5

Planned Parenthood suspends marketing trackers on abortion search pages

 2 years ago
source link: https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2022/06/30/planned-parenthood-privacy-data/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.
neoserver,ios ssh client
Advertisement
Close

Planned Parenthood suspends marketing trackers on abortion search pages

The change comes as President Biden prepares a letter to the FTC asking it to protect reproductive health data

June 30, 2022 at 1:57 p.m. EDT
planned-parenthood-privacy-data
A patient recovery area inside the Planned Parenthood Regional Logistics Center in Fairview Heights, Ill., on March 8. ((Neeta Satam for The Washington Post))

Planned Parenthood said it will remove the marketing trackers on its search pages related to abortions and that no protected health information has been breached thus far.

The comments came after The Washington Post reported Wednesday findings from Lockdown Privacy, the maker of an app that blocks online trackers, showing that when visitors used the website’s search function to find an abortionprovider and begin to schedule an appointment, Planned Parenthood shared data on those actions with third-party tracking companies including Google, Facebook and TikTok.

In a video shared with The Washington Post, Lockdown founder Johnny Lin visited the Planned Parenthood website, opened the provider search, input a Zip code and selected “surgical abortion” as a service. As he clicked through the process, a development tool let him see how data such as his IP address was being shared with Google, Facebook and many other third-party companies. Only the companies would know for sure how they use our data, but any data sitting on servers is vulnerable to potential cyberattacks or government subpoenas. In a criminal abortion case, an IP address would be pertinent, because with the help of internet service providers, law enforcement can trace IP addresses back to individuals.

Advertisement

“Let’s be clear: No scheduling or protected health information (PHI) has been breached,” said Diana Contreras, chief health-care officer for Planned Parenthood Federation of Americain the statement to The Washington Post.“Out of an abundance of caution, Planned Parenthood will suspend marketing pixels on webpages related to abortion search, and will be engaging with Meta/Facebook and other technology companies about how their policies can better protect people seeking abortion care.”

Planned Parenthood also said that it has a separate tool for scheduling and confirming appointments that it says is compliant with HIPAA (The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996, which protects sensitive health information on patients) and free from marketing trackers. It doesn’t consider the information shared with Google and others to be “scheduling” information, and Contreras added that “it is unconscionable, especially at a time of chaos and confusion in the wake of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, to spread misinformation and elevate bad actors who are intimidating and dissuading people from seeking abortion and other sexual and reproductive health services.”

Planned Parenthood’s statement comes asPresident Biden prepares a letter to the Federal Trade Commission asking it to expand protections for people seeking abortion information or services, including banning unfair or deceptive data sharing practices, according to a report from Bloomberg.

Advertisement

Amid fears and questions about how much information health-care providers and digital data collectors could share about people seeking abortions if state governments asked for it, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued new guidance on how to protect your health information when using an internet-connected device.

It also released a reminder that HIPAA-covered entities can share protected health information only in narrow circumstances governed by HIPAA’s Privacy Rule — for example, the Privacy Rule “permits but does not require covered entities to disclose PHI about an individual for law enforcement purposes,” the notice reads. But HIPAA doesn’t cover much of the digital data we share surrounding our health concerns, such as our internet searches or the data Planned Parenthood was sending to third parties.

Help Desk: Making tech work for you

Help Desk is a destination built for readers looking to better understand and take control of the technology used in everyday life.

Go deeper: Tech in Your Life | Tech at Work | Your Data and Privacy | Internet Access | What’s New | Ethical Issues

Data and Privacy: A guide to every privacy setting you should change now. We have gone through thesettings for the most popular (and problematic) services to give you recommendations. Google | Amazon | Facebook | Venmo | Apple | Android

Ask a question: Send the Help Desk your personal technology questions.

Loading...

About Joyk


Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK