Technological Modernization, 25635-25638 [2013-10326]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 85 / Thursday, May 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
After the close of the comment period,
DOE will begin collecting data,
conducting the analyses, and reviewing
the public comments. These actions will
be taken to aid in the development of a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NOPR)
for commercial warm air furnaces, if
DOE determines that the statutory
criteria have been met for amended
energy conservation standards for such
equipment.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number and/or RIN for this
rulemaking. No telefacsimilies (faxes)
will be accepted.
Docket: The docket is available for
review at www.regulations.gov,
including Federal Register notices,
public meeting attendees’ lists and
transcripts, comments, and other
supporting documents/materials. All
documents in the docket are listed in
the www.regulations.gov index.
However, not all documents listed in
the index may be publicly available,
such as information that is exempt from
public disclosure.
A link to the docket Web page can be
found at: https://www.regulations.gov/#
!docketDetail;D=EERE-2013-BT-STD0021. This Web page contains a link to
the docket for this notice on the
www.regulations.gov Web site. The
www.regulations.gov Web page contains
simple instructions on how to access all
documents, including public comments,
in the docket.
For information on how to submit a
comment, review other public
comments and the docket, or participate
in the public meeting, contact Ms.
Brenda Edwards at (202) 586–2945 or by
email: Brenda.Edwards@ee.doe.gov.
DOE considers public participation to
be a very important part of the process
for amending energy conservation
standards. DOE actively encourages the
participation and interaction of the
public during the comment period in
each stage of the rulemaking process.
Interactions with and between members
of the public provide a balanced
discussion of the issues and assist DOE
in the rulemaking process. Anyone who
wishes to be added to the DOE mailing
list to receive future notices and
information about this rulemaking
should contact Ms. Brenda Edwards at
(202) 586–2945, or via email at
Brenda.Edwards@ee.doe.gov.
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Issued in Washington, DC, on April 26,
2013.
Kathleen B. Hogan,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy
Efficiency, Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
[FR Doc. 2013–10388 Filed 5–1–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Chapter I
[Notice 2013–07]
Technological Modernization
Federal Election Commission.
Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Federal Election
Commission requests comments on
whether to begin a rulemaking to revise
its regulations in 11 CFR chapter I to
address contributions and expenditures
made by electronic means, such as by
credit card, debit card, Internet-based
payment processing, and text
messaging; to eliminate or update
references to outdated technologies; and
similar issues. The Commission intends
to review the comments received as it
decides what revisions, if any, it will
propose making to its rules.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before June 3, 2013. The Commission
will determine at a later date whether to
hold a public hearing on this Notice. If
a hearing is to be held, the Commission
will publish a notice in the Federal
Register announcing the date and time
of the hearing.
ADDRESSES: All comments must be in
writing. Comments may be submitted
electronically via the Commission’s
Web site at https://www.fec.gov/fosers,
reference REG 2013–01. Commenters are
encouraged to submit comments
electronically to ensure timely receipt
and consideration. Alternatively,
comments may be submitted in paper
form. Paper comments must be sent to
the Federal Election Commission, Attn.:
Amy L. Rothstein, Assistant General
Counsel, 999 E Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20463. All comments
must include the full name and postal
service address of a commenter, and of
each commenter if filed jointly, or they
will not be considered. The Commission
will post comments on its Web site at
the conclusion of the comment period.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Amy L. Rothstein, Assistant General
Counsel, or Ms. Jessica Selinkoff,
Attorney, 999 E Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694–1650
or (800) 424–9530.
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25635
The
Federal Election Commission is
publishing this Advance Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking to obtain
comments on whether to revise its
regulations at 11 CFR chapter I to
address electronic transactions.
Specifically, the Commission is
considering whether to update its
regulations to reflect electronic
transactions, such as those made by
debit cards, credit cards, gift cards,
Internet-based payment processing, and
online banking.1 Such a rulemaking
could address the receipt, deposit,
accounting, recordkeeping, reporting,
redesignation, and reattribution of
electronic transactions, as well as
matching funds, conduit activity, and
contributions by text message. The
Commission is also considering whether
to revise its regulations by eliminating
or updating references to outmoded
technologies such as telegrams and fax
machines.
As a general matter, the Commission
seeks to ensure that the regulated
community is able to take advantage of
evolving technological innovations,
while ensuring that the use of the
technology is consistent with the
Federal Election Campaign Act, 2 U.S.C.
