overview
issues
regulation
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advocacy groups
This page points to
Australian and international bodies with an interest in online consumer
issues. The 'reputation' page of our
Marketing guide looks at 'attack' or 'sucks' sites.
Australian
consumer rights bodies
The Australian
Consumers' Association (ACA) site offers information about consumers
rights.
Among specialist groups with an interest in consumer issues
are the Australian Digital
Alliance (ADA)
- intellectual property - and the Australian Coalition Against Unsolicited Bulk Email (CAUBE.AU)
- spam.
overseas
The Consumers International (CI)
organisation, representing consumer bodies in many
countries, last year released Consumers@shopping,
an international comparative study
of electronic commerce that
highlighted concerns regarding service reliability, redress, ordering
processes, applicable law, cookies and other matters.
Most
national consumer organisations, such as the US Consumers
Union, the Consumers Federation
of America (CFA) and the UK National
Consumer Council (NCC),
are online.
Specialist groups include the
Coalition Against Unsolicited Bulk Email (CAUCE),
the Junkbusters
organisation and Mail Abuse Prevention System (MAPS).
We've described those bodies in the spam page of our
Security guide.
The Centre for Democracy & Technology (CDT)
has
a strong interest in privacy, intellectual property and
telecommunications access issues. The smaller US Consumer
Project on Technology (CPT)
was established by Ralph Nader in the mid nineties
At the other end of the spectrum the US Consumer Alert (CA)
organisation advocates a laissez-faire approach. That's
unsurprising given its marketing as a "non-profit,
non-partisan membership organisation for people concerned
about the excessive growth of government regulation at the
national and state levels ... our organization is the only
free-market public interest group whose sole mission is to
represent average consumers as purchasers of goods and
services in a dynamic and competitive
marketplace".
The international equivalent is the International
Consumers for Civil Society (ICFCS).
Neither are particularly credible but form part of debate
in the US.
New Zealand and Canada
The website of New Zealand Consumers Institute (CINZ),
equivalent of Australia's Consumers Association is worth a
visit as an example of a positive and professional
approach by one of the smaller consumer rights bodies.
In Canada the Consumers' Association of Canada (CAC)
is online.
other initiatives
Locally the Australian Direct Marketing
Association (ADMA) has placed its direct marketing
Merchant Code of Conduct online.
In October 2000 the American Bar Association established
SafeShopping,
a website devoted to online consumer protection issues.
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