Privacy Rule Handbook (2024)

Section One:

Overview of privacy rule requirements

The privacy rule governs when and how banks may share nonpublic personal information about consumers with nonaffiliated third parties.

The rule embodies two principles - notice and opt out. In summary:

  • All banks must develop initial and annual privacy notices. The notices must describe in general terms the bank's information sharing practices.
  • Banks that share nonpublic personal information about consumers with nonaffiliated third parties (outside of opt out exceptions delineated in the privacy rule) must also provide consumers with:
    • an opt out notice
    • a reasonable period of time for the consumer to opt out

A few key terms used throughout the privacy rule are critical to understanding the rule's scope and application. Refer to Section Four of this guide for an explanation of:

  • nonpublic personal information
  • the distinction between consumers and customers
  • nonaffiliated third party

Exceptions to opt out: A consumer cannot opt out of all information sharing. First, the privacy rule does not govern information sharing among affiliated parties. Second, the rule contains exceptions to allow transfers of nonpublic personal information to unaffiliated parties to process and service a consumer's transaction, and to facilitate other normal business transactions. For example, consumers cannot opt out when nonpublic personal information is shared with a nonaffiliated third party to:

  • market the bank's own financial products or services
  • market financial products or services offered by the bank and another financial institution (joint marketing)
  • process and service transactions the consumer requests or authorizes
  • protect against potential fraud or unauthorized transactions
  • respond to judicial process
  • comply with federal, state, or local legal requirements

Applying exceptions: A bank may have to satisfy disclosure and other requirements to make the rule's opt out exceptions applicable. For example, the joint marketing exception requires a contractual agreement between two nonaffiliated financial institutions to:

  1. jointly offer, endorse, or sponsor the financial product or service, and
  2. limit further use or disclosure of the consumer information transferred

In addition, the bank must include a separate statment in the privacy notice disclosing the joint marketing agreement.

Prohibition on sharing account numbers: The privacy rule prohibits a bank from disclosing an account number or access code for credit card, deposit, or transaction accounts to any nonaffiliated third party for use in marketing. The rule contains two narrow exceptions to this general prohibition. A bank may share account numbers in conjunction with marketing its own products as long as the service provider is not authorized to directly initiate charges to the accounts. A bank may also disclose account numbers to a participant in a private label or affinity credit card program when the participants are identified to the customer. An account number does not include a number or code in encrypted form as long as the bank does not also provide a means to decode the number.

Limits on reuse and redisclosure: The privacy rule limits reuse and redisclosure of nonpublic personal information received from a nonaffiliated financial institution or disclosed to a nonaffiliated third party. The specific limitations depend on whether the information was received pursuant to or outside of the notice and opt out exceptions.

State Law: A provision under a State law that provides greater consumer protection than provided under the GLBA privacy provisions will supercede the Federal privacy rule. The bank will be obligated to comply with the provisions of that State law to the extent those provisions provide greater consumer protection than the Federal privacy rule. The Federal Trade Commission determines whether a particular State law provides greater protection.

Content of notices: The initial, annual, and revised notices include, as applicable:

  • categories of information a bank collects (all banks)
  • categories of information a bank may disclose (all banks, except a bank that does not intend to make any disclosures or only makes disclosures under the exceptions may simply state that)
  • categories of affiliates and nonaffiliates to whom a bank discloses nonpublic personal information (all banks sharing nonpublic personal information with an affiliate or with a nonaffiliated third party)
  • information sharing practices about former customers (all banks)
  • categories of information disclosed under the service provider/joint marketing exception (only those banks relying on this exception)
  • consumer's right to opt out (only those banks that disclose outside of exceptions)
  • disclosures made under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (only those banks providing the FCRA opt out notice)
  • disclosures about confidentiality and security of information (all banks)

A revised notice may be required when a bank changes its information sharing practices.

The following table reflects the rule's requirements for delivering initial, annual, and revised notices to consumers and customers.

Privacy Rule Handbook (1)

Opt Out Notice

The final rule provides that an opt out notice is adequate if it:

  • identifies all the categories of nonpublic personal information the bank intends to disclose to nonaffiliated third parties
  • states the consumer can opt out of the disclosure
  • provides a reasonable method for the consumer to opt out, such as a toll-free telephone number

The table below summarizes the rule's requirements for delivering an opt out notice.

