the bank
sells the loan without retaining
servicing rights;
(iii) In the case of a credit card
relationship or other open-end credit
relationship, the bank no longer
provides any statements or notices to
the consumer concerning that
relationship or the bank sells the credit
card receivables without retaining
servicing rights; or
(iv) For other types of relationships,
the bank has not communicated with

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00024

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

the consumer about the relationship for
a period of 12 consecutive months,
other than to provide annual notices of
privacy policies and practices.
§ 40.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies and
practices.

(a) General rule. The initial and
annual notices that a bank provides
about its privacy policies and practices
under §§ 40.4 and 40.5 must include
each of the following items of
information:
(1) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about the bank’s
consumers that the bank collects;
(2) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about the bank’s
consumers that the bank discloses;
(3) The categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom the
bank discloses nonpublic personal
information about its consumers, other
than those parties to whom the bank
discloses information under §§ 40.10
and 40.11;
(4) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about the bank’s
former customers that it discloses and
the categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom the
bank discloses nonpublic personal
information about its former customers,
other than those parties to whom it
discloses information under §§ 40.10
and 40.11;
(5) If the bank discloses nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party under § 40.9 (and no other
exception applies to that disclosure), a
separate description of the categories of
information the bank discloses and the
categories of third parties with whom
the bank has contracted;
(6) An explanation of the right under
§ 40.8(a) of the consumer to opt out of
the disclosure of nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties, including the methods by which
the consumer may exercise that right;
(7) Any disclosures that the bank
makes under section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of
the Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(d)(2)(A)(iii)) (that is, notices
regarding the ability to opt out of
disclosures of information among
affiliates); and
(8) The bank’s policies and practices
with respect to protecting the
confidentiality, security, and integrity of
nonpublic personal information.
(b) Description of nonaffiliated third
parties subject to exceptions. If a bank
discloses nonpublic personal
information about a consumer to third
parties as authorized under §§ 40.10 and
40.11, the bank is not required to list
those exceptions in the initial or annual

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
privacy notices required by §§ 40.4 and
40.5. When describing the categories
with respect to those parties, the bank
is only required to state that it makes
disclosures to other nonaffiliated third
parties as permitted by law.
(c) Future disclosures. The bank’s
notice may include:
(1) Categories of nonpublic personal
information that the bank reserves the
right to disclose in the future, but does
not currently disclose; and
(2) Categories of affiliates or
nonaffiliated third parties to whom the
bank reserves the right in the future to
disclose, but to whom the bank does not
currently disclose, nonpublic personal
information.
(d) Examples—(1) Categories of
nonpublic personal information that the
bank collects. A bank adequately
categorizes the nonpublic personal
information it collects if it categorizes
the information according to the source
of the information, such as application
information, information about
transactions (such as information
regarding a deposit, loan, or credit card
account), and consumer reports.
(2) Categories of nonpublic personal
information the bank discloses. A bank
adequately categorizes nonpublic
personal information it discloses if the
bank categorizes the information
according to source, and provides
illustrative examples of the content of
the information. These might include
application information, such as assets
and income; identifying information,
such as name, address, and social
security number; and transaction
information, such as information about
account balance, payment history,
parties to the transaction, and credit
card usage; and information from
consumer reports, such as a consumer’s
creditworthiness and credit history. A
bank does not adequately categorize the
information that it discloses if it uses
only general terms, such as transaction
information about the consumer.
(3) Categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom the
bank discloses. A bank adequately
categorizes the affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom it
discloses nonpublic personal
information about consumers if the bank
identifies the types of businesses that
they engage in. Types of businesses may
be described by general terms only if the
bank uses illustrative examples of
significant lines of business. For
example, a bank may use the term
‘‘financial products or services’’ if the
bank includes appropriate examples of
significant lines of businesses, such as
consumer banking, mortgage lending,
life insurance, or securities brokerage.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

The bank also may categorize the
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties
to whom the bank discloses nonpublic
personal information about consumers
using more detailed categories.
(4) Simplified notices. If the bank does
not disclose, and does not intend to
disclose, nonpublic personal
information to affiliates or nonaffiliated
third parties, the bank may simply state
that fact, in addition to the information
the bank must provide under paragraphs
(a)(1), (a)(8), and (b) of this section.
(5) Confidentiality, security, and
integrity. A bank adequately describes
its policies and practices with respect to
protecting the confidentiality and
security of nonpublic personal
information if it explains who has
access to the information and the
circumstances under which the
information may be accessed. The bank
adequately describes its policies and
practices with respect to protecting the
integrity of nonpublic personal
information if it explains measures the
bank takes to protect against reasonably
anticipated threats or hazards. A bank is
not required to describe technical
information about the safeguards the
bank uses.

(a) (1) Conditions for disclosure.
Except as otherwise authorized in this
part, a bank may not, directly or through
any affiliate, disclose any nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party unless:
(i) The bank has provided to the
consumer an initial notice as required
under § 40.4;
(ii) The bank has provided to the
consumer an opt out notice as required
in § 40.8;
(iii) The bank has given the consumer
a reasonable opportunity, before the
time that the bank discloses the
information to the nonaffiliated third
party, to opt out of the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) Opt out definition. Opt out means
a direction by the consumer that the
bank not disclose nonpublic personal
information about that consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party, other than as
permitted by §§ 40.9, 40.10, and 40.11.
(3) Examples of reasonable
opportunity to opt out—(i) By mail. A
bank provides a consumer with whom
it has a customer relationship with a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if the
bank mails the notices required in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section to the
consumer and allows the consumer a
reasonable period of time, such as 30
days, to opt out.

PO 00000

Frm 00025

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(ii) Isolated transaction with a
consumer. For an isolated transaction,
such as the purchase of a cashier’s
check by a consumer, a bank provides
a reasonable opportunity to opt out if
the bank provides the consumer with
the required notices at the time of the
transaction and requests that the
consumer decide, as a necessary part of
the transaction, whether to opt out
before completing the transaction.
(b) Application of opt out to all
consumers and all nonpublic personal
information. (1) A bank must comply
with this section regardless of whether
the bank and the consumer have
established a customer relationship.
(2) Unless a bank complies with this
section, it may not, directly or through
any affiliate, disclose any nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
that the bank has collected, regardless of
whether it collected the information
before or after receiving the direction to
opt out from the consumer.
(c) Partial opt out. A bank may allow
a consumer to select certain nonpublic
personal information or certain
nonaffiliated third parties with respect
to which the consumer wishes to opt
out.
§ 40.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.

§ 40.7 Limitation on disclosure of
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.

Jkt 190000

8793

(a)(1) Form of opt out notice. A bank
must provide a clear and conspicuous
notice to each of its consumers that
accurately explains the right to opt out
under § 40.7(a)(1). The notice must
state:
(i) That the bank discloses or reserves
the right to disclose nonpublic personal
information about its consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party;
(ii) That the consumer has the right to
opt out of that disclosure; and
(iii) A reasonable means by which the
consumer may exercise the opt out
right.
(2) Examples. (i) A bank provides
adequate notice that the consumer can
opt out of the disclosure of nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party if the bank identifies all of
the categories of nonpublic personal
information that the bank discloses or
reserves the right to disclose to
nonaffiliated third parties as described
in § 40.6 and states that the consumer
can opt out of the disclosure of that
information.
(ii) A bank provides a reasonable
means of opting out if it:
(A) Designates check-off boxes in a
prominent position on the relevant
forms with the opt out notice;
(B) Includes a reply form together
with the opt out notice; or
(C) Provides an electronic means to
opt out, such as a form that can be sent

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8794

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

via electronic mail or a process at the
bank’s web site, if the consumer agrees
to the electronic delivery of information.
(iii) A bank does not provide a
reasonable means of opting out if the
only means of opting out is for the
consumer to write his or her own letter
to exercise that opt out right.
(b) How to provide opt out notice—(1)
Delivery of notice. A bank must provide
the opt out notice required by paragraph
(a) of this section in a manner so that
each consumer can reasonably be
expected to receive actual notice in
writing or, if the consumer agrees, in
electronic form. If the bank and the
consumer orally agree to enter into a
customer relationship, the bank may
provide the opt out notice required by
paragraph (a) of this section within a
reasonable time thereafter if the
consumer agrees.
(2) Oral description of opt out right
insufficient. A bank may not provide the
opt out notice solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, the right of the consumer to
opt out.
(3) Same form as initial notice
permitted. A bank may provide the opt
out notice together with or on the same
written or electronic form as the initial
notice the bank provides in accordance
with § 40.4.
(4) Initial notice required when opt
out notice delivered subsequent to
initial notice. If the bank provides the
opt out notice at a later time than
required for the initial notice in
accordance with § 40.4, the bank must
also include a copy of the initial notice
in writing or, if the consumer agrees, in
an electronic form with the opt out
notice.
(c) Notice of change in terms—(1)
General rule. Except as otherwise
authorized in this part, the bank must
not, directly or through any affiliate,
disclose any nonpublic personal
information about a consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party other than as
described in the initial notice that the
bank provided to the consumer under
§ 40.4, unless:
(i) The bank has provided to the
consumer a revised notice that
accurately describes the bank’s policies
and practices;
(ii) The bank has provided to the
consumer a new opt out notice;
(iii) The bank has given the consumer
a reasonable opportunity, before the
time that the bank discloses the
information to the nonaffiliated third
party, to opt out of the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) How to provide notice of change in
terms. A bank must provide the revised
notice of its policies and practices and

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

opt out notice to a consumer using the
means permitted for providing the
initial notice and opt out notice to that
consumer under § 40.4(d) and paragraph
(b) of this section, respectively.
(3) Examples—(i) Except as otherwise
permitted by §§ 40.9,40.10 and 40.11, a
change-in-terms notice is required if a
bank:
(A) Discloses a new category of
nonpublic personal information to any
nonaffiliated third party; or
(B) Discloses nonpublic personal
information to a new category of
nonaffiliated third party.
(ii) A change-in-terms notice is not
required if a bank discloses nonpublic
personal information to a new
nonaffiliated third party that is
adequately described by the bank’s prior
notice.
(d) Continuing right to opt out. A
consumer may exercise the right to opt
out at any time, and the bank receiving
the opt out direction must comply with
that direction as soon as reasonably
practicable.
(e) Duration of consumer’s opt out
direction. A consumer’s direction to opt
out under this section is effective until
revoked by the consumer in writing, or
if the consumer agrees, in electronic
form.
§ 40.9 Exception to opt out requirements
for service providers and joint marketing.

(a) General rule. The opt out
requirements in §§ 40.7 and 40.8 do not
apply when a bank provides nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party to perform
services for the bank or functions on the
bank’s behalf, if the bank:
(1) Provides the initial notice in
accordance with § 40.4; and
(2) Enters into a contractual
agreement with the third party that:
(i) Requires the third party to
maintain the confidentiality of the
information to at least the same extent
that the bank must maintain that
confidentiality under this part; and
(ii) Limits the third party’s use of
information the bank discloses solely to
the purposes for which the information
is disclosed or as otherwise permitted
by §§ 40.10 and 40.11 of this part.
(b) Service may include joint
marketing. The services performed for a
bank by a nonaffiliated third party
under paragraph (a) of this section may
include marketing of the bank’s own
products or services or marketing of
financial products or services offered
pursuant to joint agreements between
the bank and one or more financial
institutions.
(c) Definition of joint agreement. For
purposes of this section, joint agreement

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00026

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

means a written contract pursuant to
which a bank and one or more financial
institutions jointly offer, endorse, or
sponsor a financial product or service.
§ 40.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and servicing
transactions.

(a) Exceptions for processing
transactions at consumer’s request. The
requirements for initial notice in
§ 40.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 40.7 and
40.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 40.9 do not apply if the
bank discloses nonpublic personal
information:
(1) As necessary to effect, administer,
or enforce a transaction requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(2) To service or process a financial
product or service requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(3) To maintain or service the
consumer’s account with the bank, or
with another entity as part of a private
label credit card program or other
extension of credit on behalf of such
entity; or
(4) In connection with a proposed or
actual securitization, secondary market
sale (including sales of servicing rights)
or similar transaction related to a
transaction of the consumer.
(b) Necessary to effect, administer, or
enforce a transaction means that the
disclosure is:
(1) Required, or is one of the lawful
or appropriate methods, to enforce the
bank’s rights or the rights of other
persons engaged in carrying out the
financial transaction or providing the
product or service; or
(2) Required, or is a usual, appropriate
or acceptable method:
(i) To carry out the transaction or the
product or service business of which the
transaction is a part, and record, service
or maintain the consumer’s account in
the ordinary course of providing the
financial service or financial product;
(ii) To administer or service benefits
or claims relating to the transaction or
the product or service business of which
it is a part;
(iii) To provide a confirmation,
statement or other record of the
transaction, or information on the status
or value of the financial service or
financial product to the consumer or the
consumer’s agent or broker;
(iv) To accrue or recognize incentives
or bonuses associated with the
transaction that are provided by the
bank or any other party;
(v) To underwrite insurance at the
consumer’s request or for reinsurance
purposes, or for any of the following
purposes as they relate to a consumer’s
insurance: Account administration,

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
reporting, investigating, or preventing
fraud or material misrepresentation,
processing premium payments,
processing insurance claims,
administering insurance benefits
(including utilization review activities),
participating in research projects, or as
otherwise required or specifically
permitted by Federal or State law;
(vi) In connection with settling a
transaction, including:
(A) The authorization, billing,
processing, clearing, transferring,
reconciling or collection of amounts
charged, debited, or otherwise paid
using a debit, credit or other payment
card, check or account number, or by
other payment means;
(B) The transfer of receivables,
accounts or interests therein; or
(C) The audit of debit, credit or other
payment information.
§ 40.11 Other exceptions to notice and opt
out requirements.

