It's hard to believe that major debt
collection companies violate people's consumer rights on a daily basis.
Not exact matches
The social network has occasionally cracked down: In 2014, Facebook blocked two advertising partners, HasOffers and Kontagent, for
violating policies on retaining customer data and failing to notify partner
companies about their data
collection practices.
Yes, if the debt
collection company has
violated any laws, such as the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act.
These laws are often
violated by the debt
collection companies.
We found that a significant portion of Navient's customer base claims to be victims of the
company's illegal practices which
violated the Dodd - Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, and the Fair Debt
Collections Practices Act.
Debt settlement negotiators can take the documented proof that your consumer rights were
violated by that debt
collection company and present this information to them — then offering a settlement in exchange for considering the matter resolved.
Below you can see a recent video that Ruth was featured in where she summarizes her extensive knowledge on the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act (FDCPA — this is a federal law that third - party debt
collection companies often
violate).
Debt
collection company charged with giving inaccurate statements to consumers and
violating the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act.
Below is a video that Ruth was featured in and she discusses the FDCPA which is a common law that third - party debt
collection companies often
violate.
The social network has occasionally cracked down: In 2014, Facebook blocked two advertising partners, HasOffers and Kontagent, for
violating policies on retaining customer data and failing to notify partner
companies about their data
collection practices.
Facebook says, however, that when Kogan passed the data he collected to Cambridge Analytica, he
violated the
company's rather permissive data
collection rules and in 2015 demanded that Kogan and everyone he handed the data to destroy it and certify that they did so.
News reports about Facebook's role in the aggressive form of data
collection also have raised serious questions about whether the
company violated a landmark consent decree with a federal watchdog agency designed to prevent privacy violations.