Privacy Rule Handbook (2)

The opt out right: If a bank intends to share nonpublic personal information outside the exceptions, it must also:

  • provide consumers with a reasonable opportunity to opt out. Examples in the privacy rule give consumers 30 days to respond to the opt out notice when the bank delivers the notice by mail or electronically
  • comply with a consumer's opt out direction as soon as reasonably practicable when the direction is received after the initial opt out period elapses
  • comply with the opt out direction until revoked in writing by the consumer

Delivering notices: The initial, annual, revised, and opt out notices may be delivered in writing or, if the consumer agrees, electronically. An oral description of the notice is not sufficient.

Section Two

Section Two has been rescinded. It related to preparations for the compliance deadline for privacy rules, which was July 1, 2001, and is therefore no longer relevant.

Section Three:

Maintaining Compliance Beyond
July 1, 2001

The following activities can help a bank achieve and maintain compliance with the privacy rule.

  • Develop controls to monitor ongoing compliance. Consider mechanisms for monitoring:
    • delivery of initial and annual notices to customers
    • delivery of initial notice to consumers who are not customers, if applicable
    • compliance with opt out directions, if applicable
    • accuracy of privacy notices, including prior approval for:
      • new marketing arrangements
      • new or renewed vendor contracts
      • disclosure of account numbers
      • affiliate-referral programs
      • reuse of consumer information received from another financial institution
  • Train employees. All employees should understand the bank's policies and procedures for complying with the privacy rule. Some employees will need to be able to explain the bank's privacy policies to customers and to businesses providing services to the bank.
  • Audit for compliance. Periodic audits will help management assess risk and verify the effectiveness of the compliance program. The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) will release interagency privacy examination procedures before July 1, 2001. The exam procedures will be a useful tool in developing a privacy audit program.

The interagency exam procedures will be mailed directly to insured depository institutions as soon as they are finalized. The procedures will also be available on the FDIC's Web site at www.fdic.gov when complete.

Section Four:

Learn the Lingo

Learning the lingo will help you understand and comply with the privacy rule. This section provides an explanation of key terminology.

Who must comply with the FDIC's privacy rule?

The FDIC's privacy rule refers to financial institutions that must comply with the rule as "you." For example, when the rule states that "you must provide a notice" it means all entities subject to this rule must provide a notice. The following definition of "you" explains the types of entities subject to the rule:

You: The banks that must comply with the FDIC's rule are -

  • FDIC-supervised banks
  • insured state branches of foreign banks
  • subsidiaries of FDIC-supervised banks and insured state branches of foreign banks, with certain exceptions, such as insurance and securities or brokerage subsidiaries

Although the FDIC's rule only applies to certain banks and some of their subsidiaries, all financial institutions must comply with similar privacy rules adopted by their supervisory agencies. For example, although securities subsidiaries of FDIC-supervised banks do not have to comply with the FDIC's privacy rule, they do have to comply with a similar privacy rule adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Who is protected by the privacy rule?

The privacy rule protects "consumers." All consumers receive the same privacy protections.

However, a subset of consumers defined as customers must receive certain disclosures, such as an annual privacy notice, that need not be provided to consumers who are not customers.

Thus, it is important to know the distinction between consumers and customers to understand the different disclosure requirements under the privacy rule.

Consumer: Any individual who is seeking to obtain or has obtained a financial product or service from a bank for personal, family, or household purposes is a consumer of that bank. The definition of consumer includes individuals who:

  • apply for a financial product or service (e.g., a loan or a deposit account) for personal, family, or household purposes
  • actually obtain a financial product or service (e.g., a loan or a deposit account) for personal, family, or household purposes

Customer: As the following diagram reflects, customers are a subset of consumers. A customer is a consumer with whom a bank has a continuing relationship. Although the rule does not define "continuing relationship," it provides examples of transactions that are and are not considered continuing relationships. Consumers who have a deposit account, obtain a loan, or obtain an investment advisory service are considered customers. See Section 332.3(i).

Privacy Rule Handbook (3)

Additional guidance regarding the customer relationship can be found in the Supplemental Information (the preamble) of the rule, which notes that a continuing relationship is established "where a consumer typically would receive some measure of continued service following, or in connection with, a transaction." See page 35168, Federal Register, Vol. 65, No. 106.