431 et seq., as amended, (‘‘the Act’’) as
well as the Presidential Election
Campaign Fund Act, 26 U.S.C. 9001 et
seq., and the Presidential Primary
Matching Payment Account Act, 26
U.S.C. 9031 et seq. (collectively,
‘‘Chapters 95 and 96 of Title 26’’). More
specifically, here the Commission
invites comments on whether and how
it should update its regulations to take
into account electronic transactions in a
manner that provides sufficient
guidance to the regulated community
while reducing the need for serial
revisions to reflect new and emerging
technologies. Should regulations
identify specific, approved means of
engaging in electronic transactions? Or
should regulations provide only general
standards or criteria? Would the latter
approach increase the risk of corruption,
abuse, or circumvention of the Act, or
Chapters 95 and 96 of Title 26, that may
not be present with a bright-line rule
that is less technologically flexible?
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Updating Outmoded Regulations
The Commission is considering
whether it should update its regulations
to reflect recent technological advances.
For example, certain regulations refer to
technologies that are obsolete or seldom
used today, such as a ‘‘telegram’’ (11
1 See Rulemaking Priorities for 2012, Agenda Doc.
12–40 (May 24, 2012), https://www.fec.gov/agenda/
2012/mtgdoc_1240.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 85 / Thursday, May 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
CFR 104.6(c)(1)); ‘‘typewriters’’ (11 CFR
114.9(d)); and a ‘‘carbon copy’’ of a
check (11 CFR 102.9(b)(2)(iii)). Other
regulations refer to technologies now
used only in limited circumstances,
such as microfilm, facsimiles and
computer tape. See, e.g., 11 CFR 105.5
(microfilm copies provided by the
Secretary of the Senate), 108.6
(microfilm or facsimile copies
maintained by State officers). How
should the Commission consider
addressing these references to seldom
used or obsolete technologies? What
other, similar technological references
in 11 CFR chapter I should the
Commission consider updating or
addressing in a rulemaking?
Several regulations refer to ‘‘writing,’’
‘‘signature,’’ and ‘‘printing’’
requirements. The Commission is
considering whether it should revisit
these requirements to address electronic
documents and records. For example,
Commission regulations provide a
means for a contributor to redesignate a
contribution in ‘‘a writing, signed by the
contributor.’’ 11 CFR 110.1(b), 110.2(b);
see also 11 CFR 110.1(f) (designations),
110.1(k) (joint contributions and
reattributions). Other regulations require
documents to be ‘‘signed’’ before being
filed with the Commission, without
explicitly providing for the possibility
of electronic signatures. See, e.g., 11
CFR 111.4 (submission of complaints),
111.23 (designation of counsel),
300.37(d) (certifications by certain taxexempt organizations). And some
regulations apply to ‘‘printed’’
documents and communications
without expressly addressing whether
an electronic communication or an
attachment to an electronic message,
such as a portable document file or
‘‘PDF,’’ is ‘‘printed.’’ See, e.g., 11 CFR
104.7 (‘‘best efforts’’), 110.11(c)(2)
(disclaimers for printed
communications). The Commission
invites comments on whether and, if so,
how it should consider updating these
provisions.
Previously, the Commission
concluded that a particular method of
obtaining redesignations of
contributions through a combination of
electronic and traditional means met the
written signature requirements in the
redesignation provisions at 11 CFR
110.1(b)(5) and 110.2(b)(5), because that
method ‘‘provides a level of assurance
as to the contributor’s identity and
intent comparable to that of a written
signature.’’ 2 At the same time, the
2 See Interpretive Rule Regarding Electronic
Contributor Redesignations, 76 FR 16233 (Mar. 23,
2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/law/cfr/ej_
compilation/2011/notice_2011–02.pdf.
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Commission encouraged the use of
innovations in technology to effectuate
electronic redesignations and stated that
it would consider, on a case-by-case
basis, other methods of electronic
redesignation.3 If the Commission
decides to revise the redesignation
regulations to include electronic
redesigations, what other methods
should it consider? How should the
Commission revise the redesignation
rules and other regulations that require
‘‘writings’’ or signatures in order to
minimize the need for serial revisions to
adapt to new and emerging
technologies?
The Commission is also considering
whether to revise regulations that
require certain communications to be
mailed or hand-delivered to the
Commission without providing for the
possibility of electronic transmission.
See, e.g., 11 CFR 1.3 (Privacy Act
requests), 112.1(e) (advisory opinion
requests). Should the Commission
update these regulations in light of
current technology? If so, how?