(a) Exceptions to opt out
requirements. The requirements for
initial notice to consumers in
§ 40.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 40.7 and
40.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 40.9 do not apply when
a bank discloses nonpublic personal
information:
(1) With the consent or at the
direction of the consumer, provided that
the consumer has not revoked the
consent or direction;
(2) (i) To protect the confidentiality or
security of the bank’s records pertaining
to the consumer, service, product or
transaction;
(ii) To protect against or prevent
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, claims or other liability;
(iii) For required institutional risk
control or for resolving consumer
disputes or inquiries;
(iv) To persons holding a legal or
beneficial interest relating to the
consumer; or
(v) To persons acting in a fiduciary or
representative capacity on behalf of the
consumer;
(3) To provide information to
insurance rate advisory organizations,
guaranty funds or agencies, agencies
that are rating the bank, persons that are
assessing the bank’s compliance with
industry standards, and the bank’s
attorneys, accountants and auditors;
(4) To the extent specifically
permitted or required under other
provisions of law and in accordance
with the Right to Financial Privacy Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3401 et seq.), to law
enforcement agencies (including
government regulators), self-regulatory
organizations, or for an investigation on
a matter related to public safety;

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(5)(i) To a consumer reporting agency
in accordance with the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.);
or
(ii) From a consumer report reported
by a consumer reporting agency;
(6) In connection with a proposed or
actual sale, merger, transfer, or exchange
of all or a portion of a business or
operating unit if the disclosure of
nonpublic personal information
concerns solely consumers of such
business or unit; or
(7)(i) To comply with Federal, State or
local laws, rules and other applicable
legal requirements;
(ii) To comply with a properly
authorized civil, criminal or regulatory
investigation, or subpoena or summons
by Federal, State or local authorities; or
(iii) To respond to judicial process or
government regulatory authorities
having jurisdiction over the bank for
examination, compliance or other
purposes as authorized by law.
(b) Examples of consent and
revocation of consent. (1) A consumer
may specifically consent to a bank’s
disclosure to a nonaffiliated insurance
company of the fact that the consumer
has applied to the bank for a mortgage
so that the insurance company can offer
homeowner’s insurance to the
consumer.
(2) A consumer may revoke consent
by subsequently exercising the right to
opt out of future disclosures of
nonpublic personal information as
permitted under § 40.8(d).

(a) Limits on the bank’s redisclosure
and reuse. (1) Except as otherwise
provided in this part, if a bank receives
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer from a nonaffiliated financial
institution, the bank must not, directly
or through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
not affiliated with either the bank or the
other financial institution, unless the
disclosure would be lawful if the
financial institution made it directly to
such other person.
(2) A bank may use nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
that it receives from a nonaffiliated
financial institution in accordance with
an exception under §§ 40.9, 40.10, or
40.11 only for the purpose of that
exception.
(b) Limits on redisclosure and the
reuse by other persons. (1) Except as
otherwise provided in this part, if a
bank discloses nonpublic personal
information about a consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party, that party must
not, directly or through an affiliate,

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00027

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

disclose the information to any other
person that is a nonaffiliated third party
of both the bank and that party, unless
the disclosure would be lawful if the
bank made it directly to such other
person.
(2) A nonaffiliated third party may
use nonpublic personal information
about a consumer that it receives from
a bank in accordance with an exception
under §§ 40.9, 40.10, or 40.11 only for
the purpose of that exception.
§ 40.13 Limits on sharing of account
number information for marketing
purposes.

A bank must not, directly or through
an affiliate, disclose, other than to a
consumer reporting agency, an account
number or similar form of access
number or access code for a credit card
account, deposit account or transaction
account of a consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party for use in
telemarketing, direct mail marketing or
other marketing through electronic mail
to the consumer.
§ 40.14
Act.

Protection of Fair Credit Reporting

Nothing in this part shall be
construed to modify, limit, or supersede
the operation of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
and no inference shall be drawn on the
basis of the provisions of this part
regarding whether information is
transaction or experience information
under section 603 of that Act.
§ 40.15

§ 40.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse
of information.

8795

Relation to State laws.

(a) In general. This part shall not be
construed as superseding, altering, or
affecting any statute, regulation, order or
interpretation in effect in any State,
except to the extent that such State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is inconsistent with the
provisions of this part, and then only to
the extent of the inconsistency.
(b) Greater protection under State law.
For purposes of this section, a State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is not inconsistent with
the provisions of this part if the
protection such statute, regulation,
order or interpretation affords any
consumer is greater than the protection
provided under this part, as determined
by the Federal Trade Commission, after
consultation with the OCC, on the
Federal Trade Commission’s own
motion or upon the petition of any
interested party.
§ 40.16

Effective date; transition rule.

(a) Effective date. This part is effective
November 13, 2000.
(b) Notice requirement for consumers
who were customers on the effective

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8796

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

date. No later than 30 days after the
effective date of this part, a bank must
provide an initial notice, as required by
§ 40.4, to consumers who were the
bank’s customers on the effective date of
this part.
Dated: February 2, 2000.
John D. Hawke, Jr.,
Comptroller of the Currency.

Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, Title 12, Chapter II, of the
Code of Federal Regulations is proposed
to be amended by adding a new part 216
to read as follows:
PART 216—PRIVACY OF CONSUMER
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
(REGULATION P)
Sec.
216.1 Purpose and scope.
216.2 Rule of construction.
216.3 Definitions.
216.4 Initial notice to consumers of privacy
policies and practices required.
216.5 Annual notice to customers required.
216.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies
and practices.
216.7 Limitation on disclosure of nonpublic
personal information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties.
216.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.
216.9 Exception to opt out requirements for
service providers and joint marketing.
216.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and
servicing transactions.
216.11 Other exceptions to notice and opt
out requirements.
216.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse of
information.
216.13 Limits on sharing of account number
information for marketing purposes.
216.14 Protection of Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
216.15 Relation to State laws.
216.16 Effective date; transition rule.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 6801 et seq.
§ 216.1

Purpose and scope.

(a) Purpose. This part governs the
treatment of nonpublic personal
information about consumers by the
financial institutions listed in paragraph
(b) of this section. This part:
(1) Requires a financial institution to
provide notice to consumers about its
privacy policies and practices;
(2) Describes the conditions under
which a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties; and

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(3) Provides a method for consumers
to prevent a financial institution from
disclosing that information to most
nonaffiliated third parties by ‘‘opting
out’’ of that disclosure, subject to the
exceptions in §§ 216.9, 216.10, and
216.11.
(b) Scope. The rules established by
this part apply only to nonpublic
personal information about individuals
who obtain financial products or
services for personal, family or
household purposes from the
institutions listed below. This part does
not apply to information about
companies or about individuals who
obtain financial products or services for
business purposes. This part applies to
entities for which the Board has primary
supervisory authority. They are referred
to in this part as ‘‘you.’’ These are: State
member banks, bank holding companies
and certain of their nonbank
subsidiaries or affiliates, State
uninsured branches and agencies of
foreign banks, commercial lending
companies owned or controlled by
foreign banks, and Edge and Agreement
corporations.
§ 216.2

Rule of construction.

The examples in this part are not
exclusive. Compliance with an example,
to the extent applicable, constitutes
compliance with this part.
§ 216.3

Definitions.

As used in this part, unless the
context requires otherwise:
(a) Affiliate means any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) (1) Clear and conspicuous means
that a notice is reasonably
understandable and designed to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in the
notice.
(2) Examples. (i) You make your
notice reasonably understandable if, to
the extent applicable, you:
(A) Present the information contained
in the notice in clear, concise sentences,
paragraphs and sections;
(B) Use short explanatory sentences
and bullet lists, whenever possible;
(C) Use definite, concrete, everyday
words and active voice, whenever
possible;
(D) Avoid multiple negatives;
(E) Avoid legal and highly technical
business terminology; and
(F) Avoid boilerplate explanations
that are imprecise and readily subject to
different interpretations.
(ii) You design your notice to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in it if, to
the extent applicable, you:

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00028

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(A) Use a plain-language heading to
call attention to the notice;
(B) Use a typeface and type size that
are easy to read; and
(C) Provide wide margins and ample
line spacing.
(iii) If you provide a notice on the
same form as another notice or other
document, you design your notice to
call attention to the nature and
significance of the information
contained in the notice if you use:
(A) Larger type size(s), boldface or
italics in the text;
(B) Wider margins and line spacing in
the notice; or
(C) Shading or sidebars to highlight
the notice, whenever possible.
(c) Collect means to obtain
information that is organized or
retrievable on a personally identifiable
basis, irrespective of the source of the
underlying information.
(d) Company means any corporation,
limited liability company, business
trust, general or limited partnership,
association or similar organization.
(e)(1) Consumer means an individual
who obtains or has obtained a financial
product or service from you that is to be
used primarily for personal, family or
household purposes, and that
individual’s legal representative.
(2) Examples. (i) An individual who
applies to you for credit for personal,
family or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the credit is
extended.
(ii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in order to obtain a determination about
whether he or she may qualify for a loan
to be used primarily for personal, family
or household purposes is a consumer of
a financial service, regardless of
whether the loan is extended by you or
another financial institution.
(iii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in connection with obtaining or seeking
to obtain financial, investment or
economic advisory services is a
consumer regardless of whether you
establish an ongoing advisory
relationship.
(iv) An individual who negotiates a
workout with you for a loan that you
own is a consumer regardless of
whether you originally extended the
loan to the individual.
(v) An individual who has a loan from
you is your consumer even if you:
(A) Hire an agent to collect on the
loan;
(B) Sell the rights to service the loan;
or
(C) Bought the loan from the financial
institution that originated the loan.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(vi) An individual is not your
consumer solely because you process
information about the individual on
behalf of a financial institution that
extended the loan to the individual.
(f) Consumer reporting agency has the
same meaning as in section 603(f) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(f)).
(g) Control of a company means:
(1) Ownership, control, or power to
vote 25 percent or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of voting
security of the company, directly or
indirectly, or acting through one or
more other persons;
(2) Control in any manner over the
election of a majority of the directors,
trustees or general partners (or
individuals exercising similar functions)
of the company; or
(3) The power to exercise, directly or
indirectly, a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the
company, as determined by the Board.
(h) Customer means a consumer who
has a customer relationship with you.
(i)(1) Customer relationship means a
continuing relationship between a
consumer and you under which you
provide one or more financial products
or services to the consumer that are to
be used primarily for personal, family or
household purposes.
(2) Examples. (i) A consumer has a
continuing relationship with you if the
consumer:
(A) Has a deposit, credit, trust or
investment account with you;
(B) Purchases an insurance product
from you;
(C) Holds an investment product
through you;
(D) Enters into an agreement or
understanding with you whereby you
undertake to arrange or broker a home
mortgage loan for the consumer;
(E) Has a loan that you service where
you own the servicing rights;
(F) Enters into a lease of personal
property with you; or
(G) Obtains financial, investment or
economic advisory services from you for
a fee.
(ii) A consumer does not, however,
have a continuing relationship with you
if:
(A) The consumer only obtains a
financial product or service in an
isolated transaction, such as
withdrawing cash from your ATM or
purchasing a cashier’s check or money
order;
(B) You sell the consumer’s loan and
do not retain the rights to service that
loan; or
(C) You sell the consumer airline
tickets, travel insurance or traveler’s
checks in an isolated transaction.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(j) (1) Financial institution means any
institution the business of which is
engaging in activities that are financial
in nature or incidental to such financial
activities as described in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial institution does not
include:
(i) Any person or entity with respect
to any financial activity that is subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.);
(ii) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation or any entity chartered and
operating under the Farm Credit Act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.); or
(iii) Institutions chartered by Congress
specifically to engage in securitizations,
secondary market sales (including sales
of servicing rights) or similar
transactions related to a transaction of a
consumer, as long as such institutions
do not sell or transfer nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party.
(k) (1) Financial product or service
means any product or service that a
financial holding company could offer
by engaging in an activity that is
financial in nature or incidental to such
a financial activity under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial service includes your
evaluation, brokerage or distribution of
information that you collect in
connection with a request or an
application from a consumer for a
financial product or service.
(l) Government regulator means:
(1) The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System;
(2) The Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency;
(3) The Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(4) The Director of the Office of Thrift
Supervision;
(5) The National Credit Union
Administration Board;
(6) The Securities and Exchange
Commission;
(7) The Secretary of the Treasury,
with respect to 31 U.S.C. Chapter 53,
Subchapter II (Records and Reports on
Monetary Instruments and Transactions)
and 12 U.S.C. Chapter 21 (Financial
Recordkeeping);
(8) A State insurance authority, with
respect to any person domiciled in that
insurance authority’s State that is
engaged in providing insurance; and
(9) The Federal Trade Commission.
(m) (1) Nonaffiliated third party
means any person except:
(i) Your affiliate; or

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00029

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8797

(ii) A person employed jointly by you
and any company that is not your
affiliate (but nonaffiliated third party
includes the other company that jointly
employs the person).
(2) Nonaffiliated third party includes
any company that is an affiliate by
virtue of the direct or indirect
ownership or control of the company by
the financial institution or any affiliate
of the financial institution in
conducting merchant banking or
investment banking activities of the type
described in section 4(k)(4)(H) or
insurance company investment
activities of the type described in
section 4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)
and (I)).
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include:
(i) Publicly available information,
except as provided in paragraph
(n)(1)(ii) of this section; or
(ii) Any list, description, or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived without using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
personally identifiable financial
information, such as account numbers.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to you to
obtain a financial product or service
from you;
(ii) About a consumer resulting from
any transaction involving a financial
product or service between you and a
consumer; or
(iii) You otherwise obtain about a
consumer in connection with providing
a financial product or service to that
consumer.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to you on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8798

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of your customers or has
obtained a financial product or service
from you, unless that fact is derived
using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about your
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been your consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by you
or your agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p) (1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public
from:
(i) Federal, State or local government
records;
(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
(q) You means:
(1) A State member bank, as defined
in 12 CFR 208.3(g) and its subsidiaries;
(2) A bank holding company, as
defined in 12 CFR 225.2(c);
(3) A subsidiary (as defined in 12 CFR
225.2(o)) or affiliate of a bank holding
company, except for a:
(i) National bank or a State bank that
is not a member of the Federal Reserve
System;
(ii) Broker, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(4);
(iii) Dealer, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(5);
(iv) Person, to the extent that person
is engaged in the business of insurance
in a State as principal or agent and
required to be licensed by the
appropriate State insurance authority;

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

(v) Investment company, as defined in
15 U.S.C. 80a–3; or
(vi) Investment adviser, as defined in
15 U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11);
(4) A State agency or State branch of
a foreign bank, as those terms are
defined in 12 U.S.C. 3101(b)(11) and
(12), the deposits of which agency or
branch are not insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(5) A commercial lending company,
as defined in 12 CFR 211.21(f), that is
owned or controlled by a foreign bank,
as defined in 12 CFR 211.21(m); or
(6) A corporation organized under
section 25A of the Federal Reserve Act
(12 U.S.C. 611–631) or a corporation
having an agreement or undertaking
with the Board under section 25 of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601–
604a).
§ 216.4 Initial notice to consumers of
privacy policies and practices required.