The next diagram depicts the relationship between all individuals who do business with a bank and those who meet the regulatory definitions for consumers and customers. As the diagram shows, only a portion of the individuals who conduct business with a bank are consumers under the privacy rule. For example, individuals are not considered consumers under this rule if they are commercial clients, grantors or beneficiaries of trusts for which the bank is trustee, or participants in an employee benefit plan that the banks sponsors.

Privacy Rule Handbook (4)

What type of information is protected by the privacy rule?

The rule identifies three primary categories of information:

  • publicly available information
  • personally identifiable financial information
  • nonpublic personal information

Nonpublic personal information is the category of information protected by the privacy rule. The definitions for publicly available information and personally identifiable financial information work together to describe and define nonpublic personal information.

  • Publicly available information is any information a bank reasonably believes is lawfully publicly available. The nature of the information, not the source of the information, determines whether it is publicly available information for purposes of the privacy rule. For example, even if a bank obtains customers' telephone numbers or the assessed value of their residences directly from the consumers, this information will be considered publicly available if the bank has a reasonable basis to believe the information could have been lawfully obtained from a public source. A reasonable belief exists if a bank has determined that (a) the information is of the type that is generally available to the public and (b) the individual has not blocked such information from public disclosure. This means, for example, that a bank can consider a customer's phone number to be publicly available, but only if the bank takes steps to determine the phone number is not unlisted.
  • Personally identifiable financial information is any information a bank collects about a consumer in conjunction with providing a financial product or service. This includes:
    • information provided by the consumer during the application process (e.g., name, phone number, address, income)
    • information resulting from the financial product or service transaction (e.g., payment history, loan or deposit balances, credit card purchases)
    • information from other sources about the consumer obtained in connection with providing the financial product or service (e.g., information from a consumer credit report or from court records)

Personally identifiable financial information also includes any information that "is disclosed in a manner that indicates that the individual is or has been your consumer." See Section 332.3(o)(2)(i)(D). Thus, the very fact that an individual is a consumer of a bank is personally identifiable financial information.

  • Nonpublic personal information, the category of information protected by the privacy rule, consists of:
    1. Personally identifiable financial information that is not publicly available information; and
    2. Lists, descriptions, or other groupings of consumers that were either
      1. created using personally identifiable financial information that is not publicly available information, or
      2. contain personally identifiable financial information that is not publicly available information.

A list is considered nonpublic personal information if it is generated based on customer relationships, loan balances, or other personally identifiable financial information that is not publicly available. A list is also considered nonpublic personal information if it contains any nonpublic personal information.

For example, in jurisdictions where mortgage documents are public records, the names and address of all individuals for whom a bank held a mortgage would not be nonpublic personal information since it was generated using publicly available information and contained only publicly available information. The list would become nonpublic personal information, however, if it contained current loan balances or if it was generated using only those customers with current mortgage loan balances in excess of a certain amount.

The two categories of nonpublic personal information are depicted in the following diagram.

Privacy Rule Handbook (5)

Who are nonaffiliated third parties?

The privacy rule restricts information sharing with nonaffiliated third parties. The rule defines nonaffiliated third parties as persons or entities except affiliates and persons jointly employed by a bank and a nonaffiliated third party. Affiliates generally include a bank's subsidiaries, its holding company, and any other subsidiaries of the holding company. See Section 332.3(a), Section 332.3(d), and Section 332.3(g).

The privacy rule does not impose limitations on information sharing with affiliates. It does, however, require disclosure of such information sharing policies and practices. (Note: The rules governing the sharing of information between a bank and its affiliates are set forth in the Fair Credit Reporting Act.)

Although the privacy rule most commonly uses the term "nonaffiliated third parties," there are some instances in which a distinction is made between nonaffiliated financial institutions and all other nonaffiliated third parties. Readers should pay particular attention to these distinctions. See Section 332.13.

Privacy Rule Handbook (2024)

FAQs

What is the FDIC privacy rule? ›

The Right—Consumers must be given the right to “opt out” of, or prevent, a financial institution from disclosing nonpublic personal information about them to a nonaffiliated third party unless an exception to that right applies.

What are the requirements for the financial privacy rule? ›

Generally, these requirements include obtaining subpoenas, notifying the customer of the request, and providing the customer with an opportunity to object. The Act imposes related limitations and duties on financial institutions prior to the release of information requested by federal authorities.

