The Supreme Court has agreed to weigh in on the interpretation of a decades-old federal privacy statute that has found renewed relevance in the modern digital advertising ecosystem. In Salazar v. Paramount Global, the Court will consider the scope of the Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA), specifically, who qualifies as a “consumer” entitled to the statute’s protections. The decision to grant certiorari reflects a clear and growing circuit split with implications for companies that operate video-enabled websites, ad-supported streaming platforms, and content-driven digital services.
Congress enacted the VPPA in 1988 in response to a highly publicized privacy controversy during the confirmation hearings of Supreme Court nominee Judge Robert Bork. During those hearings, a Washington newspaper obtained and published Bork’s video rental history from a local video store. The incident sparked bipartisan concern over the ease with which sensitive viewing habits could be disclosed, prompting Congress to pass legislation restricting such practices.
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