2. Providing for Electronic
Contributions and Transactions
The Act, Chapters 95 and 96 of Title
26, and Commission regulations
generally refer to contributions by cash
or check and to disbursements by check
or draft without taking into account
electronic transactions. Yet, according
to the most recent triennial study
conducted by the Federal Reserve
System, payments by check have been
decreasing and the ‘‘number of noncash
payments in the United States . . .
increased at a compound annual rate of
4.6 percent’’ from 2006 to 2009.4
Electronic payments—that is, payments
made by debit cards; credit cards;
automated clearinghouses; and prepaid
debit, credit, banking, and gift cards—
‘‘collectively exceed three-quarters of all
noncash payments’’ in the United
States.5
Consistent with this trend, people
increasingly use electronic means to
contribute to political committees. A
series of studies by the Pew Research
Center of the 2006, 2008, and 2010
elections shows that the number of
Internet users who make online
contributions to candidates is
increasing.6 And among adults who
3 Id.
4 Federal Reserve System, 2010 Federal Reserve
Payments Study: Noncash Payment Trends in the
United States: 2006–2009 4 (Apr. 5, 2011), available
at www.frbservices.org/files/communications/pdf/
press/2010_payments_study.pdf.
5 Id.
6 See, e.g., Aaron Smith, Pew Internet and
American Life Project, The Internet and Campaign
2010 21 (Mar. 17, 2011), available at https://www.
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donated to presidential candidates in
the 2012 election, 50 percent donated
online or via email.7 As of September
2012—only a few months after the
Commission had approved the use of
text messaging to make contributions—
ten percent of those who made
contributions in the presidential race
did so by ‘‘text message from a cell
phone or cell phone app.’’ 8
a. General Industry Practice
In light of these trends, the
Commission is considering whether and
how to revise its regulations to address
electronic contributions and other
transactions. As a preliminary matter,
the Commission seeks information on
general industry practice. How are
commercial and consumer electronic
transactions conducted generally? What
are the industry standards, practices,
and safeguards? How do vendors and
third-party payment processors, such as
PayPal, verify the payer’s identity and
attribute payments made by credit card?
What types and forms of information are
typically collected and maintained?
What are the standard practices of thirdparty payment processors, such as
PayPal or Square? What are the
intermediate steps in processing
electronic transactions? Do vendors or
third-party payment processors
typically process multiple recipients’
funds through merchant accounts? What
are the general timeframes for each step
of these electronic processes? What are
typical accounting practices with regard
to merchant accounts? How do these
practices differ, if at all, for prepaid
debit, credit, banking and gift card
transactions? How might practices
change in light of emerging
technologies? Are there other forms of
electronic payment—such as by
electronic wallet or swipe,9 P2P (or
pewinternet.org/∼/media//Files/Reports/2011/
Internet%20and%20Campaign%202010.pdf
(finding that online contributions increased from
three percent in the 2006 mid-term elections to four
percent in 2010); Aaron Smith, Pew Internet and
American Life Project, The Internet’s Role in
Campaign 2008 38–39 (Apr. 15, 2009), available at
https://www.pewinternet.org/∼/media//Files/
Reports/2009/The_Internets_Role_in_Campaign_
2008.pdf (showing that nine percent made online
contributions).
7 Aaron Smith & Maeve Duggan, Pew Internet and
American Life Project, Presidential Campaign
Donations in the Digital Age (Oct. 25, 2012),
available at https://www.pewinternet.org/∼/media/
Files/Reports/2012/PIP_State_of_the_2012_race_
donations.pdf (finding further that 67 percent
donated in person, over the telephone, or through
the mail).
8 Id.
9 See, e.g., Tara Siegel Bernard & Claire Cain
Miller, Swiping Is the Easy Part, N.Y. Times, Mar.
24, 2011, at B1, available at https://www.nytimes.
com/2011/03/24/technology/24wallet.html?_r=0.
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 85 / Thursday, May 2, 2013 / Proposed Rules
person to person) platform,10 mobile
app, or Twitter hashtag 11—that the
Commission should consider if it
decides to revise its rules?
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b. Political Committee Practice
The Commission also seeks
information on how political
committees receive electronic
contributions. Do political committees’
practices differ from general commercial
industry standards and practices? If so,
how do they differ? Are political
committees’ practices comparable to
those of nonprofit organizations that
receive electronic donations at the
Federal, State, or local level? What legal
or practical considerations or
constraints drive any such differences?
What role, if any, should commercial
industry standards and practices play in
the Commission’s consideration of
requirements for electronic
contributions received by political
committees?
