Wisconsin-based Guardian Credit Union convinced a federal court to split a proposed online tracker privacy class suit in half, dismissing eight claims while letting nine advance.
“Even reading Plaintiff’s factual allegations generously, several of his claims fail as a matter of law,” the US District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin said, including for invasion of privacy and negligence per se citing the Federal Trade Commission Act and the Gramm-Leach Biley Act.
Plaintiff David Gassman alleged that the credit union installed code-based tracking devices on its website to collect personal financial information and share it with third parties. The ...
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