What information must be disclosed on the privacy notice? ›

Your notice must include, where it applies to you, the following information: Categories of information collected. For example, nonpublic personal information obtained from an application or a third party such as a consumer reporting agency. Categories of information disclosed.

What are the three types of privacy notices required under the GLBA? ›

There are three types of privacy notices defined in the regulations: an initial notice, an annual notice, and a revised notice.

What does the privacy rule include? ›

The Privacy Rule protects all "individually identifiable health information" held or transmitted by a covered entity or its business associate, in any form or media, whether electronic, paper, or oral.

What are 3 things not insured by FDIC? ›

The FDIC does not insure:
  • Stock Investments.
  • Bond Investments.
  • Mutual Funds.
  • Crypto Assets.
  • Life Insurance Policies.
  • Annuities.
  • Municipal Securities.
  • Safe Deposit Boxes or their contents.

What is legally required in a privacy policy? ›

A Privacy Policy is a legal document that discloses details about what personal data you collect, how and why you use it, what the individual's data rights are, and more. In this guide, we've used the term Privacy Policy. "Some laws use other terms such as Privacy Notice or Privacy Statement.

What is the red flag rule? ›

The Red Flags Rule requires specified firms to create a written Identity Theft Prevention Program (ITPP) designed to identify, detect and respond to “red flags”—patterns, practices or specific activities—that could indicate identity theft.

What is the FCRA privacy rule? ›

The Act (Title VI of the Consumer Credit Protection Act) protects information collected by consumer reporting agencies such as credit bureaus, medical information companies and tenant screening services. Information in a consumer report cannot be provided to anyone who does not have a purpose specified in the Act.

What information should not be disclosed? ›

Other examples of confidential information include medical records, personal history, personal goals, and private correspondence between people. While confidential information needs to remain private, there are situations where breaking confidentiality is permissible; If the disclosing party is subpoenaed.

What if a bank violates your privacy? ›

What if you think your privacy rights were violated? You can make a complaint under the California law to the California Attorney General or to a state or federal agency that regulates financial companies. The agency may investigate your complaint and may take action against the financial company.

What are the three key rules of GLBA? ›

Three key rules of the GLBA include:
  • Privacy Rule: Ensuring the protection of consumers' personal financial information.
  • Safeguards Rule: Requiring the establishment of security measures to prevent data breaches.
  • Pretexting Provisions: Prohibiting deceptive methods of obtaining personal financial information.
Aug 3, 2023

What needs to be included in a privacy notice? ›

A privacy notice should identify who the data controller is, with contact details for its Data Protection Officer. It should also explain the purposes for which personal data are collected and used, how the data are used and disclosed, how long it is kept, and the controller's legal basis for processing.

What is an example of a GLBA violation? ›

failing to provide users with a clear initial privacy notice, failing to deliver it in a way that each consumer could be reasonably expected to receive it, and by distributing a notice that didn't accurately affect its practices.”

What is the Dodd Frank Act for privacy? ›

Under Dodd-Frank, the CFPB is authorized to promulgate rules “identifying as unlawful, unfair, deceptive, or abusive acts or practices in connection with any transaction with a consumer for a consumer financial product or service.” The portion of CFPB authority focusing on abusive acts or practices is new in the ...

What is the FDIC coverage rule? ›

The standard deposit insurance coverage limit is $250,000 per depositor, per FDIC-insured bank, per ownership category. Deposits held in different ownership categories are separately insured, up to at least $250,000, even if held at the same bank.

What is the FDIC safeguards rule? ›

The FTC Safeguards Rule requires covered companies to develop, implement, and maintain an information security program with administrative, technical, and physical safeguards designed to protect customer information.

What is the FDIC set off rule? ›

The FDIC is authorized to withhold insurance from those depositors who are indebted to the failed IDI until the debt is satisfied. Also, in its capacity as receiver for the failed IDI, the FDIC possesses the right to “offset” or “set off” the depositor's deposit against an unpaid debt (such as a delinquent loan).

What is the Federal Reserve privacy Rule? ›

The Board limits its collection of personal information to that which is necessary to carry out its missions and responsibilities. The Board protects the security and confidentiality of personal information through various methods including security technologies and access controls.

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