(a) When initial notice is required.
You must provide a clear and
conspicuous notice that accurately
reflects your privacy policies and
practices to:
(1) An individual who becomes your
customer, prior to the time that you
establish a customer relationship,
except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)
of this section; and
(2) A consumer, prior to the time that
you disclose any nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party, if you make
such a disclosure other than as
authorized by §§ 216.10 and 216.11.
(b) When initial notice to a consumer
is not required. You are not required to
provide an initial notice to a consumer
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section if:
(1) You do not disclose any nonpublic
personal information about the
consumer to any nonaffiliated third
party, other than as authorized by
§§ 216.10 and 216.11; and
(2) You do not have a customer
relationship with the consumer.
(c) When you establish a customer
relationship—(1) General rule. You
establish a customer relationship at the
time you and the consumer enter into a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You establish a
customer relationship when the
consumer:
(i) Opens a credit card account with
you;
(ii) Executes the contract to open a
deposit account with you, obtains credit
from you, or purchases insurance from
you;
(iii) Agrees to obtain financial,
economic or investment advisory
services from you for a fee;

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00030

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(iv) Becomes your client for the
purpose of your providing credit
counseling or tax preparation services.
(d) How to provide notice—(1)
General rule. You must provide the
privacy notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section so that each consumer
can reasonably be expected to receive
actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form.
(2) Exceptions to allow subsequent
delivery of notice. You may provide the
initial notice required by paragraph
(a)(1) of this section within a reasonable
time after you establish a customer
relationship if:
(i) You purchase a loan or assume a
deposit liability from another financial
institution and the customer of that loan
or deposit account does not have a
choice about your purchase or
assumption; or
(ii) You and the consumer orally agree
to enter into a customer relationship
and the consumer agrees to receive the
notice thereafter.
(3) Oral description of notice
insufficient. You may not provide the
initial notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, your privacy policies and
practices.
(4) Retention or accessibility of initial
notice for customers. For customers
only, you must provide the initial notice
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section so that it can be retained or
obtained at a later time by the customer,
in a written form or, if the customer
agrees, in electronic form.
(5) Examples. (i) You may reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the consumer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
consumer;
(C) For the consumer who conducts
transactions electronically, post the
notice on the electronic site and require
the consumer to acknowledge receipt of
the notice as a necessary step to
obtaining a particular financial product
or service;
(D) For an isolated transaction with
the consumer, such as an ATM
transaction, post the notice on the ATM
screen and require the consumer to
acknowledge receipt of the notice as a
necessary step to obtaining the
particular financial product or service.
(ii) You may not, however, reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(A) Only post a sign in your branch
or office or generally publish
advertisements of your privacy policies
and practices;
(B) Send the notice via electronic mail
to a consumer who obtains a financial
product or service with you in person or
through the mail and who does not
agree to receive the notice
electronically.
(iii) You provide the initial privacy
notice to the customer so that it can be
retained or obtained at a later time if
you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the customer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
customer upon request of the customer;
(C) Maintain the notice on a web site
(or a link to another web site) for the
customer who obtains a financial
product or service electronically and
who agrees to receive the notice
electronically.
§ 216.5 Annual notice to customers
required.

(a) General rule. You must provide a
clear and conspicuous notice to
customers that accurately reflects your
privacy policies and practices not less
than annually during the continuation
of the customer relationship. Annually
means at least once in any period of 12
consecutive months during which that
relationship exists.
(b) How to provide notice. You must
provide the annual notice required by
paragraph (a) of this section to a
customer using a means permitted for
providing the initial notice to that
customer under § 216.4(d).
(c)(1) Termination of customer
relationship. You are not required to
provide an annual notice to a customer
with whom you no longer have a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You no longer have a
continuing relationship with an
individual if:
(i) In the case of a deposit account, the
account is dormant under the bank’s
policies;
(ii) In the case of a closed-end loan,
the consumer pays the loan in full, you
charge off the loan, or you sell the loan
without retaining servicing rights;
(iii) In the case of a credit card
relationship or other open-end credit
relationship, you no longer provide any
statements or notices to the consumer
concerning that relationship or you sell
the credit card receivables without
retaining servicing rights; or
(iv) For other types of relationships,
you have not communicated with the
consumer about the relationship for a
period of 12 consecutive months, other

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

than to provide annual notices of
privacy policies and practices.
§ 216.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies and
practices.

(a) General rule. The initial and
annual notices that you provide about
your privacy policies and practices
under §§ 216.4 and 216.5 must include
each of the following items of
information:
(1) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you collect;
(2) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you disclose;
(3) The categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about your consumers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 216.10 and 216.11;
(4) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your former
customers that you disclose and the
categories of affiliates and nonaffiliated
third parties to whom you disclose
nonpublic personal information about
your former customers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 216.10 and 216.11;
(5) If you disclose nonpublic personal
information to a nonaffiliated third
party under § 216.9 (and no other
exception applies to that disclosure), a
separate description of the categories of
information you disclose and the
categories of third parties with whom
you have contracted;
(6) An explanation of the right under
§ 216.8(a) of the consumer to opt out of
the disclosure of nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties, including the methods by which
the consumer may exercise that right;
(7) Any disclosures that you make
under section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(d)(2)(A)(iii)) (that is, notices
regarding the ability to opt out of
disclosures of information among
affiliates); and
(8) Your policies and practices with
respect to protecting the confidentiality,
security and integrity of nonpublic
personal information.
(b) Description of nonaffiliated third
parties subject to exceptions. If you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to third parties as
authorized under §§ 216.10 and 216.11,
you are not required to list those
exceptions in the initial or annual
privacy notices required by §§ 216.4 and
216.5. When describing the categories
with respect to those parties, you are
only required to state that you make

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00031

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8799

disclosures to other nonaffiliated third
parties as permitted by law.
(c) Future disclosures. Your notice
may include:
(1) Categories of nonpublic personal
information that you reserve the right to
disclose in the future, but do not
currently disclose; and
(2) Categories of affiliates or
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
reserve the right in the future to
disclose, but to whom you do not
currently disclose, nonpublic personal
information.
(d) Examples—(1) Categories of
nonpublic personal information that
you collect. You adequately categorize
the nonpublic personal information you
collect if you categorize it according to
the source of the information, such as
application information, information
about transactions (such as information
regarding your deposit, loan, or credit
card account), and consumer reports.
(2) Categories of nonpublic personal
information you disclose. You
adequately categorize nonpublic
personal information you disclose if you
categorize it according to source, and
provide a few illustrative examples of
the content of the information. These
might include application information,
such as assets and income; identifying
information, such as name, address, and
social security number; and transaction
information, such as information about
account balance, payment history,
parties to the transaction, and credit
card usage; and information from
consumer reports, such as a consumer’s
creditworthiness and credit history. You
do not adequately categorize the
information that you disclose if you use
only general terms, such as transaction
information about the consumer.
(3) Categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose. You adequately categorize the
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties
to whom you disclose nonpublic
personal information about consumers if
you identify the types of businesses that
they engage in. Types of businesses may
be described by general terms only if
you use a few illustrative examples of
significant lines of business. For
example, you may use the term financial
products or services if you include
appropriate examples of significant
lines of businesses, such as consumer
banking, mortgage lending, life
insurance or securities brokerage. You
also may categorize the affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers using more detailed
categories.
(4) Simplified notices. If you do not
disclose, and do not intend to disclose,

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8800

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

nonpublic personal information to
affiliates or nonaffiliated third parties,
you may simply state that fact, in
addition to the information you must
provide under paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(8),
and (b) of this section.
(5) Confidentiality, security and
integrity. You describe your policies and
practices with respect to protecting the
confidentiality and security of
nonpublic personal information if you
explain who has access to the
information and the circumstances
under which the information may be
accessed. You describe your policies
and practices with respect to protecting
the integrity of nonpublic personal
information if you explain measures you
take to protect against reasonably
anticipated threats or hazards. You are
not required to describe technical
information about the safeguards you
use.

as a necessary part of the transaction,
whether to opt out before completing
the transaction.
(b) Application of opt out to all
consumers and all nonpublic personal
information. (1) You must comply with
this section, regardless of whether you
and the consumer have established a
customer relationship.
(2) Unless you comply with this
section, you may not, directly or
through any affiliate, disclose any
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer that you have collected,
regardless of whether you collected it
before or after receiving the direction to
opt out from the consumer.
(c) Partial opt out. You may allow a
consumer to select certain nonpublic
personal information or certain
nonaffiliated third parties with respect
to which the consumer wishes to opt
out.

§ 216.7 Limitation on disclosure of
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.

§ 216.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.

(a)(1) Conditions for disclosure.
Except as otherwise authorized in this
part, you may not, directly or through
any affiliate, disclose any nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer an initial notice as required
under § 216.4;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer an opt out notice as required
in § 216.8;
(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) Opt out definition. Opt out means
a direction by the consumer that you not
disclose nonpublic personal information
about that consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party, other than as permitted by
§§ 216.9, 216.10 and 216.11.
(3) Examples of reasonable
opportunity to opt out—(i) By mail. You
provide a consumer with whom you
have a customer relationship with a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
mail the notices required in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section to the consumer
and allow the consumer a reasonable
period of time, such as 30 days, to opt
out.
(ii) Isolated transaction with
consumer. For an isolated transaction,
such as the purchase of a cashier’s
check by a consumer, you provide a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
provide the consumer with the required
notices at the time of the transaction
and request that the consumer decide,

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(a)(1) Form of opt out notice. You
must provide a clear and conspicuous
notice to each of your consumers that
accurately explains the right to opt out
under § 216.7(a)(1). The notice must
state:
(i) That you disclose or reserve the
right to disclose nonpublic personal
information about your consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party;
(ii) That the consumer has the right to
opt out of that disclosure; and
(iii) A reasonable means by which the
consumer may exercise the opt out
right.
(2) Examples. (i) You provide
adequate notice that the consumer can
opt out of the disclosure of nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party if you identify all of the
categories of nonpublic personal
information that you disclose or reserve
the right to disclose to nonaffiliated
third parties as described in § 216.6 and
state that the consumer can opt out of
the disclosure of that information.
(ii) You provide a reasonable means to
exercise an opt out right if you:
(A) Designate check-off boxes in a
prominent position on the relevant
forms with the opt out notice;
(B) Include a reply form together with
the opt out notice; or
(C) Provide an electronic means to opt
out, such as a form that can be sent via
electronic mail or a process at your web
site, if the consumer agrees to the
electronic delivery of information.
(iii) You do not provide a reasonable
means of opting out if the only means
of opting out is for the consumer to
write his or her own letter to exercise
that opt out right.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00032

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(b) How to provide opt out notice—(1)
Delivery of notice. You must provide the
opt out notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section in a manner so that each
consumer can reasonably be expected to
receive actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form. If
you and the consumer orally agree to
enter into a customer relationship, you
may provide the opt out notice required
by paragraph (a) of this section within
a reasonable time thereafter if the
consumer agrees.
(2) Oral description of opt out right
insufficient. You may not provide the
opt out notice solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, the right of the consumer to
opt out.
(3) Same form as initial notice
permitted. You may provide the opt out
notice together with or on the same
written or electronic form as the initial
notice you provide in accordance with
§ 216.4.
(4) Initial notice required when opt
out notice delivered subsequent to
initial notice. If you provide the opt out
notice at a later time than required for
the initial notice in accordance with
§ 216.4, you must also include a copy of
the initial notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in an electronic form
with the opt out notice.
(c) Notice of change in terms—(1)
General rule. Except as otherwise
authorized in this part, you must not,
directly or through any affiliate, disclose
any nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party other than as described in
the initial notice that you provided to
the consumer under § 216.4, unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer a revised notice that
accurately describes your policies and
practices;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer a new opt out notice;
(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) How to provide notice of change in
terms. You must provide the revised
notice of your policies and practices and
opt out notice to a consumer using the
means permitted for providing the
initial notice and opt out notice to that
consumer under § 216.4(d) and
paragraph (b) of this section,
respectively.
(3) Examples. (i) Except as otherwise
permitted by §§ 216.9, 216.10 and
216.11, a change-in-terms notice is
required if you:

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(A) Disclose a new category of
nonpublic personal information to any
nonaffiliated third party; or
(B) Disclose nonpublic personal
information to a new category of
nonaffiliated third party.
(ii) A change-in-terms notice is not
required if you disclose nonpublic
personal information to a new
nonaffiliated third party that is
adequately described by your prior
notice.
(d) Continuing right to opt out. A
consumer may exercise the right to opt
out at any time, and you must comply
with the consumer’s direction as soon as
reasonably practicable.
(e) Duration of consumer’s opt out
direction. A consumer’s direction to opt
out under this section is effective until
revoked by the consumer in writing, or
if the consumer agrees, in electronic
form.
§ 216.9 Exception to opt out requirements
for service providers and joint marketing.

(a) General rule. The opt out
requirements in §§ 216.7 and 216.8 do
not apply when you provide nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party to perform
services for you or functions on your
behalf, if you:
(1) Provide the initial notice in
accordance with § 216.4; and
(2) Enter into a contractual agreement
with the third party that:
(i) Requires the third party to
maintain the confidentiality of the
information to at least the same extent
that you must maintain that
confidentiality under this part; and
(ii) Limits the third party’s use of
information you disclose solely to the
purposes for which the information is
disclosed or as otherwise permitted by
§§ 216.10 and 216.11 of this part.
(b) Service may include joint
marketing. The services performed for
you by a nonaffiliated third party under
paragraph (a) of this section may
include marketing of your own products
or services or marketing of financial
products or services offered pursuant to
joint agreements between you and one
or more financial institutions.
(c) Definition of joint agreement. For
purposes of this section, joint agreement
means a written contract pursuant to
which you and one or more financial
institutions jointly offer, endorse, or
sponsor a financial product or service.
§ 216.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and servicing
transactions.

