BetterHelp has agreed to pay $7.8 million in a settlement agreement with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) over allegations of misusing and sharing consumer health data for advertising purposes.
Founded in 2013, BetterHelp is an alternative to traditional face-to-face therapy sessions. It provides a mental health platform for direct counseling from licensed therapists through text, live chat, phone, and video comunication.
People turning to BetterHelp often deal with depression, anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress, substance abuse, or various addictions.
Following an investigation into the online therapy provider's handling of customer data, the FTC revealed in March 2023 that the service collected without consent data from its app users or visitors of its websites, even from people that had not signed up for a counseling session.
BetterHelp shared collected information with Facebook, Snapchat, Criteo, and Pinterest. The data included included email addresses, IP addresses, answers from preliminary health questionnaire during sign-up process, which came with a promise of not disclosing personal health info outside limited purposes, like counseling services.
The complaint alleged that the details were used to identify similar consumers and target them with advertisments for BetterHelp’s counseling services, "which helped the company bring in tens of thousands of new paying users and millions of dollars in revenue."
BetterHelp agreed to the FTC's proposed order to settle the charges by paying $7.8 million in refunds to consumers for sharing their sensitive data for advertising purposes.
Eligible consumers are those who signed up for and paid for BetterHelp’s services between August 1, 2017, and December 31, 2020. The FTC says roughly 800,000 people qualify.
The refund program also includes MyTherapist, Teen Counseling, Faithful Counseling, Pride Counseling, iCounseling, Regain, and Terappeuta, which operate under the BetterHelp umbrella.
Users will receive an email notification about the refund process from ‘Ankura Consulting,’ the entity handling the process. They will be given several payment options, including checks, Zelle, and PayPal.
All payments will be sent out to consumers this summer, and people are given until June 10, 2024, to declare their desired payment method to Ankura.
Comments
PXAbstraction - 1 month ago
The next time you see a YouTuber shilling this company, remember that this is only one of many very public scandals they've had and continue to have. Data exfiltration, therapist qualification and vetting, negligence and many more. They've promised to clean up their act multiple times and never have. They're another one of these tech bro outfits that insist they're a tech company, and not a therapy company. That should tell you all you need to know about them.
These are all easy things to find and learn about and no YouTuber can claim ignorance at this point. If they continue to promote this, they don't have enough respect for their audience to turn down sponsors that are objectively bad for them. I've started unsubscribing for channels that continue to shill BetterHelp after having it pointed out to them. Mental health is important and very different from just shilling crappy products in general.
3dw1n - 1 month ago
Hacker and the Fed (Hector Monsegur (aka Sabu) and Chris Tarbell (FBI)) were heavily promoting this on their podcast. They will be happy with this news #not
PuppyOnesie - 1 month ago
So, $9.75 per person? Yes!
XSp - 1 month ago
Has the FTC put in consideration that this company continues being heavily promoted in several YouTube channels who shamelessly ignore the multiple violations this business did over the years?
Because I don't see an obligation there for advertisers to disclose their wrongdoings. In fact, they are settling to avoid admitting to wrongdoing.
I'm a bit tired of denouncing this business and being thoroughly ignored by several channels that call themselves ethical with advertisement, and yet they keep ignoring the warnings, despite multiple commenters telling them what this service does and did in the past.
It's time for BetterHelp to be completely shut down. It's a business that preys on vulnerable people. They are offering mental health services without complying to HIPAA privacy and security protections. People have denounced the bad service quality and how they manipulate ratings. And it's quite obvious how neither this settlement nor several past warnings have worked to stop the practice.
2015:
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/03/the-computer-will-see-you-now/385706/
2018:
https://www.polygon.com/2018/10/15/17967362/philip-defranco-betterhelp-scam-drama-youtube
https://www.polygon.com/2018/10/4/17932862/betterhelp-app-youtube-sponsorship-controversy-explained
https://www.wired.com/story/pricey-war-influence-your-instagram-feed/
This is from 2021:
https://www.maastrichtuniversity.nl/blog/2021/02/how-betterhelp-scandal-changed-our-perspective-influencer-responsibility
2022:
https://www.newsweek.com/betterhelp-patients-tell-sketchy-therapists-1762849
Do I need to keep going? Does this look like a service that should be allowed to exist in the current environment?
U_Swimf - 1 month ago
Betterhealth sounds like the platform Betterbug. no relation there