Beyond the Privacy Torts: Reinvigorating a Common Law Approach for Data Breaches

Published: 11 Jan 2018, Last Modified: 31 Dec 2025127 Yale L.J. Forum 614 (2018)EveryoneCC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Abstract: Data breaches continue to roil the headlines, yet regulation and legislation are unlikely to provide a timely solution to protect consumers. Meanwhile, individuals are left, at best, in a state of data insecurity and, at worst, in a compromised economic situation. State common law provides a path forward. Rather than rely on statutory claims or the privacy torts to protect consumer data, this Essay suggests that courts should recognize how contemporary transactions implicate fiduciary-like relationships of trust. By designating what this Essay terms data confidants as a limited form of information fiduciary, courts can reinvigorate the tort of breach of confidence as a remedy for aggrieved consumers.
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