1 / 29

CONSUMER RIGHTS & ELECTRONIC COMMERCE

CONSUMER RIGHTS & ELECTRONIC COMMERCE. Mrs Pamela W. S. Chan Chief Executive Consumer Council, HKSAR. 26 March 2001. Consumer Confidence. Consumer confidence is necessary to realise the full potential of e-commerce On-line operators should respect 8 basic consumer rights.

jarrod-chen
Download Presentation

CONSUMER RIGHTS & ELECTRONIC COMMERCE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CONSUMER RIGHTS & ELECTRONIC COMMERCE Mrs Pamela W. S. Chan Chief Executive Consumer Council, HKSAR • 26 March 2001

  2. Consumer Confidence • Consumer confidence is necessary to realise the full potential of e-commerce • On-line operators should respect 8 basic consumer rights.

  3. Eight Consumer Rights - UN • Right to satisfaction of Basic Needs • Right to Safety • Right to be Informed • Right to Choose • Right to be Heard • Right to Redress • Right to Consumer Education • Right to Healthy & Sustainable Environment

  4. Eight Consumer Rights - UN • Right to satisfaction of basic needs • Right to safety • Right to be informed • Right to choose • Right to be heard • Right to redress • Right to consumer education • Right to healthy & sustainable environment

  5. E-Commerce • On-line world shaping lives of consumers • Soon regarded as basic service in developed economies • Problem of Access: • no computer • illiterate • mentally deficient

  6. Consumer Rights Right to be informed Consumers must be given appropriate information and ensuredprivacy • passing of information not allowed unless with expressed consent • why & how information will be used • named individual for data protection

  7. Consumer Rights Right to choose • Sites that will respect their privacy. • Data collection - necessary and reasonable • Right to opt out, review and correct information • Right to refuse the passing of information to third parties

  8. Consumer Rights Right to redress • Right to hold companies liable for privacy violation • Easy access to dispute resolution mechanism

  9. Consumer Rights Right to safety • Superior security system - safeguard electronic transaction and data protection • Clear definition of liability of firms

  10. Consumer Protection in the Virtual Market • Same level of protection as in real market • Achieved through national consumer protection and privacy law • New challenges as E-traders adapt the technology for their own interests, not consumers

  11. Consumers International Privacy Project • By: consumer organizations from 14 countries/ territories • Objective - how much information is collected and how web sites take steps to protect privacy • 751 sites : • 300 US based 300 EU based • Sectors: • Retail • Financial and • Health

  12. Disclosure on Information Use EU & US sites fall short of international standards • EU: tight regulation • US: no comprehensive legal protection in consumer privacy But EU are no better

  13. Personal Information • US & EU: +63% of sites collected personal information • Hong Kong: 80% of sites

  14. Placement of Cookies Financial & Retail sites • US and EU +72% of sites place more than one cookies • HK: 85% Majority place 2 - 3 cookies One site +50 cookies

  15. Compulsory information • Most common information collected: • name 81% • email 70% • telephone 49% • address 46% • In Hong Kong: • gender: 24% • ID Card No: 4% • date of birth: 9%

  16. At what stage was information collected • Information was collected after user browsed the site, but before making a purchase in all jurisdictions

  17. Did sites have privacy policy • Of the US and EU sites that collected information, 58% had a privacy policy. • Of Hong Kong sites, 84% had a policy • Information on what was done with information found to be lacking

  18. How easy was it to find privacy policy • Ease of finding a policy determined by how prominent it was • 67% of EU and US sites were in this category • Hong Kong77%

  19. ‘Opting Out’ of mailing lists and passing on of information • EU, US and Hong Kong sites were similar in that • 21% gave an opting out choice for their own mailing lists; • 3% about affiliates mailing lists • 3% about third party mailing lists

  20. Was site a member of certification program • Over 95% of sites visited did not belong to any certification scheme • Only 3 sites in Hong Kong cited a trust mark reference

  21. Trust Mark Schemes • OECD Guidelines • To be successful trust marks must address basic consumer concerns • on terms of payment and procedure, • terms of delivery, • guarantees, after sales service, • cooling off periods, • returns policy, • statement on privacy

  22. Online redress mechanism • Given that most transactions will be outside a consumers jurisdiction, a major consideration will be alternative dispute resolution (ADR) by way of an online redress mechanism, • A range of possibilities • assisted negotiation • mediation • binding arbitration

  23. Key Elements of online redress • Independence - impartiality of the third party • Transparency - all aspects clearly known • Visibility - needs to be well publicised • Affordable - preferably free • Timely - resolve disputes quickly • Competent ADR officers • Security of information

  24. Key ADR Elements continued…. • Enforceability - sanctions should be available • Due Process - fair to both sides • Legality - participation should not foreclose possibility of legal action by consumer or appropriate enforcement agency

  25. Insurance Schemes/Fidelity Funds • Provision for worst case scenario, if merchant fails to abide by ADR decision • In terms of consumer confidence, this would be major selling point

  26. Monitoring Trust Marks • Business: worse scenario loss of trustmark • Consumers: monetary • Consumer expectation: close monitoring insurance/fidelity fund

  27. International Standards • Globalisation points to need for international rules, for government, business & consumers • International standards on trust marks will provide an important benchmark • ISO initiatives • Need for consumer participation in setting standards

  28. The future • Beneficial if one single forum emerges at some future date to ensure a harmonised approach • Not only for consumers, but for governments and business

  29. Confucius The Wise, perplexes not, The Benevolent, worries not, The Brave, fears not. Thank You

More Related