Secondary Use
Secondary Use is a form of Information Processing privacy harm under the Solove taxonomy.
Secondary Use is defined as using personal information for a purpose other than the purpose for which it was collected.
- In the 1940's the U.S. Government used census data, collected originally for the purpose of apportioning congressional districts, to identify and intern those of Japanese descent during the war.[1]
Additional comments
Occurrences
Laws and Regulations
The following laws and regulations address the Secondary Use harm.
- (410 ILCS § 50/). Medical Patient Rights Act. (United States)
- (410 ILCS § 513/). Genetic Information Privacy Act (United States)
- 201 CMR 17.00. Standards For The Protection of Personal Information of Residents of The Commonwealth. (United States)
- 42 U.S.C. Subchapter VII (United States)
- 5 U.S.C. §552a (United States)
- Bank Secrecy Act (United States)
- CH. 19.255. Personal Information—Notice of Security Breaches. (United States)
- CH. 217. Genetic Testing. (United States)
- CH. 48.1. Consumer Privacy Protection Act. (United States)
- CH. 482-1-122. Alabama Insurance Regulation. (United States)
- CH. 70.02. Medical Records—Health Care Information Access and Disclosure. (United States)
- CO. HB 09-1338. (United States)
- Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (United States)
- California Consumer Credit Reporting Agencies Act (United States)
- California Consumer Privacy Act of (2018) (United States)
- Communications Act of 1934 (United States)
- Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (United States)
- Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2014 (United States)
- Driver's Privacy Protection Act of 1994 (United States)
- Electronic Communications Privacy Act (United States)
- Fair Credit Reporting Act of 1970 (United States)
- Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (United States)
- Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (United States)
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (United States)
- ILL. SB 0318. Use of genetic testing information by employers. (United States)
- ILL. SB 1307. The Genetic Information Privacy Act. (United States)
- KY. HB 5. The Safety and Security of Personal Information held by Public Agencies. (United States)
- MD. HB 1127. Maryland Financial Consumer Protection Commission. (United States)
- MD. SB 613. Consumer Personal Information Privacy. (United States)
- MN. H.F. 112. The use of Genetic Information by Government Entities; creating new Consumer Protection Law regarding use of Genetic Information. (United States)
- NH. HB 1586. Student and Teacher Information Protection and Privacy. (United States)
- NH. HB 536. Biometric Information to The Consumer Protection Act. (United States)
- NM. HB 369. Genetic Information Privacy Act. (United States)
- NY GBS § 399-DDD Confidentiality of Social Security Account Number (United States)
- OR. STAT. § 807.750 (2009)
- Oregon Consumer Information Protection Act. (United States)
- Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (United States)
- Personal Data Protection Law (KVKK) (Turkey)
- Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act (United States)
- Privacy Act of 1974 (United States)
- Protection of Pupil Rights Amendment (United States)
- Rhode Island Identity Theft Protection Act of 2015. (United States)
- Section 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act (United States)
- VT. REG. B-2018-01 (2018) (United States)
- VT. REG. IH-2001-01 (United States)
- Video Privacy Protection Act (United States)
- WA. HB 2213 (2017) (United States)
- §10-3-1104.6. Genetic information -limitations on disclosure of information -liability definitions -legislative declaration. (United States)
- §13.386. Treatment of Genetic Information held by Government Entities and other persons. (United States)
- §132-1.10. Social security numbers and other personal identifying information. (United States)