(a) Exceptions for processing
transactions at consumer’s request. The
requirements for initial notice in

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

§ 216.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 216.7 and
216.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 216.9 do not apply if you
disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) As necessary to effect, administer,
or enforce a transaction requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(2) To service or process a financial
product or service requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(3) To maintain or service the
consumer’s account with you, or with
another entity as part of a private label
credit card program or other extension
of credit on behalf of such entity; or
(4) In connection with a proposed or
actual securitization, secondary market
sale (including sales of servicing rights)
or similar transaction related to a
transaction of the consumer.
(b) Necessary to effect, administer, or
enforce a transaction means that the
disclosure is:
(1) Required, or is one of the lawful
or appropriate methods, to enforce your
rights or the rights of other persons
engaged in carrying out the financial
transaction or providing the product or
service; or
(2) Required, or is a usual, appropriate
or acceptable method:
(i) To carry out the transaction or the
product or service business of which the
transaction is a part, and record, service
or maintain the consumer’s account in
the ordinary course of providing the
financial service or financial product;
(ii) To administer or service benefits
or claims relating to the transaction or
the product or service business of which
it is a part;
(iii) To provide a confirmation,
statement or other record of the
transaction, or information on the status
or value of the financial service or
financial product to the consumer or the
consumer’s agent or broker;
(iv) To accrue or recognize incentives
or bonuses associated with the
transaction that are provided by you or
any other party;
(v) To underwrite insurance at the
consumer’s request or for reinsurance
purposes, or for any of the following
purposes as they relate to a consumer’s
insurance: account administration,
reporting, investigating, or preventing
fraud or material misrepresentation,
processing premium payments,
processing insurance claims,
administering insurance benefits
(including utilization review activities),
participating in research projects, or as
otherwise required or specifically
permitted by Federal or State law;
(vi) In connection with settling a
transaction, including:

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00033

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8801

(A) The authorization, billing,
processing, clearing, transferring,
reconciling or collection of amounts
charged, debited, or otherwise paid
using a debit, credit or other payment
card, check or account number, or by
other payment means;
(B) The transfer of receivables,
accounts or interests therein; or
(C) The audit of debit, credit or other
payment information.
§ 216.11 Other exceptions to notice and
opt out requirements.

(a) Exceptions to opt out
requirements. The requirements for
initial notice to consumers in
§ 216.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 216.7 and
216.8, and service providers and joint
marketing in § 216.9 do not apply when
you disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) With the consent or at the
direction of the consumer, provided that
the consumer has not revoked the
consent or direction;
(2) (i) To protect the confidentiality or
security of your records pertaining to
the consumer, service, product or
transaction;
(ii) To protect against or prevent
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, claims or other liability;
(iii) For required institutional risk
control or for resolving consumer
disputes or inquiries;
(iv) To persons holding a legal or
beneficial interest relating to the
consumer; or
(v) To persons acting in a fiduciary or
representative capacity on behalf of the
consumer;
(3) To provide information to
insurance rate advisory organizations,
guaranty funds or agencies, agencies
that are rating you, persons that are
assessing your compliance with
industry standards, and your attorneys,
accountants and auditors;
(4) To the extent specifically
permitted or required under other
provisions of law and in accordance
with the Right to Financial Privacy Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3401 et seq.), to law
enforcement agencies (including
government regulators), self-regulatory
organizations, or for an investigation on
a matter related to public safety;
(5) (i) To a consumer reporting agency
in accordance with the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
or
(ii) From a consumer report reported
by a consumer reporting agency;
(6) In connection with a proposed or
actual sale, merger, transfer, or exchange
of all or a portion of a business or
operating unit if the disclosure of
nonpublic personal information

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

8802

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

concerns solely consumers of such
business or unit; or
(7) (i) To comply with Federal, State
or local laws, rules and other applicable
legal requirements;
(ii) To comply with a properly
authorized civil, criminal or regulatory
investigation, or subpoena or summons
by Federal, State or local authorities; or
(iii) To respond to judicial process or
government regulatory authorities
having jurisdiction over you for
examination, compliance or other
purposes as authorized by law.
(b) Examples of consent and
revocation of consent. (1) A consumer
may specifically consent to your
disclosure to a nonaffiliated insurance
company of the fact that the consumer
has applied to you for a mortgage so that
the insurance company can offer
homeowner’s insurance to the
consumer.
(2) A consumer may revoke consent
by subsequently exercising the right to
opt out of future disclosures of
nonpublic personal information as
permitted under § 216.8(d).
§ 216.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse
of information.

(a) Limits on your redisclosure and
reuse. (1) Except as otherwise provided
in this part, if you receive nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
from a nonaffiliated financial
institution, you must not, directly or
through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
not affiliated with either the financial
institution or you, unless the disclosure
would be lawful if the financial
institution made it directly to such other
person.
(2) You may use nonpublic personal
information about a consumer that you
receive from a nonaffiliated financial
institution in accordance with an
exception under §§ 216.9, 216.10 or
216.11 only for the purpose of that
exception.
(b) Limits on redisclosure and the
reuse by other persons. (1) Except as
otherwise provided in this part, if you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party, that party must not, directly
or through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
a nonaffiliated third party of both you
and that party, unless the disclosure
would be lawful if you made it directly
to such other person.
(2) A nonaffiliated third party may
use nonpublic personal information
about a consumer that it receives from
you in accordance with an exception
under §§ 216.9, 216.10 or 216.11 only
for the purpose of that exception.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

§ 216.13 Limits on sharing of account
number information for marketing
purposes.

You must not, directly or through an
affiliate, disclose, other than to a
consumer reporting agency, an account
number or similar form of access
number or access code for a credit card
account, deposit account or transaction
account of a consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party for use in
telemarketing, direct mail marketing or
other marketing through electronic mail
to the consumer.
§ 216.14 Protection of Fair Credit
Reporting Act.

Nothing in this part shall be
construed to modify, limit, or supersede
the operation of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
and no inference shall be drawn on the
basis of the provisions of this part
regarding whether information is
transaction or experience information
under section 603 of that Act.
§ 216.15

Relation to State laws.

(a) In general. This part shall not be
construed as superseding, altering, or
affecting any statute, regulation, order or
interpretation in effect in any State,
except to the extent that such State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is inconsistent with the
provisions of this part, and then only to
the extent of the inconsistency.
(b) Greater protection under State law.
For purposes of this section, a State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is not inconsistent with
the provisions of this part if the
protection such statute, regulation,
order or interpretation affords any
consumer is greater than the protection
provided under this part, as determined
by the Federal Trade Commission, after
consultation with the Board, on the
Federal Trade Commission’s own
motion or upon the petition of any
interested party.
§ 216.16

Effective date; transition rule.

(a) Effective date. This part is effective
November 13, 2000.
(b) Notice requirement for consumers
who were your customers on the
effective date. No later than thirty days
after the effective date of this part, you
must provide an initial notice, as
required by § 216.4, to consumers who
were your customers on the effective
date of this part.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00034

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, February 10, 2000.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, Title 12, Chapter III of the
Code of Federal Regulations is proposed
to be amended by adding a new part 332
to read as follows:
PART 332—PRIVACY OF CONSUMER
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Sec.
332.1 Purpose and scope.
332.2 Rule of construction.
332.3 Definitions.
332.4 Initial notice to consumers of privacy
policies and practices required.
332.5 Annual notice to customers required.
332.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies
and practices.
332.7 Limitation on disclosure of nonpublic
personal information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties.
332.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.
332.9 Exception to opt out requirements for
service providers and joint marketing.
332.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and
servicing transactions.
332.11 Other exceptions to notice and opt
out requirements.
332.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse of
information.
332.13 Limits on sharing of account number
information for marketing purposes.
332.14 Protection of Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
332.15 Relation to State laws.
332.16 Effective date; transition rule.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819 (Seventh and
Tenth); 15 U.S.C. 6801 et seq.
§ 332.1

Purpose and scope.

(a) Purpose. This part governs the
treatment of nonpublic personal
information about consumers by the
financial institutions listed in paragraph
(b) of this section. This part:
(1) Requires a financial institution to
provide notice to consumers about its
privacy policies and practices;
(2) Describes the conditions under
which a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties; and
(3) Provides a method for consumers
to prevent a financial institution from
disclosing that information to certain
nonaffiliated third parties by ‘‘opting
out’’ of that disclosure, subject to the
exceptions in §§ 332.9, 332.10, and
332.11.

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(b) Scope. The rules established by
this part apply only to nonpublic
personal information about individuals
who obtain financial products or
services for personal, family or
household purposes from the
institutions listed in this paragraph (b).
This part does not apply to information
about companies or about individuals
who obtain financial products or
services for business purposes. This part
applies to entities for which the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation has
primary supervisory authority. They are
referred to in this part as ‘‘you.’’ These
are banks insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (other
than members of the Federal Reserve
System), insured state branches of
foreign banks, and any subsidiaries of
such entities, except a broker or dealer
that is registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, a registered
investment adviser (with respect to the
investment advisory activities of the
adviser and activities incidental to those
investment advisory activities), an
investment company registered under
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
an insurance company that is subject to
supervision by a State insurance
regulator (with respect to insurance
activities of the company and activities
incidental to those insurance activities),
and an entity that is subject to
regulation by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission.
§ 332.2

Rule of construction.

The examples in this part are not
exclusive. Compliance with an example,
to the extent applicable, constitutes
compliance with this part.
§ 332.3

Definitions.

As used in this part, unless the
context requires otherwise:
(a) Affiliate means any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b)(1) Clear and conspicuous means
that a notice is reasonably
understandable and designed to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in the
notice.
(2) Examples. (i) You make your
notice reasonably understandable if, to
the extent applicable, you:
(A) Present the information contained
in the notice in clear, concise sentences,
paragraphs and sections;
(B) Use short explanatory sentences
and bullet lists, whenever possible;
(C) Use definite, concrete, everyday
words and active voice, whenever
possible;
(D) Avoid multiple negatives;

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

(E) Avoid legal and highly technical
business terminology; and
(F) Avoid boilerplate explanations
that are imprecise and readily subject to
different interpretations.
(ii) You design your notice to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in the
notice if, to the extent applicable, you:
(A) Use a plain-language heading to
call attention to the notice;
(B) Use a typeface and type size that
are easy to read; and
(C) Provide wide margins and ample
line spacing.
(iii) If you provide a notice on the
same form as another notice or other
document, you design your notice to
call attention to the nature and
significance of the information
contained in the notice if you use:
(A) Larger type size(s), boldface or
italics in the text;
(B) Wider margins and line spacing in
the notice; or
(C) Shading or sidebars to highlight
the notice, whenever possible.
(c) Collect means to obtain
information that is organized or
retrievable on a personally identifiable
basis, irrespective of the source of the
underlying information.
(d) Company means any corporation,
limited liability company, business
trust, general or limited partnership,
association or similar organization.
(e) (1) Consumer means an individual
who obtains or has obtained a financial
product or service from you that is to be
used primarily for personal, family or
household purposes, and that
individual’s legal representative.
(2) Examples. (i) An individual who
applies to you for credit for personal,
family or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the credit is
extended.
(ii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in order to obtain a determination about
whether he or she may qualify for a loan
to be used primarily for personal,
family, or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the loan is
extended by you or another financial
institution.
(iii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in connection with obtaining or seeking
to obtain financial, investment or
economic advisory services is a
consumer regardless of whether you
establish an ongoing advisory
relationship.
(iv) An individual who negotiates a
workout with you for a loan that you
own is a consumer regardless of

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00035

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8803

whether you originally extended the
loan to the individual.
(v) An individual who has a loan from
you is your consumer even if you:
(A) Hire an agent to collect on the
loan;
(B) Sell the rights to service the loan;
or
(C) Bought the loan from the financial
institution that originated the loan.
(vi) An individual is not your
consumer solely because you process
information about the individual on
behalf of a financial institution that
extended the loan to the individual.
(f) Consumer reporting agency has the
same meaning as in section 603(f) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(f)).
(g) Control of a company means:
(1) Ownership, control, or power to
vote 25 percent or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of voting
security of the company, directly or
indirectly, or acting through one or
more other persons;
(2) Control in any manner over the
election of a majority of the directors,
trustees or general partners (or
individuals exercising similar functions)
of the company; or
(3) The power to exercise, directly or
indirectly, a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the
company, as determined by the FDIC.
(h) Customer means a consumer who
has a customer relationship with you.
(i) (1) Customer relationship means a
continuing relationship between a
consumer and you under which you
provide one or more financial products
or services to the consumer that are to
be used primarily for personal, family,
or household purposes.
(2) Examples. (i) A consumer has a
continuing relationship with you if the
consumer:
(A) Has a deposit, credit, trust or
investment account with you;
(B) Purchases an insurance product
from you;
(C) Holds an investment product
through you;
(D) Enters into an agreement or
understanding with you whereby you
undertake to arrange or broker a home
mortgage loan for the consumer;
(E) Has a loan that you service where
you own the servicing rights;
(F) Enters into a lease of personal
property with you; or
(G) Obtains financial, investment or
economic advisory services from you for
a fee.
(ii) A consumer does not, however,
have a continuing relationship with you
if:
(A) The consumer only obtains a
financial product or service in an

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

8804

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

isolated transaction, such as
withdrawing cash from your ATM or
purchasing a cashier’s check or money
order;
(B) You sell the consumer’s loan and
do not retain the rights to service that
loan; or
(C) You sell the consumer airline
tickets, travel insurance or traveler’s
checks in an isolated transaction.
(j) (1) Financial institution means any
institution the business of which is
engaging in activities that are financial
in nature or incidental to such financial
activities as described in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial institution does not
include:
(i) Any person or entity with respect
to any financial activity that is subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.);
(ii) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation or any entity chartered and
operating under the Farm Credit Act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.); or
(iii) Institutions chartered by Congress
specifically to engage in securitizations,
secondary market sales (including sales
of servicing rights) or similar
transactions related to a transaction of a
consumer, as long as such institutions
do not sell or transfer nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party.
(k) (1) Financial product or service
means any product or service that a
financial holding company could offer
by engaging in an activity that is
financial in nature or incidental to such
a financial activity under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial service includes your
evaluation, brokerage or distribution of
information that you collect in
connection with a request or an
application from a consumer for a
financial product or service.
(l) Government regulator means:
(1) The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System;
(2) The Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency;
(3) The Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(4) The Director of the Office of Thrift
Supervision;
(5) The National Credit Union
Administration Board;
(6) The Securities and Exchange
Commission;
(7) The Secretary of the Treasury,
with respect to 31 U.S.C. Chapter 53,
Subchapter II (Records and Reports on
Monetary Instruments and Transactions)

