Online retailers in America will soon be required by law to disclose to state governments what purchases their customers – meaning, you – have made.
That extraordinary situation is the result of a long-running legal case that the US Supreme Court this week refused to hear. This means a decision by the Tenth Circuit [PDF] requiring out-of-state retailers to report to the Colorado state government the details of all purchases – including what that purchase was and who bought it – stands.
So if you bought a dildo in Denver, some bureaucrat is going to be informed about it.
Colorado is not the only state pushing the requirement. Vermont will also make the same requirement three months after Colorado starts imposing the law. And other states including Alabama, South Dakota, Tennessee and Wyoming have approved similar rules.
Unsurprisingly, businesses and privacy advocates are up in arms.
The executive director of NetChoice – a trade association of e-commerce businesses that includes eBay, PayPal, Google and Facebook as members – Steve DelBianco, said the decision "set the stage for a rude privacy shock to American consumers."
"State governments will receive data about residents' purchases, including personal health products and politically-themed books and movies," DelBianco noted.
The exec director of the American Catalog Mailers Association (ACMA), Hamilton Davison, is also extremely concerned. "Consumers, particularly those who buy from catalogs and e-commerce merchants, put considerable trust in the businesses from which they make the most personal of purchases," he noted. "This decision undermines this trust by requiring remote sellers to report to state tax collectors on the buying habits of their customers, including health care products, apparel or other sensitive items."
Why?
The idea behind the law is for state governments to be able to claim sales tax on purchases from companies that do not have a physical presence in the state.
With the explosion in e-commerce companies, particularly giants like Amazon, states that do not have such companies' corporate offices are losing out on what could be millions of dollars in sales tax.
Legally, the question has revolved around a "physical presence" requirement that was reached in a 1992 Supreme Court judgment (Quill Corp v North Dakota). Under that decision, it was mandated that sales tax obligations could only be applied to companies that were physically based in the state. But that was before the internet took off and the states are arguing that the law should no longer hold.
Three years ago, the Direct Marketing Association (DMA) challenged a Colorado law that obligated any company with sales over $100,000 – but which did not collect Colorado sales tax on sales to customers in the state – to provide the state government with annual reports specifying details of sales to specific customers.
The DMA said the law broke the Commerce Clause, and an Appeals Court agreed. So the state appealed to the Tenth Circuit, which refused to hear the case and punted it to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court passed it back down to the Tenth Circuit which then made a ruling [PDF] in the state's favor, ie, out-of-state companies would have to report their sales to specific customers.
So the DMA appealed that decision to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court this week refused to hear its appeal, or one from the State of Colorado that would have overturned the Quill physical presence requirement.
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