Keynote Address, Jim Hood, Attorney General, State of
Mississippi, President, National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG)
Law enforcement has to be moving to the internet, where
crime is going. Worked with ISPs on child porn/hash screening. We do hacking,
extortion, data breach, IP theft. He
fears in our lifetime a hacker will shut down our electric grids. Survived
Katrina; carried a gun the first few weeks thereafter. Law-abiding people will steal water, gasoline,
whatever they need to protect their families if the electrical grid is shut
down.
AGs have multistate working groups. If you have a data
breach, and call my office as GC, I have a direct link to that company. If you hire a large firm with a data breach
practice, most AGs will think “this is the defense firm we have to deal with”
and their eyes glaze over. Work with the AG instead. If you hire a defense firm, we assume you’re
guilty, that’s our law enforcement action.
BP oil spill: initially well handled, GC reached out; then they figured
out they were really in trouble. If you
have a small data breach, work with AG’s office. Hard to point a finger when we
may not have protected our own gov’t systems as we should. Compare to your competitors—big box store may
need different procedures than a bank. AGs are putting together a manual with
suggestions; not necessarily best practices.
Primarily for small businesses suffering a data breach.
Most AGs want federal legislation to be as stringent as the
most stringent state legislation. Probably will see some movement in the next
year or two. We fight federal preemption
every day, Democrats and Republicans. There
is a lot of overreach—federal district judges in particular haven’t respected
state sovereignty as they should.
(Heh.) CAFA: 49 AGs said “exempt
AG actions from this act,” and Senators said they wouldn’t be covered, but the
5th Circuit said that AGs were covered anyway; SCt reversed 9-0.
There’s a constant battle. But we’ll
probably reach agreement on data breach.
We just appealed the Google decision. The Sony hack: I didn’t have a clue they knew
Mississippi had an AG; I didn’t know anything about operation Goliath or any of
this stuff. They acted like the movie
theaters got an AG to go after them, but I’ve been doing it for 6-8 years.
Motion picture industry has been involved since the 1920s when people stole
film off trucks. Counterfeit items hurt our consumers. Drugs, etc.
After Google entered into a plea w/fed. gov’t, paid $500
million to avoid conviction, b/c DOJ found that marketing division was getting
around their system to allow Canadian pharmacies to advertise—really dope
dealers in South America and Russia. Google folded b/c DOJ got their
emails. Complaints from parents:
investigators made buys online, like oxycodone. Autocomplete used to complete “prescription”
with “buy prescription drugs without prescription.” We bought from their ads. Monetizing the sale of illegal drugs is a
problem. YouTube videos would say “here’s
how to buy drugs w/o a prescription.” (§230?)
IP theft is important—Mississippi has an inordinate number
of artists and writers—but the AGs weren’t badgering Google out of
nowhere. We bought pain and birth
control pills; often we got ripped off, or got counterfeits—during Google’s 2
year probationary period and we provided that information but the fed gov’t
hasn’t done anything so far. Engaging on these tech issues is not new. 3-D printers are an emerging issue. Will change business more than the internet.
Will be able to print a cellphone. Won’t need Chinese labor. Also IP theft. Guns, drugs.
Encryption: will you get sued if you don’t encrypt? You can’t
encrypt w/in business, but if you send it to someone else, they need to
decrypt. Apple iOS: Now we have digital
info in almost every criminal case—texting, photos, emails. We rescue kids by
working with Facebook: we find them if they’ve run away. FB works with us. Law enforcement access saves lives. Crooks want privacy protection—helps sell
phones. (So much for data breach
concerns.) If we can’t get cellphone companies to keep
some code for us, we need a law to give us the best evidence. What if a guy gets shot and the video on the phone
is the only evidence?
Q: in the past, NAG has cooperated w/FTC. What’s it like
now, and how do you see it going forward?
What are the priorities in consumer protection, and do they match those
of the FTC?
A: have a good relationship w/FCC and FTC. Antitrust can be slow, but generally they
deal with a bigger bureaucracy. Ads to
kids: higher standards. Particularly online, all the apps targeted at kids.
Q: why aren’t you boycotting Indiana? Aren’t civil rights a
critical issue as well?
A: Governor of Conn. banned state funds for travel
there. They’re going to have to deal
with their own problem.
Q: distinguishing between ads and content—are the AGs
involved?
A: not as much, but in the area of Google ads/AdWords, when
we see “how to murder your wife” for a YouTube video, we notice that. Have to disclose where you place ad. We will look at putting legit ads beside
illegit ads.
Q: self-regulation, including on piracy: ecosystem challenge
is where the liability should be put.
There’s a challenge in putting liability on intermediaries. We’ve come out on having advertisers do
contracts and push down limitations on ads delivered on pirate sites.
A: companies have a role here. Talk to the AGs but AGs can’t
carry all your water. A lot of times
competitors come to us. We try to stay out of individual class actions.
"If you hire a defense firm, we assume you’re guilty." WOW.
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