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

and 12 U.S.C. Chapter 21 (Financial
Recordkeeping);
(8) A State insurance authority, with
respect to any person domiciled in that
insurance authority’s State that is
engaged in providing insurance; and
(9) The Federal Trade Commission.
(m) (1) Nonaffiliated third party
means any person except:
(i) Your affiliate; or
(ii) A person employed jointly by you
and any company that is not your
affiliate (but nonaffiliated third party
includes the other company that jointly
employs the person).
(2) Nonaffiliated third party includes
any company that is an affiliate by
virtue of the direct or indirect
ownership or control of the company by
the financial institution or any affiliate
of the financial institution in
conducting merchant banking or
investment banking activities of the type
described in section 4(k)(4)(H) or
insurance company investment
activities of the type described in
section 4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)
and (I)).
Alternative A
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include any list, description, or
other grouping of consumers (and
publicly available information
pertaining to them) that is derived
without using any personally
identifiable financial information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
any information consumers provide to
you on an application for a financial
product or service.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to you to
obtain a financial product or service
from you;
(ii) Resulting from any transaction
involving a financial product or service
between you and a consumer; or
(iii) You otherwise obtain about a
consumer in connection with providing
a financial product or service to that
consumer, other than publicly available
information.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00036

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to you on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of your customers or has
obtained a financial product or service
from you, unless that fact is derived
using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about your
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been your consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by you
or your agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p) (1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public that
is obtained from:
(i) Federal, State, or local government
records;
(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State, or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
Alternative B
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include:
(i) Publicly available information,
except as provided in paragraph
(n)(1)(ii) of this section; or
(ii) Any list, description, or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived without using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
personally identifiable financial
information, such as account numbers.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to you to
obtain a financial product or service
from you;
(ii) About a consumer resulting from
any transaction involving a financial
product or service between you and a
consumer; or
(iii) You otherwise obtain about a
consumer in connection with providing
a financial product or service to that
consumer.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to you on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of your customers or has
obtained a financial product or service
from you, unless that fact is derived
using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about your
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been your consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by you
or your agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p)(1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

made available to the general public
from:
(i) Federal, State, or local government
records;
(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State, or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
(q) You means a bank insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(other than a member of the Federal
Reserve System), an insured state
branch of a foreign bank, and any
subsidiary of either such entity except:
(1) A broker, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(4);
(2) A dealer, as defined in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(5);
(3) A person, to the extent that person
is engaged in the business of insurance
in a State as principal or agent and
required to be licensed by the
appropriate State insurance authority;
(4) An investment company, as
defined in 15 U.S.C. 80a–3(a)(1); or
(5) An investment adviser, as defined
in 15 U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(20).
§ 332.4 Initial notice to consumers of
privacy policies and practices required.

(a) When initial notice is required.
You must provide a clear and
conspicuous notice that accurately
reflects your privacy policies and
practices to:
(1) An individual who becomes your
customer, prior to the time that you
establish a customer relationship,
except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)
of this section; and
(2) A consumer, prior to the time that
you disclose any nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party, if you make
such a disclosure other than as
authorized by §§ 332.10 and 332.11.
(b) When initial notice to a consumer
is not required. You are not required to
provide an initial notice to a consumer
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section if:
(1) You do not disclose any nonpublic
personal information about the
consumer to any nonaffiliated third
party, other than as authorized by
§§ 332.10 and 332.11; and

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00037

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8805

(2) You do not have a customer
relationship with the consumer.
(c) When you establish a customer
relationship—(1) General rule. You
establish a customer relationship at the
time you and the consumer enter into a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You establish a
customer relationship when the
consumer:
(i) Opens a credit card account with
you;
(ii) Executes the contract to open a
deposit account with you, obtains credit
from you, or purchases insurance from
you;
(iii) Agrees to obtain financial,
economic or investment advisory
services from you for a fee; or
(iv) Becomes your client for the
purpose of your providing credit
counseling or tax preparation services.
(d) How to provide notice—(1)
General rule. You must provide the
privacy notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section so that each consumer
can reasonably be expected to receive
actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form.
(2) Exceptions to allow subsequent
delivery of notice. You may provide the
initial notice required by paragraph
(a)(1) of this section within a reasonable
time after you establish a customer
relationship if:
(i) You purchase a loan or assume a
deposit liability from another financial
institution and the customer of that loan
or deposit account does not have a
choice about your purchase or
assumption; or
(ii) You and the consumer orally agree
to enter into a customer relationship
and the consumer agrees to receive the
notice thereafter.
(3) Oral description of notice
insufficient. You may not provide the
initial notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, your privacy policies and
practices.
(4) Retention or accessibility of initial
notice for customers. For customers
only, you must provide the initial notice
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section so that it can be retained or
obtained at a later time by the customer,
in a written form or, if the customer
agrees, in electronic form.
(5) Examples. (i) You may reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the consumer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
consumer;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8806

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(C) For the consumer who conducts
transactions electronically, post the
notice on the electronic site and require
the consumer to acknowledge receipt of
the notice as a necessary step to
obtaining a particular financial product
or service;
(D) For an isolated transaction with
the consumer, such as an ATM
transaction, post the notice on the ATM
screen and require the consumer to
acknowledge receipt of the notice as a
necessary step to obtaining the
particular financial product or service.
(ii) You may not, however, reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:
(A) Only post a sign in your branch
or office or generally publish
advertisements of your privacy policies
and practices; or
(B) Send the notice via electronic mail
to a consumer who obtains a financial
product or service from you in person
or through the mail and who does not
agree to receive the notice
electronically.
(iii) You provide the initial privacy
notice to the customer so that it can be
retained or obtained at a later time if
you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the customer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
customer upon request of the customer;
or
(C) Maintain the notice on a web site
(or a link to another web site) for the
customer who obtains a financial
product or service electronically and
who agrees to receive the notice
electronically.
§ 332.5 Annual notice to customers
required.

(a) General rule. You must provide a
clear and conspicuous notice to
customers that accurately reflects your
privacy policies and practices not less
than annually during the continuation
of the customer relationship. Annually
means at least once in any period of 12
consecutive months during which that
relationship exists.
(b) How to provide notice. You must
provide the annual notice required by
paragraph (a) of this section to a
customer using a means permitted for
providing the initial notice to that
customer under § 332.4(d).
(c)(1) Termination of customer
relationship. You are not required to
provide an annual notice to a customer
with whom you no longer have a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You no longer have a
continuing relationship with an
individual if:

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(i) In the case of a deposit account, the
account is dormant under your policies;
(ii) In the case of a closed-end loan,
the consumer pays the loan in full, you
charge off the loan, or you sell the loan
without retaining servicing rights;
(iii) In the case of a credit card
relationship or other open-end credit
relationship, you no longer provide any
statements or notices to the consumer
concerning that relationship or you sell
the credit card receivables without
retaining servicing rights; or
(iv) For other types of relationships,
you have not communicated with the
consumer about the relationship for a
period of 12 consecutive months, other
than to provide annual notices of
privacy policies and practices.
§ 332.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies and
practices.

(a) General rule. The initial and
annual notices that you provide about
your privacy policies and practices
under §§ 332.4 and 332.5 must include
each of the following items of
information:
(1) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you collect;
(2) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you disclose;
(3) The categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about your consumers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 332.10 and 332.11;
(4) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your former
customers that you disclose and the
categories of affiliates and nonaffiliated
third parties to whom you disclose
nonpublic personal information about
your former customers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 332.10 and 332.11;
(5) If you disclose nonpublic personal
information to a nonaffiliated third
party under § 332.9 (and no other
exception applies to that disclosure), a
separate description of the categories of
information you disclose and the
categories of third parties with whom
you have contracted;
(6) An explanation of the right under
§ 332.8(a) of the consumer to opt out of
the disclosure of nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties, including the methods by which
the consumer may exercise that right;
(7) Any disclosures that you make
under section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(d)(2)(A)(iii)) (that is, notices
regarding the ability to opt out of

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00038

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

disclosures of information among
affiliates); and
(8) Your policies and practices with
respect to protecting the confidentiality,
security, and integrity of nonpublic
personal information.
(b) Description of nonaffiliated third
parties subject to exceptions. If you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to third parties as
authorized under §§ 332.10 and 332.11,
you are not required to list those
exceptions in the initial or annual
privacy notices required by §§ 332.4 and
332.5. When describing the categories
with respect to those parties, you are
only required to state that you make
disclosures to other nonaffiliated third
parties as permitted by law.
(c) Future disclosures. Your notice
may include:
(1) Categories of nonpublic personal
information that you reserve the right to
disclose in the future, but do not
currently disclose; and
(2) Categories of affiliates or
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
reserve the right in the future to
disclose, but to whom you do not
currently disclose, nonpublic personal
information.
(d) Examples—(1) Categories of
nonpublic personal information that
you collect. You adequately categorize
the nonpublic personal information you
collect if you categorize the information
according to the source of the
information, such as application
information, information about
transactions (such as information
regarding a deposit, loan, or credit card
account), and consumer reports.
(2) Categories of nonpublic personal
information you disclose. You
adequately categorize nonpublic
personal information you disclose if you
categorize the information according to
source, and provide illustrative
examples of the content of the
information. These might include
application information, such as assets
and income; identifying information,
such as name, address, and social
security number; and transaction
information, such as information about
account balance, payment history,
parties to the transaction, and credit
card usage; and information from
consumer reports, such as a consumer’s
creditworthiness and credit history. You
do not adequately categorize the
information that you disclose if you use
only general terms, such as transaction
information about the consumer.
(3) Categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose. You adequately categorize the
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties
to whom you disclose nonpublic

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
personal information about consumers if
you identify the types of businesses that
they engage in. Types of businesses may
be described by general terms only if
you use illustrative examples of
significant lines of business. For
example, you may use the term
‘‘financial products or services’’ if you
include appropriate examples of
significant lines of businesses, such as
consumer banking, mortgage lending,
life insurance, or securities brokerage.
You also may categorize the affiliates
and nonaffiliated third parties to whom
you disclose nonpublic personal
information about consumers using
more detailed categories.
(4) Simplified notices. If you do not
disclose, and do not intend to disclose,
nonpublic personal information to
affiliates or nonaffiliated third parties,
you may simply state that fact, in
addition to the information you must
provide under paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(8),
and (b) of this section.
(5) Confidentiality, security, and
integrity. You adequately describe your
policies and practices with respect to
protecting the confidentiality and
security of nonpublic personal
information if you explain who has
access to the information and the
circumstances under which the
information may be accessed. You
adequately describe your policies and
practices with respect to protecting the
integrity of nonpublic personal
information if you explain measures you
take to protect against reasonably
anticipated threats or hazards. You are
not required to describe technical
information about the safeguards you
use.

third party, other than as permitted by
§§ 332.9, 332.10, and 332.11.
(3) Examples of reasonable
opportunity to opt out—(i) By mail. You
provide a consumer with whom you
have a customer relationship with a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
mail the notices required in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section to the consumer
and allow the consumer a reasonable
period of time, such as 30 days, to opt
out.
(ii) Isolated transaction with a
consumer. For an isolated transaction,
such as the purchase of a cashier’s
check by a consumer, you provide a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
provide the consumer with the required
notices at the time of the transaction
and request that the consumer decide,
as a necessary part of the transaction,
whether to opt out before completing
the transaction.
(b) Application of opt out to all
consumers and all nonpublic personal
information. (1) You must comply with
this section regardless of whether you
and the consumer have established a
customer relationship.
(2) Unless you comply with this
section, you may not, directly or
through any affiliate, disclose any
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer that you have collected,
regardless of whether you collected the
information before or after receiving the
direction to opt out from the consumer.
(c) Partial opt out. You may allow a
consumer to select certain nonpublic
personal information or certain
nonaffiliated third parties with respect
to which the consumer wishes to opt
out.

§ 332.7 Limitation on disclosure of
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.

§ 332.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.

(a) (1) Conditions for disclosure.
Except as otherwise authorized in this
part, you may not, directly or through
any affiliate, disclose any nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer an initial notice as required
under § 332.4;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer an opt out notice as required
in § 332.8;
(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) Opt out definition. Opt out means
a direction by the consumer that you not
disclose nonpublic personal information
about that consumer to a nonaffiliated

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(a) (1) Form of opt out notice. You
must provide a clear and conspicuous
notice to each of your consumers that
accurately explains the right to opt out
under § 332.7(a)(1). The notice must
state:
(i) That you disclose or reserve the
right to disclose nonpublic personal
information about your consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party;
(ii) That the consumer has the right to
opt out of that disclosure; and
(iii) A reasonable means by which the
consumer may exercise the opt out
right.
(2) Examples. (i) You provide
adequate notice that the consumer can
opt out of the disclosure of nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party if you identify all of the
categories of nonpublic personal
information that you disclose or reserve
the right to disclose to nonaffiliated

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00039

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8807

third parties as described in § 332.6 and
state that the consumer can opt out of
the disclosure of that information.
(ii) You provide a reasonable means to
exercise an opt out right if you:
(A) Designate check-off boxes in a
prominent position on the relevant
forms with the opt out notice;
(B) Include a reply form together with
the opt out notice; or
(C) Provide an electronic means to opt
out, such as a form that can be sent via
electronic mail or a process at your web
site, if the consumer agrees to the
electronic delivery of information.
(iii) You do not provide a reasonable
means of opting out if the only means
of opting out is for the consumer to
write his or her own letter to exercise
that opt out right.
(b) How to provide opt out notice—(1)
Delivery of notice. You must provide the
opt out notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section in a manner so that each
consumer can reasonably be expected to
receive actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form. If
you and the consumer orally agree to
enter into a customer relationship, you
may provide the opt out notice required
by paragraph (a) of this section within
a reasonable time thereafter if the
consumer agrees.
(2) Oral description of opt out right
insufficient. You may not provide the
opt out notice solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, the right of the consumer to
opt out.
(3) Same form as initial notice
permitted. You may provide the opt out
notice together with or on the same
written or electronic form as the initial
notice you provide in accordance with
§ 332.4.
(4) Initial notice required when opt
out notice delivered subsequent to
initial notice. If you provide the opt out
notice at a later time than required for
the initial notice in accordance with
§ 332.4, you must also include a copy of
the initial notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in an electronic form
with the opt out notice.
(c) Notice of change in terms—(1)
General rule. Except as otherwise
authorized in this part, you must not,
directly or through any affiliate, disclose
any nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party other than as described in
the initial notice that you provided to
the consumer under § 332.4, unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer a revised notice that
accurately describes your policies and
practices;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer a new opt out notice;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8808

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) How to provide notice of change in
terms. You must provide the revised
notice of your policies and practices and
opt out notice to a consumer using the
means permitted for providing the
initial notice and opt out notice to that
consumer under § 332.4(d) and
paragraph (b) of this section,
respectively.
(3) Examples. (i) Except as otherwise
permitted by §§ 332.9, 332.10, and
332.11, a change-in-terms notice is
required if you:
(A) Disclose a new category of
nonpublic personal information to any
nonaffiliated third party; or
(B) Disclose nonpublic personal
information to a new category of
nonaffiliated third party.
(ii) A change-in-terms notice is not
required if you disclose nonpublic
personal information to a new
nonaffiliated third party that is
adequately described by your prior
notice.
(d) Continuing right to opt out. A
consumer may exercise the right to opt
out at any time, and upon receiving the
opt out direction you must comply with
that direction as soon as reasonably
practicable.
(e) Duration of consumer’s opt out
direction. A consumer’s direction to opt
out under this section is effective until
revoked by the consumer in writing, or
if the consumer agrees, in electronic
form.
§ 332.9 Exception to opt out requirements
for service providers and joint marketing.

