Cassidy, Lujan, Trahan Introduce Bill to Inform Consumers, Increase Online Transparency

Statement

U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) and Ben Ray Luján (D-NM) and U.S. Representative Lori Trahan (D-MA-03) today introduced the Terms-of-service Labeling, Design and Readability (TLDR) Act to require commercial websites and mobile apps to create a simple and readable summary of their terms-of-service agreements. The TLDR Act would increase online transparency and ensure consumers are informed about how their personal data is collected and used. Small businesses are exempt from the law.

"Users should not have to comb through pages of legal jargon in a website's terms of services to know how their data will be used," said Dr. Cassidy. "Requiring companies to provide an easy-to-understand summary of their terms should be mandatory and is long overdue."

"Consumers deserve the ability to make informed decisions online for themselves and their families," said Senator Luján. "Rather than inform, too many companies use long and complicated Terms of Service agreements to bury critical details about their data policies and shield themselves from legal liability. The TLDR Act will empower consumers to take their business elsewhere when that happens. Informing consumers is a bipartisan issue, and I look forward to continue working with my colleagues to provide real choice online."

"For far too long, blanket terms of service agreements have forced consumers to either "agree' to all of a company's conditions or lose access to a website or app entirely. No negotiation, no alternative, and no real choice," said Representative Trahan. "To further slant the decision in their favor, many companies design unnecessarily long and complicated contracts, knowing that users don't have the bandwidth to read lengthy legal documents when they're simply trying to message a loved one or make a quick purchase. The potential for abuse is obvious, and some bad actors have chosen to exploit these agreements to expand their control over users' personal data and shield themselves from liability. This is a problem that transcends political parties, and it demands solutions like the TLDR Act that do the same by requiring transparency and returning power to consumers."


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