Unless you're using strict privacy controls in your browser, you generally expect that online stores will track at least a bit of your activity, if just to send you targeted ads when you browse the web. However, a proposed class action lawsuit is claiming that Casper was far nosier. The suit alleges that the mattress-in-a-box startup violated the Electronic Communications Privacy Act by using code from NaviStone to grab personal data from web visitors without permission. Reportedly, it would collect keystrokes, clicks, IP addresses and other identifying info whether or not you actually submitted it. In theory, Casper could see what you'd typed into a form even if you backed out.
Not surprisingly, both Casper and NaviStone reject notions that this amounted to spying on visitors. Casper described the lawsuit to CBS as a "blatant attempt to cash in on and extort" a rapidly growing startup. NaviStone was caught off-guard by the lawsuit, but has said that it takes privacy laws seriously and wanted to "clear up any misunderstandings" about what its web tracking tools do. It doesn't link email addresses to personal information, for instance.
There is good
reason to be skeptical of a potential class action suit, since it's all
too common to see lawyers encourage them in a bid to get their name in
the spotlight over a hot-button issue. However, this isn't the first
time questions have surfaced over NaviStone's tools. Gizmodo recently learned
that dozens of websites (such as Quicken Loans) used NaviStone, and its
reporting led to NaviStone backing away from a practice of emailing
customers who'd typed in their addresses but never sent them. Users
clearly aren't consenting to or aware of the data sharing, and while
Casper may only have intended to pitch would-be mattress buyers, there
are serious privacy implications if it was identifying those customers
before they'd even clicked a "submit" button.

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