(a) General rule. The opt out
requirements in §§ 332.7 and 332.8 do
not apply when you provide nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party to perform
services for you or functions on your
behalf, if you:
(1) Provide the initial notice in
accordance with § 332.4; and
(2) Enter into a contractual agreement
with the third party that:
(i) Requires the third party to
maintain the confidentiality of the
information to at least the same extent
that you must maintain that
confidentiality under this part; and
(ii) Limits the third party’s use of
information you disclose solely to the
purposes for which the information is
disclosed or as otherwise permitted by
§§ 332.10 and 332.11 of this part.
(b) Service may include joint
marketing. The services performed for

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

you by a nonaffiliated third party under
paragraph (a) of this section may
include marketing of your own products
or services or marketing of financial
products or services offered pursuant to
joint agreements between you and one
or more financial institutions.
(c) Definition of joint agreement. For
purposes of this section, joint agreement
means a written contract pursuant to
which you and one or more financial
institutions jointly offer, endorse, or
sponsor a financial product or service.
§ 332.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and servicing
transactions.

(a) Exceptions for processing
transactions at consumer’s request. The
requirements for initial notice in
§ 332.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 332.7 and
332.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 332.9 do not apply if you
disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) As necessary to effect, administer,
or enforce a transaction requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(2) To service or process a financial
product or service requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(3) To maintain or service the
consumer’s account with you, or with
another entity as part of a private label
credit card program or other extension
of credit on behalf of such entity; or
(4) In connection with a proposed or
actual securitization, secondary market
sale (including sales of servicing rights)
or similar transaction related to a
transaction of the consumer.
(b) Necessary to effect, administer, or
enforce a transaction means that the
disclosure is:
(1) Required, or is one of the lawful
or appropriate methods, to enforce your
rights or the rights of other persons
engaged in carrying out the financial
transaction or providing the product or
service; or
(2) Required, or is a usual,
appropriate, or acceptable method:
(i) To carry out the transaction or the
product or service business of which the
transaction is a part, and record, service
or maintain the consumer’s account in
the ordinary course of providing the
financial service or financial product;
(ii) To administer or service benefits
or claims relating to the transaction or
the product or service business of which
it is a part;
(iii) To provide a confirmation,
statement or other record of the
transaction, or information on the status
or value of the financial service or
financial product to the consumer or the
consumer’s agent or broker;
(iv) To accrue or recognize incentives
or bonuses associated with the

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00040

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

transaction that are provided by you or
any other party;
(v) To underwrite insurance at the
consumer’s request or for reinsurance
purposes, or for any of the following
purposes as they relate to a consumer’s
insurance: account administration,
reporting, investigating, or preventing
fraud or material misrepresentation,
processing premium payments,
processing insurance claims,
administering insurance benefits
(including utilization review activities),
participating in research projects, or as
otherwise required or specifically
permitted by Federal or State law;
(vi) In connection with settling a
transaction, including:
(A) The authorization, billing,
processing, clearing, transferring,
reconciling or collection of amounts
charged, debited, or otherwise paid
using a debit, credit or other payment
card, check or account number, or by
other payment means;
(B) The transfer of receivables,
accounts, or interests therein; or
(C) The audit of debit, credit, or other
payment information.
§ 332.11 Other exceptions to notice and
opt out requirements.

(a) Exceptions to opt out
requirements. The requirements for
initial notice to consumers in
§ 332.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 332.7 and
332.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 332.9 do not apply when
you disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) With the consent or at the
direction of the consumer, provided that
the consumer has not revoked the
consent or direction;
(2) (i) To protect the confidentiality or
security of your records pertaining to
the consumer, service, product, or
transaction;
(ii) To protect against or prevent
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, claims, or other liability;
(iii) For required institutional risk
control or for resolving consumer
disputes or inquiries;
(iv) To persons holding a legal or
beneficial interest relating to the
consumer; or
(v) To persons acting in a fiduciary or
representative capacity on behalf of the
consumer;
(3) To provide information to
insurance rate advisory organizations,
guaranty funds or agencies, agencies
that are rating you, persons that are
assessing your compliance with
industry standards, and your attorneys,
accountants, and auditors;
(4) To the extent specifically
permitted or required under other

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
provisions of law and in accordance
with the Right to Financial Privacy Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3401 et seq.), to law
enforcement agencies (including
government regulators), self-regulatory
organizations, or for an investigation on
a matter related to public safety;
(5) (i) To a consumer reporting agency
in accordance with the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.);
or
(ii) From a consumer report reported
by a consumer reporting agency;
(6) In connection with a proposed or
actual sale, merger, transfer, or exchange
of all or a portion of a business or
operating unit if the disclosure of
nonpublic personal information
concerns solely consumers of such
business or unit; or
(7) (i) To comply with Federal, State,
or local laws, rules and other applicable
legal requirements;
(ii) To comply with a properly
authorized civil, criminal or regulatory
investigation, or subpoena or summons
by Federal, State, or local authorities; or
(iii) To respond to judicial process or
government regulatory authorities
having jurisdiction over you for
examination, compliance or other
purposes as authorized by law.
(b) Examples of consent and
revocation of consent. (1) A consumer
may specifically consent to your
disclosure to a nonaffiliated insurance
company of the fact that the consumer
has applied to you for a mortgage so that
the insurance company can offer
homeowner’s insurance to the
consumer.
(2) A consumer may revoke consent
by subsequently exercising the right to
opt out of future disclosures of
nonpublic personal information as
permitted under § 332.8(d).
§ 332.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse
of information.

(a) Limits on your redisclosure and
reuse. (1) Except as otherwise provided
in this part, if you receive nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
from a nonaffiliated financial
institution, you must not, directly or
through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
not affiliated with either you or the
other financial institution, unless the
disclosure would be lawful if the
financial institution made it directly to
such other person.
(2) You may use nonpublic personal
information about a consumer that you
receive from a nonaffiliated financial
institution in accordance with an
exception under §§ 332.9, 332.10, or
332.11 only for the purpose of that
exception.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(b) Limits on redisclosure and the
reuse by other persons. (1) Except as
otherwise provided in this part, if you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party, that party must not, directly
or through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
a nonaffiliated third party of both you
and that party, unless the disclosure
would be lawful if you made it directly
to such other person.
(2) A nonaffiliated third party may
use nonpublic personal information
about a consumer that it receives from
you in accordance with an exception
under §§ 332.9, 332.10, or 332.11 only
for the purpose of that exception.
§ 332.13 Limits on sharing of account
number information for marketing
purposes.

Protection of Fair Credit Reporting

Nothing in this part shall be
construed to modify, limit, or supersede
the operation of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
and no inference shall be drawn on the
basis of the provisions of this part
regarding whether information is
transaction or experience information
under section 603 of that Act.
§ 332.15

Relation to State laws.

(a) In general. This part shall not be
construed as superseding, altering, or
affecting any statute, regulation, order or
interpretation in effect in any State,
except to the extent that such State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is inconsistent with the
provisions of this part, and then only to
the extent of the inconsistency.
(b) Greater protection under State law.
For purposes of this section, a State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is not inconsistent with
the provisions of this part if the
protection such statute, regulation,
order or interpretation affords any
consumer is greater than the protection
provided under this part, as determined
by the Federal Trade Commission, after
consultation with the FDIC, on the
Federal Trade Commission’s own
motion or upon the petition of any
interested party.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00041

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

Effective date; transition rule.

(a) Effective date. This part is effective
November 13, 2000.
(b) Notice requirement for consumers
who were customers on the effective
date. No later than 30 days after the
effective date of this part, you must
provide an initial notice, as required by
§ 332.4, to consumers who were your
customers on the effective date of this
part.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 9th day of
February, 2000.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.

OFFICE OF THRIFT SUPERVISION

You must not, directly or through an
affiliate, disclose, other than to a
consumer reporting agency, an account
number or similar form of access
number or access code for a credit card
account, deposit account or transaction
account of a consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party for use in
telemarketing, direct mail marketing or
other marketing through electronic mail
to the consumer.
§ 32.14
Act.

§ 332.16

8809

12 CFR Chapter V
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, OTS proposes to amend
Chapter V of Title 12 of the Code of
Federal regulations by adding part 573
to read as follows:
PART 573—PRIVACY OF CONSUMER
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
Sec.
573.1 Purpose and scope.
573.2 Rule of construction.
573.3 Definitions.
573.4 Initial notice to consumers of privacy
policies and practices required.
573.5 Annual notice to customers required.
573.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies
and practices.
573.7 Limitation on disclosure of nonpublic
personal information about consumers to
nonaffiliated third parties.
573.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.
573.9 Exception to opt out requirements for
service providers and joint marketing.
573.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and
servicing transactions.
573.11 Other exceptions to notice and opt
out requirements.
573.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse of
information.
573.13 Limits on sharing of account number
information for marketing purposes.
573.14 Protection of Fair Credit Reporting
Act.
573.15 Relation to State laws.
573.16 Effective date; transition rule.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1828; 15 U.S.C. 6801 et seq.
§ 573.1

Purpose and scope.

(a) Purpose. This part governs the
treatment of nonpublic personal
information about consumers by the
financial institutions listed in paragraph
(b) of this section. This part:

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8810

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(1) Requires a financial institution to
provide notice to consumers about its
privacy policies and practices;
(2) Describes the conditions under
which a financial institution may
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers to nonaffiliated third
parties; and
(3) Provides a method for consumers
to prevent a financial institution from
disclosing that information to most
nonaffiliated third parties by ‘‘opting
out’’ of that disclosure, subject to the
exceptions in §§ 573.9, 573.10, and
573.11.
(b) Scope. The rules established by
this part apply only to nonpublic
personal information about individuals
who obtain financial products or
services for personal, family or
household purposes from the
institutions listed below. This part does
not apply to information about
companies or about individuals who
obtain financial products or services for
business purposes. This part applies to
savings associations whose deposits are
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, and any
subsidiaries of such savings
associations, but not to subsidiaries that
are brokers, dealers, persons providing
insurance, investment companies, or
investment advisers. This part refers to
these entities as ‘‘you.’’
§ 573.2

Rule of construction.

The examples in this part are not
exclusive. Compliance with an example,
to the extent applicable, constitutes
compliance with this part.
§ 573.3

Definitions.

As used in this part, unless the
context requires otherwise:
(a) Affiliate means any company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) (1) Clear and conspicuous means
that a notice is reasonably
understandable and designed to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in the
notice.
(2) Examples. (i) You make your
notice reasonably understandable if, to
the extent applicable, you:
(A) Present the information contained
in the notice in clear, concise sentences,
paragraphs and sections;
(B) Use short explanatory sentences
and bullet lists, whenever possible;
(C) Use definite, concrete, everyday
words and active voice, whenever
possible;
(D) Avoid multiple negatives;
(E) Avoid legal and highly technical
business terminology; and

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

(F) Avoid boilerplate explanations
that are imprecise and readily subject to
different interpretations.
(ii) You design your notice to call
attention to the nature and significance
of the information contained in it if, to
the extent applicable, you:
(A) Use a plain-language heading to
call attention to the notice;
(B) Use a typeface and type size that
are easy to read; and
(C) Provide wide margins and ample
line spacing.
(iii) If you provide a notice on the
same form as another notice or other
document, you design your notice to
call attention to the nature and
significance of the information
contained in the notice if you use:
(A) Larger type size(s), boldface or
italics in the text;
(B) Wider margins and line spacing in
the notice; or
(C) Shading or sidebars to highlight
the notice, whenever possible.
(c) Collect means to obtain
information that is organized or
retrievable on a personally identifiable
basis, irrespective of the source of the
underlying information.
(d) Company means any corporation,
limited liability company, business
trust, general or limited partnership,
association or similar organization.
(e) (1) Consumer means an individual
who obtains or has obtained a financial
product or service from you that is to be
used primarily for personal, family or
household purposes, and that
individual’s legal representative.
(2) Examples. (i) An individual who
applies to you for credit for personal,
family or household purposes is a
consumer of a financial service,
regardless of whether the credit is
extended.
(ii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in order to obtain a determination about
whether he or she may qualify for a loan
to be used primarily for personal, family
or household purposes is a consumer of
a financial service, regardless of
whether the loan is extended by you or
another financial institution.
(iii) An individual who provides
nonpublic personal information to you
in connection with obtaining or seeking
to obtain financial, investment or
economic advisory services is a
consumer regardless of whether you
establish an ongoing advisory
relationship.
(iv) An individual who negotiates a
workout with you for a loan that you
own is a consumer regardless of
whether you originally extended the
loan to the individual.
(v) An individual who has a loan from
you is your consumer even if you:

