A financial institution is required
to disclose to consumers its policies and practices concerning information
sharing with both affiliates and nonaffiliated third parties. They
must give new customers accurate, clear, and conspicuous initial notices
about their privacy policies, describing the conditions under which
they may disclose nonpublic personal information to nonaffiliated
third parties and affiliates. “Customers” are consumers with whom
the institution has a continuing relationship in which it provides
financial products or services for personal, family, or household
purposes. Initial notices must also be given to a consumer who is
not a customer if the institution shares nonpublic personal information
about the consumer with nonaffiliated third parties. Institutions
must also give their current customers accurate, clear, and conspicuous
annual notices of their privacy policies. When information-sharing
practices change, institutions may have to provide a revised notice,
as outlined in section 1016.8.
Privacy notices should include the following information:
- categories of information the institution collects
- categories of information the institution may disclose
- categories of affiliates and nonaffiliates to which
the institution gives nonpublic personal information
- the consumer’s right to opt out
- any disclosures made under the Fair Credit Reporting
Act