U.S. grants loan sharks power to harass debtors on social media

New U.S. regulation has granted debt collectors direct access to harass debtors on social media platforms.
According to the Washington Post, the new rule, which grants debt collectors direct access to their debtors on various social media platforms and available options to bombard them with emails, texts, and calls, was effected on November 30, 2021.
The new rule was designed to eliminate abusive debt collection practices and modernise the legal debt collection regime.
Although the rule grants access to harass debtors, privacy limitations have been put in place to protect debtors in the process.
This means a private conversation between the debtor and collector cannot reveal to the public, social media followers and friends to both parties.
The director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Rohit Chopra, said the agency was currently observing the rule’s effectiveness to see if there is a need to “strengthen it further.”
More from Peoples Gazette

World
COVID-19: South Korea detects Omicron; records 5,000 infections in one day
Most of the 5,123 new infections were reported in Seoul and the capital region.

Africa
FLASH: President Ramaphosa visits Buhari as Omicron ravages South Africa
Mr Ramaphosa is on a two-day official visit to Nigeria.

World
Omicron: Travellers to U.S. to face tougher COVID-19 rules
The WHO said blanket travel bans would not prevent the spread, and they “place a heavy burden on lives and livelihoods.”

Agriculture
Why EU countries reject cocoa from Nigerian farmers: Osinbajo
The Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria recently alleged that the EU had threatened to reject cocoa produced in Nigeria from 2022 due to a fall in the commodity’s quality.

World
Philippine: Google to ban political adverts in 2022
Technology giant Google on Wednesday announced it would not accept political advertisements on all its platforms.

World
IPI urges Philippine government to let Maria Ressa attend Nobel ceremony
“We…call on the government of the Philippines to allow our fellow board member and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Maria Ressa to attend her Nobel ceremony….”