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00042

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

(A) Hire an agent to collect on the
loan;
(B) Sell the rights to service the loan;
or
(C) Bought the loan from the financial
institution that originated the loan.
(vi) An individual is not your
consumer solely because you process
information about the individual on
behalf of a financial institution that
extended the loan to the individual.
(f) Consumer reporting agency has the
same meaning as in section 603(f) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(f)).
(g) Control of a company means:
(1) Ownership, control, or power to
vote 25 percent or more of the
outstanding shares of any class of voting
security of the company, directly or
indirectly, or acting through one or
more other persons;
(2) Control in any manner over the
election of a majority of the directors,
trustees or general partners (or
individuals exercising similar functions)
of the company; or
(3) The power to exercise, directly or
indirectly, a controlling influence over
the management or policies of the
company, as determined by OTS.
(h) Customer means a consumer who
has a customer relationship with you.
(i) (1) Customer relationship means a
continuing relationship between a
consumer and you under which you
provide one or more financial products
or services to the consumer that are to
be used primarily for personal, family,
or household purposes.
(2) Examples. (i) A consumer has a
continuing relationship with you if the
consumer:
(A) Has a deposit, credit, trust, or
investment account with you;
(B) Purchases an insurance product
from you;
(C) Holds an investment product
through you;
(D) Enters into an agreement or
understanding with you whereby you
undertake to arrange or broker a home
mortgage loan for the consumer;
(E) Has a loan that you service where
you own the servicing rights;
(F) Enters into a lease of personal
property with you; or
(G) Obtains financial, investment or
economic advisory services from you for
a fee.
(ii) A consumer does not, however,
have a continuing relationship with you
if:
(A) The consumer only obtains a
financial product or service in an
isolated transaction, such as
withdrawing cash from your ATM or
purchasing a cashier’s check or money
order;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(B) You sell the consumer’s loan and
do not retain the rights to service that
loan; or
(C) You sell the consumer travel
insurance or traveler’s checks in an
isolated transaction.
(j) (1) Financial institution means any
institution the business of which is
engaging in activities that are financial
in nature or incidental to such financial
activities as described in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial institution does not
include:
(i) Any person or entity with respect
to any financial activity that is subject
to the jurisdiction of the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.);
(ii) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation or any entity chartered and
operating under the Farm Credit Act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.); or
(iii) Institutions chartered by Congress
specifically to engage in securitizations,
secondary market sales (including sales
of servicing rights), or similar
transactions related to a transaction of a
consumer, as long as such institutions
do not sell or transfer nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party.
(k) (1) Financial product or service
means any product or service that a
financial holding company could offer
by engaging in an activity that is
financial in nature or incidental to such
a financial activity under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1843(k)).
(2) Financial service includes your
evaluation, brokerage or distribution of
information that you collect in
connection with a request or an
application from a consumer for a
financial product or service.
(l) Government regulator means:
(1) The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System;
(2) The Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency;
(3) The Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(4) The Director of the Office of Thrift
Supervision;
(5) The National Credit Union
Administration Board;
(6) The Securities and Exchange
Commission;
(7) The Secretary of the Treasury,
with respect to 31 U.S.C. Chapter 53,
Subchapter II (Records and Reports on
Monetary Instruments and Transactions)
and 12 U.S.C. Chapter 21 (Financial
Recordkeeping);
(8) A State insurance authority, with
respect to any person domiciled in that

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

insurance authority’s State that is
engaged in providing insurance; and
(9) The Federal Trade Commission.
(m) (1) Nonaffiliated third party
means any person except:
(i) Your affiliate; or
(ii) A person employed jointly by you
and any company that is not your
affiliate (but nonaffiliated third party
includes the other company that jointly
employs the person).
(2) Nonaffiliated third party includes
any company that is an affiliate by
virtue of the direct or indirect
ownership or control of the company by
the financial institution or any affiliate
of the financial institution in
conducting merchant banking or
investment banking activities of the type
described in section 4(k)(4)(H) or
insurance company investment
activities of the type described in
section 4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)
and (I).
Alternative A
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include any list, description, or
other grouping of consumers (and
publicly available information
pertaining to them) that is derived
without using any personally
identifiable financial information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
any information consumers provide to
you on an application for a financial
product or service.
(o) (1) Personally identifiable
financial information means any
information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to you to
obtain a financial product or service
from you;
(ii) Resulting from any transaction
involving a financial product or service
between you and a consumer; or
(iii) You otherwise obtain about a
consumer in connection with providing
a financial product or service to that
consumer, other than publicly available
information.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to you on an application to obtain a

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00043

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8811

loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of your customers or has
obtained a financial product or service
from you, unless that fact is derived
using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about your
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been your consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by you
or your agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p) (1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public you
obtain from:
(i) Federal, State or local government
records;
(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
Alternative B
(n) (1) Nonpublic personal
information means:
(i) Personally identifiable financial
information; and
(ii) Any list, description, or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(2) Nonpublic personal information
does not include:

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8812

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(i) Publicly available information,
except as provided in paragraph
(n)(1)(ii) of this section; or
(ii) Any list, description, or other
grouping of consumers (and publicly
available information pertaining to
them) that is derived without using any
personally identifiable financial
information.
(3) Example. Nonpublic personal
information includes any list of
individuals’ street addresses and
telephone numbers that is derived using
personally identifiable financial
information, such as account numbers.
(o)(1) Personally identifiable financial
information means any information:
(i) Provided by a consumer to you to
obtain a financial product or service
from you;
(ii) About a consumer resulting from
any transaction involving a financial
product or service between you and a
consumer; or
(iii) You otherwise obtain about a
consumer in connection with providing
a financial product or service to that
consumer.
(2) Examples. (i) Personally
identifiable financial information
includes:
(A) Information a consumer provides
to you on an application to obtain a
loan, credit card, insurance or other
financial product or service, including,
among other things, medical
information;
(B) Account balance information,
payment history, overdraft history, and
credit or debit card purchase
information;
(C) The fact that an individual is or
has been one of your customers or has
obtained a financial product or service
from you, unless that fact is derived
using only publicly available
information, such as government real
estate records or bankruptcy records;
(D) Other information about your
consumer if it is disclosed in a manner
that indicates the individual is or has
been your consumer;
(E) Any information provided by a
consumer or otherwise obtained by you
or your agent in connection with
collecting on a loan or servicing a loan;
and
(F) Information from a consumer
report.
(ii) Personally identifiable financial
information does not include a list of
names and addresses of customers of an
entity that is not a financial institution.
(p)(1) Publicly available information
means any information that is lawfully
made available to the general public
from:
(i) Federal, State, or local government
records;

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

(ii) Widely distributed media; or
(iii) Disclosures to the general public
that are required to be made by Federal,
State or local law.
(2) Examples—(i) Government
records. Publicly available information
contained in government records
includes information contained in
government real estate records and
security interest filings.
(ii) Widely distributed media. Publicly
available information from widely
distributed media includes information
from a telephone book, a television or
radio program, a newspaper or an
Internet site that is available to the
general public without requiring a
password or similar restriction.
§ 573.4 Initial notice to consumers of
privacy policies and practices required.

(a) When initial notice is required.
You must provide a clear and
conspicuous notice that accurately
reflects your privacy policies and
practices to:
(1) An individual who becomes your
customer, prior to the time that you
establish a customer relationship,
except as provided in paragraph (d)(2)
of this section; and
(2) A consumer, prior to the time that
you disclose any nonpublic personal
information about the consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party, if you make
such a disclosure other than as
authorized by §§ 573.10 and 573.11.
(b) When initial notice to a consumer
is not required. You are not required to
provide an initial notice to a consumer
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section if:
(1) You do not disclose any nonpublic
personal information about the
consumer to any nonaffiliated third
party, other than as authorized by
§§ 573.10 and 573.11; and
(2) You do not have a customer
relationship with the consumer.
(c) When you establish a customer
relationship—(1) General rule. You
establish a customer relationship at the
time you and the consumer enter into a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You establish a
customer relationship when the
consumer:
(i) Opens a credit card account with
you;
(ii) Executes the contract to open a
deposit account with you, obtains credit
from you, or purchases insurance from
you;
(iii) Agrees to obtain financial,
economic, or investment advisory
services from you for a fee;
(iv) Becomes your client for the
purpose of your providing credit
counseling or tax preparation services.
(d) How to provide notice—(1)
General rule. You must provide the

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00044

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

privacy notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section so that each consumer
can reasonably be expected to receive
actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form.
(2) Exceptions to allow subsequent
delivery of notice. You may provide the
initial notice required by paragraph
(a)(1) of this section within a reasonable
time after you establish a customer
relationship if:
(i) You purchase a loan or assume a
deposit liability from another financial
institution and the customer of that loan
or deposit account does not have a
choice about your purchase or
assumption; or
(ii) You and the consumer orally agree
to enter into a customer relationship
and the consumer agrees to receive the
notice thereafter.
(3) Oral description of notice
insufficient. You may not provide the
initial notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, your privacy policies and
practices.
(4) Retention or accessibility of initial
notice for customers. For customers
only, you must provide the initial notice
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section so that it can be retained or
obtained at a later time by the customer,
in a written form or, if the customer
agrees, in electronic form.
(5) Examples. (i) You may reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the consumer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
consumer;
(C) For the consumer who conducts
transactions electronically, post the
notice on the electronic site and require
the consumer to acknowledge receipt of
the notice as a necessary step to
obtaining a particular financial product
or service;
(D) For an isolated transaction with
the consumer, such as an ATM
transaction, post the notice on the ATM
screen and require the consumer to
acknowledge receipt of the notice as a
necessary step to obtaining the
particular financial product or service.
(ii) You may not, however, reasonably
expect that a consumer will receive
actual notice of your privacy policies
and practices if you:
(A) Only post a sign in your branch
or office or generally publish
advertisements of your privacy policies
and practices;
(B) Send the notice via electronic mail
to a consumer who obtains a financial

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
product or service with you in person or
through the mail and who does not
agree to receive the notice
electronically.
(iii) You provide the initial privacy
notice to the customer so that it can be
retained or obtained at a later time if
you:
(A) Hand-deliver a printed copy of the
notice to the customer;
(B) Mail a printed copy of the notice
to the last known address of the
customer upon request of the customer;
or
(C) Maintain the notice on a web site
(or a link to another web site) for the
customer who obtains a financial
product or service electronically and
who agrees to receive the notice
electronically.
§ 573.5 Annual notice to customers
required.

(a) General rule. You must provide a
clear and conspicuous notice to
customers that accurately reflects your
privacy policies and practices not less
than annually during the continuation
of the customer relationship. Annually
means at least once in any period of 12
consecutive months during which that
relationship exists.
(b) How to provide notice. You must
provide the annual notice required by
paragraph (a) of this section to a
customer using a means permitted for
providing the initial notice to that
customer under § 573.4(d).
(c)(1) Termination of customer
relationship. You are not required to
provide an annual notice to a customer
with whom you no longer have a
continuing relationship.
(2) Examples. You no longer have a
continuing relationship with an
individual if:
(i) In the case of a deposit account, the
account is dormant under your policies;
(ii) In the case of a closed-end loan,
the consumer pays the loan in full, you
charge off the loan, or you sell the loan
without retaining servicing rights;
(iii) In the case of a credit card
relationship or other open-end credit
relationship, you no longer provide any
statements or notices to the consumer
concerning that relationship or you sell
the credit card receivables without
retaining servicing rights; or
(iv) For other types of relationships,
you have not communicated with the
consumer about the relationship for a
period of 12 consecutive months, other
than to provide annual notices of
privacy policies and practices.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

§ 573.6 Information to be included in initial
and annual notices of privacy policies and
practices.

(a) General rule. The initial and
annual notices that you provide about
your privacy policies and practices
under §§ 573.4 and 573.5 must include
each of the following items of
information:
(1) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you collect;
(2) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your
consumers that you disclose;
(3) The categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about your consumers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 573.10 and 573.11;
(4) The categories of nonpublic
personal information about your former
customers that you disclose and the
categories of affiliates and nonaffiliated
third parties to whom you disclose
nonpublic personal information about
your former customers, other than those
parties to whom you disclose
information under §§ 573.10 and 573.11;
(5) If you disclose nonpublic personal
information to a nonaffiliated third
party under § 573.9 (and no other
exception applies to that disclosure), a
separate description of the categories of
information you disclose and the
categories of third parties with whom
you have contracted;
(6) An explanation of the right under
§ 573.8(a) of the consumer to opt out of
the disclosure of nonpublic personal
information to nonaffiliated third
parties, including the methods by which
the consumer may exercise that right;
(7) Any disclosures that you make
under section 603(d)(2)(A)(iii) of the
Fair Credit Reporting Act (15 U.S.C.
1681a(d)(2)(A)(iii)) (that is, notices
regarding the ability to opt out of
disclosures of information among
affiliates); and
(8) Your policies and practices with
respect to protecting the confidentiality,
security and integrity of nonpublic
personal information.
(b) Description of nonaffiliated third
parties subject to exceptions. If you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to third parties as
authorized under §§ 573.10 and 573.11,
you are not required to list those
exceptions in the initial or annual
privacy notices required by §§ 573.4 and
573.5. When describing the categories
with respect to those parties, you are
only required to state that you make
disclosures to other nonaffiliated third
parties as permitted by law.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00045

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8813

(c) Future disclosures. Your notice
may include:
(1) Categories of nonpublic personal
information that you reserve the right to
disclose in the future, but do not
currently disclose; and (2) Categories of
affiliates or nonaffiliated third parties to
whom you reserve the right in the future
to disclose, but to whom you do not
currently disclose, nonpublic personal
information.
(d) Examples—(1) Categories of
nonpublic personal information that
you collect. You adequately categorize
the nonpublic personal information you
collect if you categorize it according to
the source of the information, such as
application information, information
about transactions (such as information
regarding your deposit, loan, or credit
card account), and consumer reports.
(2) Categories of nonpublic personal
information you disclose. You
adequately categorize nonpublic
personal information you disclose if you
categorize it according to source, and
provide a few illustrative examples of
the content of the information. These
might include application information,
such as assets and income; identifying
information, such as name, address, and
social security number; and transaction
information, such as information about
account balance, payment history,
parties to the transaction, and credit
card usage; and information from
consumer reports, such as a consumer’s
creditworthiness and credit history. You
do not adequately categorize the
information that you disclose if you use
only general terms, such as transaction
information about the consumer.
(3) Categories of affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose. You adequately categorize the
affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties
to whom you disclose nonpublic
personal information about consumers if
you identify the types of businesses that
they engage in. Types of businesses may
be described by general terms only if
you use a few illustrative examples of
significant lines of business. For
example, you may use the term financial
products or services if you include
appropriate examples of significant
lines of businesses, such as consumer
banking, mortgage lending, life
insurance or securities brokerage. You
also may categorize the affiliates and
nonaffiliated third parties to whom you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about consumers using more detailed
categories.
(4) Simplified notices. If you do not
disclose, and do not intend to disclose,
nonpublic personal information to
affiliates or nonaffiliated third parties,
you may simply state that fact, in

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8814

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

addition to the information you must
provide under paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(8),
and (b) of this section.
(5) Confidentiality, security and
integrity. You describe your policies and
practices with respect to protecting the
confidentiality and security of
nonpublic personal information if you
explain who has access to the
information and the circumstances
under which the information may be
accessed. You describe your policies
and practices with respect to protecting
the integrity of nonpublic personal
information if you explain measures you
take to protect against reasonably
anticipated threats or hazards. You are
not required to describe technical
information about the safeguards you
use.

