15-U.S.C.-1681X

15-U.S.C.-1681X

§1681X – Corporate and Technological Circumvention Prohibited

Pathway

Title 15 > Chapter 41 > Subchapter III > Section 1681x

Details

  • Reference: Section 1681x
  • Legend: §1681X – Corporate and Technological Circumvention Prohibited
  • USCode Year: 2013

Provision Content

The Commission shall prescribe regulations, to become effective not later than 90 days after December 4, 2003, to prevent a consumer reporting agency from circumventing or evading treatment as a consumer reporting agency described in section 1681a(p) of this title for purposes of this subchapter, including—

(1) by means of a corporate reorganization or restructuring, including a merger, acquisition, dissolution, divestiture, or asset sale of a consumer reporting agency; or

(2) by maintaining or merging public record and credit account information in a manner that is substantially equivalent to that described in paragraphs (1) and (2) of section 1681a(p) of this title, in the manner described in section 1681a(p) of this title.

(Pub. L. 90–321, title VI, §629, as added Pub. L. 108–159, title II, §211(b), Dec. 4, 2003, 117 Stat. 1970.)

Effective Date

Section subject to joint regulations establishing effective dates as prescribed by Federal Reserve Board and Federal Trade Commission, except as otherwise provided, see section 3 of Pub. L. 108–159, set out as an Effective Date of 2003 Amendment note under section 1681 of this title.

U.S. Encyclopedia of Law Coverage

15-U.S.C.-1681P in the Legal Encyclopedia: Trade Law

In this entry about 15-U.S.C.-1681P, find legal reference material, bibliographies and premiere content related to trade law in the American Encyclopedia of Law, presenting a comprehensive view of the United States trade law-specific issues, written by authorities in the field.

15-U.S.C.-1681F in the Legal Encyclopedia: Consumer Credit Protection

In this entry about 15-U.S.C.-1681F, find legal reference material, bibliographies and premiere content related to consumer credit protection in the American Encyclopedia of Law, presenting a comprehensive view of the United States consumer credit protection-specific issues, written by authorities in the field.

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