(b) Application of opt out to all
consumers and all nonpublic personal
information.
(1) You must comply with this
section, regardless of whether you and
the consumer have established a
customer relationship.
(2) Unless you comply with this
section, you may not, directly or
through any affiliate, disclose any
nonpublic personal information about a
consumer that you have collected,
regardless of whether you collected it
before or after receiving the direction to
opt out from the consumer.
(c) Partial opt out. You may allow a
consumer to select certain nonpublic
personal information or certain
nonaffiliated third parties with respect
to which the consumer wishes to opt
out.

§ 573.7 Limitation on disclosure of
nonpublic personal information about
consumers to nonaffiliated third parties.

§ 573.8 Form and method of providing opt
out notice to consumers.

(a) (1) Conditions for disclosure.
Except as otherwise authorized in this
part, you may not, directly or through
any affiliate, disclose any nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer an initial notice as required
under § 573.4;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer an opt out notice as required
in § 573.8;
(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) Opt out definition. Opt out means
a direction by the consumer that you not
disclose nonpublic personal information
about that consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party, other than as permitted by
§§ 573.9, 573.10 and 573.11.
(3) Examples of reasonable
opportunity to opt out—(i) By mail. You
provide a consumer with whom you
have a customer relationship with a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
mail the notices required in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section to the consumer
and allow the consumer a reasonable
period of time, such as 30 days, to opt
out.
(ii) Isolated transaction with
consumer. For an isolated transaction,
such as the purchase of a cashier’s
check by a consumer, you provide a
reasonable opportunity to opt out if you
provide the consumer with the required
notices at the time of the transaction
and request that the consumer decide,
as a necessary part of the transaction,
whether to opt out before completing
the transaction.

(a) (1) Form of opt out notice. You
must provide a clear and conspicuous
notice to each of your consumers that
accurately explains the right to opt out
under § 573.7(a)(1). The notice must
state:
(i) That you disclose or reserve the
right to disclose nonpublic personal
information about your consumer to a
nonaffiliated third party;
(ii) That the consumer has the right to
opt out of that disclosure; and
(iii) A reasonable means by which the
consumer may exercise the opt out
right.
(2) Examples. (i) You provide
adequate notice that the consumer can
opt out of the disclosure of nonpublic
personal information to a nonaffiliated
third party if you identify all of the
categories of nonpublic personal
information that you disclose or reserve
the right to disclose to nonaffiliated
third parties as described in § 573.6 and
state that the consumer can opt out of
the disclosure of that information.
(ii) You provide a reasonable means to
exercise an opt out right if you:
(A) Designate check-off boxes in a
prominent position on the relevant
forms with the opt out notice;
(B) Include a reply form together with
the opt out notice; or
(C) Provide an electronic means to opt
out, such as a form that can be sent via
electronic mail or a process at your web
site, if the consumer agrees to the
electronic delivery of information.
(iii) You do not provide a reasonable
means of opting out if the only means
of opting out is for the consumer to
write his or her own letter to exercise
that opt out right.
(b) How to provide opt out notice—(1)
Delivery of notice. You must provide the

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00046

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

opt out notice required by paragraph (a)
of this section in a manner so that each
consumer can reasonably be expected to
receive actual notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in electronic form. If
you and the consumer orally agree to
enter into a customer relationship, you
may provide the opt out notice required
by paragraph (a) of this section within
a reasonable time thereafter if the
consumer agrees.
(2) Oral description of opt out right
insufficient. You may not provide the
opt out notice solely by orally
explaining, either in person or over the
telephone, the right of the consumer to
opt out.
(3) Same form as initial notice
permitted. You may provide the opt out
notice together with or on the same
written or electronic form as the initial
notice you provide in accordance with
§ 573.4.
(4) Initial notice required when opt
out notice delivered subsequent to
initial notice. If you provide the opt out
notice at a later time than required for
the initial notice in accordance with
§ 573.4, you must also include a copy of
the initial notice in writing or, if the
consumer agrees, in an electronic form
with the opt out notice.
(c) Notice of change in terms—(1)
General rule. Except as otherwise
authorized in this part, you must not,
directly or through any affiliate, disclose
any nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party other than as described in
the initial notice that you provided to
the consumer under § 573.4, unless:
(i) You have provided to the
consumer a revised notice that
accurately describes your policies and
practices;
(ii) You have provided to the
consumer a new opt out notice;
(iii) You have given the consumer a
reasonable opportunity, before the time
that you disclose the information to the
nonaffiliated third party, to opt out of
the disclosure; and
(iv) The consumer does not opt out.
(2) How to provide notice of change in
terms. You must provide the revised
notice of your policies and practices and
opt out notice to a consumer using the
means permitted for providing the
initial notice and opt out notice to that
consumer under § 573.4(d) or paragraph
(b) of this section respectively.
(3) Examples. (i) Except as otherwise
permitted by §§ 573.9, 573.10 and
573.11, a change-in-terms notice is
required if you:
(A) Disclose a new category of
nonpublic personal information to any
nonaffiliated third party; or

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February, 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules
(B) Disclose nonpublic personal
information to a new category of
nonaffiliated third party.
(ii) A change-in-terms notice is not
required if you disclose nonpublic
personal information to a new
nonaffiliated third party that is
adequately described by your prior
notice.
(d) Continuing right to opt out. A
consumer may exercise the right to opt
out at any time, and you must comply
with the consumer’s direction as soon as
reasonably practicable.
(e) Duration of consumer’s opt out
direction. A consumer’s direction to opt
out under this section is effective until
revoked by the consumer in writing, or
if the consumer agrees, in electronic
form.
§ 573.9 Exception to opt out requirements
for service providers and joint marketing.

(a) General rule. The opt out
requirements in §§ 573.7 and 573.8 do
not apply when you provide nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
to a nonaffiliated third party to perform
services for you or functions on your
behalf, if you:
(1) Provide the initial notice in
accordance with § 573.4; and
(2) Enter into a contractual agreement
with the third party that:
(i) Requires the third party to
maintain the confidentiality of the
information to at least the same extent
that you must maintain that
confidentiality under this part; and
(ii) Limits the third party’s use of
information you disclose solely to the
purposes for which the information is
disclosed or as otherwise permitted by
§§ 573.10 and 573.11 of this part.
(b) Service may include joint
marketing. The services performed for
you by a nonaffiliated third party under
paragraph (a) of this section may
include marketing of your own products
or services or marketing of financial
products or services offered pursuant to
joint agreements between you and one
or more financial institutions.
(c) Definition of joint agreement. For
purposes of this section, joint agreement
means a written contract pursuant to
which you and one or more financial
institutions jointly offer, endorse, or
sponsor a financial product or service.
§ 573.10 Exceptions to notice and opt out
requirements for processing and servicing
transactions.

(a) Exceptions for processing
transactions at consumer’s request. The
requirements for initial notice in
§ 573.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 573.7 and
573.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 573.9 do not apply if you

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

12:34 Feb 18, 2000

disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) As necessary to effect, administer,
or enforce a transaction requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(2) To service or process a financial
product or service requested or
authorized by the consumer;
(3) To maintain or service the
consumer’s account with you, or with
another entity as part of a private label
credit card program or other extension
of credit on behalf of such entity; or
(4) In connection with a proposed or
actual securitization, secondary market
sale (including sales of servicing rights)
or similar transaction related to a
transaction of the consumer.
(b) Necessary to effect, administer, or
enforce a transaction means that the
disclosure is:
(1) Required, or is one of the lawful
or appropriate methods, to enforce your
rights or the rights of other persons
engaged in carrying out the financial
transaction or providing the product or
service; or
(2) Required, or is a usual,
appropriate, or acceptable method:
(i) To carry out the transaction or the
product or service business of which the
transaction is a part, and record, service,
or maintain the consumer’s account in
the ordinary course of providing the
financial service or financial product;
(ii) To administer or service benefits
or claims relating to the transaction or
the product or service business of which
it is a part;
(iii) To provide a confirmation,
statement or other record of the
transaction, or information on the status
or value of the financial service or
financial product to the consumer or the
consumer’s agent or broker;
(iv) To accrue or recognize incentives
or bonuses associated with the
transaction that are provided by you or
any other party;
(v) To underwrite insurance at the
consumer’s request or for reinsurance
purposes, or for any of the following
purposes as they relate to a consumer’s
insurance: account administration,
reporting, investigating, or preventing
fraud or material misrepresentation,
processing premium payments,
processing insurance claims,
administering insurance benefits
(including utilization review activities),
participating in research projects, or as
otherwise required or specifically
permitted by Federal or State law;
(vi) In connection with settling a
transaction, including:
(A) The authorization, billing,
processing, clearing, transferring,
reconciling or collection of amounts
charged, debited, or otherwise paid

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00047

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

8815

using a debit, credit, or other payment
card, check or account number, or by
other payment means;
(B) The transfer of receivables,
accounts, or interests therein; or
(C) The audit of debit, credit, or other
payment information.
§ 573.11 Other exceptions to notice and
opt out requirements.

(a) Exceptions to opt out
requirements. The requirements for
initial notice to consumers in
§ 573.4(a)(2), the opt out in §§ 573.7 and
573.8 and service providers and joint
marketing in § 573.9 do not apply when
you disclose nonpublic personal
information:
(1) With the consent or at the
direction of the consumer, provided that
the consumer has not revoked the
consent or direction;
(2) (i) To protect the confidentiality or
security of your records pertaining to
the consumer, service, product or
transaction;
(ii) To protect against or prevent
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, claims or other liability;
(iii) For required institutional risk
control or for resolving consumer
disputes or inquiries;
(iv) To persons holding a legal or
beneficial interest relating to the
consumer; or
(v) To persons acting in a fiduciary or
representative capacity on behalf of the
consumer;
(3) To provide information to
insurance rate advisory organizations,
guaranty funds or agencies, agencies
that are rating you, persons that are
assessing your compliance with
industry standards, and your attorneys,
accountants, and auditors;
(4) To the extent specifically
permitted or required under other
provisions of law and in accordance
with the Right to Financial Privacy Act
of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3401 et seq.), to law
enforcement agencies (including
government regulators), self-regulatory
organizations, or for an investigation on
a matter related to public safety;
(5) (i) To a consumer reporting agency
in accordance with the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.);
or
(ii) From a consumer report reported
by a consumer reporting agency;
(6) In connection with a proposed or
actual sale, merger, transfer, or exchange
of all or a portion of a business or
operating unit if the disclosure of
nonpublic personal information
concerns solely consumers of such
business or unit; or
(7) (i) To comply with Federal, State,
or local laws, rules and other applicable
legal requirements;

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm03

PsN: 22FEP2

8816

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 35 / Tuesday, February 22, 2000 / Proposed Rules

(ii) To comply with a properly
authorized civil, criminal, or regulatory
investigation, or subpoena or summons
by Federal, State, or local authorities; or
(iii) To respond to judicial process or
government regulatory authorities
having jurisdiction over you for
examination, compliance or other
purposes as authorized by law.
(b) Examples of consent and
revocation of consent. (1) A consumer
may specifically consent to your
disclosure to a nonaffiliated insurance
company of the fact that the consumer
has applied to you for a mortgage so that
the insurance company can offer
homeowner’s insurance to the
consumer.
(2) A consumer may revoke consent
by subsequently exercising the right to
opt out of future disclosures of
nonpublic personal information as
permitted under § 573.8(d).
§ 573.12 Limits on redisclosure and reuse
of information.

(a) Limits on your redisclosure and
reuse. (1) Except as otherwise provided
in this part, if you receive nonpublic
personal information about a consumer
from a nonaffiliated financial
institution, you must not, directly or
through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
not affiliated with either the financial
institution or you, unless the disclosure
would be lawful if the financial
institution made it directly to such other
person.
(2) You may use nonpublic personal
information about a consumer that you
receive from a nonaffiliated financial
institution in accordance with an
exception under §§ 573.9, 573.10 or
573.11 only for the purpose of that
exception.

VerDate 16<FEB>2000

17:38 Feb 18, 2000

(b) Limits on redisclosure and the
reuse by other persons. (1) Except as
otherwise provided in this part, if you
disclose nonpublic personal information
about a consumer to a nonaffiliated
third party, that party must not, directly
or through an affiliate, disclose the
information to any other person that is
a nonaffiliated third party of both you
and that party, unless the disclosure
would be lawful if you made it directly
to such other person.
(2) A nonaffiliated third party may
use nonpublic personal information
about a consumer that it receives from
you in accordance with an exception
under §§ 573.9, 573.10, or 573.11 only
for the purpose of that exception.
§ 573.13 Limits on sharing of account
number information for marketing
purposes.

You must not, directly or through an
affiliate, disclose, other than to a
consumer reporting agency, an account
number or similar form of access
number or access code for a credit card
account, deposit account, or transaction
account of a consumer to any
nonaffiliated third party for use in
telemarketing, direct mail marketing, or
other marketing through electronic mail
to the consumer.
§ 573.14 Protection of Fair Credit
Reporting Act.

Nothing in this part shall be
construed to modify, limit, or supersede
the operation of the Fair Credit
Reporting Act (15 U.S.C. 1681 et seq.),
and no inference shall be drawn on the
basis of the provisions of this part
regarding whether information is
transaction or experience information
under section 603 of that Act.

Jkt 190000

PO 00000

Frm 00048

Fmt 4701

Sfmt 4702

§ 573.15

Relation to State laws.

(a) In general. This part shall not be
construed as superseding, altering, or
affecting any statute, regulation, order,
or interpretation in effect in any State,
except to the extent that such State
statute, regulation, order or
interpretation is inconsistent with the
provisions of this part, and then only to
the extent of the inconsistency.
(b) Greater protection under State law.
For purposes of this section, a State
statute, regulation, order, or
interpretation is not inconsistent with
the provisions of this part if the
protection such statute, regulation,
order, or interpretation affords any
consumer is greater than the protection
provided under this part, as determined
by the Federal Trade Commission, after
consultation with OTS, on the Federal
Trade Commission’s own motion or
upon the petition of any interested
party.
§ 573.16

Effective date; transition rule.

(a) Effective date. This part is effective
November 13, 2000.
(b) Notice requirement for consumers
who were your customers on the
effective date. No later than 30 days
after the effective date of this part, you
must provide an initial notice, as
required by § 573.4, to consumers who
were your customers on the effective
date of this part.
Dated: February 9, 2000.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
Ellen Seidman,
Director.
[FR Doc. 00–3718 Filed 2–18–00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODES 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P;
6720–01–P

E:\FR\FM\22FEP2.SGM

pfrm11

PsN: 22FEP2