The Commission also seeks
information on recordkeeping practices
for electronic transactions. Commission
regulations require political committees
to maintain records of contributions and
disbursements in ways that do not
explicitly account for electronic
transactions. See, e.g., 11 CFR
102.9(a)(4) (requiring a ‘‘photocopy of
each check or written instrument or a
digital image of each check or written
instrument’’), 102.9(b)(2) (requiring
records such as cancelled checks,
receipts, and carbon copies for
disbursements over $200). Although the
Commission has interpreted its
recordkeeping regulations in the context
of electronic transactions,12 should the
Commission revise these regulations to
address expressly recordkeeping
requirements for electronic transactions,
such as, for example, requiring political
committees that receive credit card
10 See, e.g., Fed. Fin. Inst. Examination Council,
Online Person-to-person (P2P), Account-to-Account
Payments and Electronic Cash, IT Examination
HandBook InfoBase, https://ithandbook.ffiec.gov/itbooklets/retail-payment-systems/paymentinstruments,-clearing,-and-settlement/card-basedelectronic-payments/online-person-to-person(p2p),-account-to-account-(a2a)-payments-andelectronic-cash.aspx (last visited Feb. 26, 2013).
11 See, e.g., Heather Kelly, Twitter and Amex to
Let You Pay with a Hashtag, CNN (Feb. 12, 2013),
https://www.cnn.com/2013/02/11/tech/socialmedia/twitter-hashtag-purchases; see also https://
chirpify.com/ (social media purchase platform).
12 See Advisory Opinion 1995–09 (NewtWatch)
(approving a proposal to maintain records
supporting electronic fund transfers); Advisory
Opinion 1993–04 (Cox); Advisory Opinion 1994–40
(Alliance for American Leadership); see also
Federal Election Commission, Campaign Guide:
Congressional Candidates and Committees 75–76
(Aug. 2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/
candgui.pdf (describing recordkeeping for credit
card disbursements).
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contributions to maintain records with
cardholders’ names and credit card
numbers? See, e.g., 11 CFR 9034.2(b)
(requirements for credit card
contributions eligible for matching
funds). Would this requirement be
consistent with current industry
practices? Would it need to be updated
periodically to reflect changing
technology? What should the
recordkeeping requirements be for
contributions made by prepaid debit,
credit, banking and gift cards? Should
the regulations take a less specific
approach, like that in 11 CFR 104.14(b),
which requires records to ‘‘provide in
sufficient detail the necessary
information and data from which the
filed reports and statements may be
verified, explained, clarified, and
checked for accuracy and
completeness’’? Alternatively, are the
current rules flexible enough to account
for electronic recordkeeping practices
without being revised?
Other recordkeeping considerations
that arise in the context of electronic
transactions relate to the use of
merchant accounts. The Act and
Commission regulations require all
receipts to be deposited into a political
committee’s campaign depository
account within ten days of receipt. 2
USC 432(h)(1); 11 CFR 103.3(a); see also
11 CFR 102.2(a)(1)(vi) (disclosure of
campaign depositories). Although the
Commission has previously opined on
the treatment of merchant accounts in
specific factual situations,13 the
Commission seeks information on the
current uses of merchant accounts by
political committees. Do contributions
to political committees made via credit
card or other electronic means
customarily pass through a merchant
account before being deposited by the
committees in their campaign
depositories? Should merchant accounts
themselves be considered campaign
depositories? Why or why not? How can
an electronic contribution that is
processed through a merchant account
containing funds designated for
multiple recipients be traced for
recordkeeping, disclosure and audit
purposes in a manner that provides
assurances comparable to a ‘‘paper
trail’’? 14
13 See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1999–22 (Aristotle
Publishing) (concluding that political committees
receiving credit card contributions through
merchant account should disclose that account as
a campaign depository).
14 See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1993–04 (Cox), n.
2 (discussing recordkeeping and ‘‘paper trails’’);
Advisory Opinion 1999–22 (Aristotle Publishing)
(approving a vendor’s use of a single merchant ID
to process contributions subsequently forwarded to
multiple political committees).
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25637
In several recent advisory opinions,
the Commission has addressed
electronic contributions to political
committees that are processed by
incorporated commercial vendors or
payment processors. In some of these
opinions, the Commission concluded
that the transaction was permissible
under 11 CFR 110.6, which prohibits
corporations from acting as conduits or
intermediaries, because the corporation
was acting as a vendor to the political
committee recipient.15 In other advisory
opinions, the Commission concluded
that the transaction was permissible
because the corporations were providing
services to the contributors.16 Most
recently, the Commission explained that
some contributions made through
electronic payment processors were not
subject to 11 CFR 110.6 because they
were not contributions to an
intermediary earmarked for a
candidate.17 Should the Commission
consider revising its regulations at 11
CFR 110.6 to address electronic
contributions processed by incorporated
commercial vendors and payment
processors? If so, what approach should
the regulations take? Should the
regulations also address how to treat
fees paid to commercial vendors and
payment processors to process
electronic contributions?
Other regulations that do not
expressly address electronic
contributions also have been interpreted
by the Commission to apply to
electronic transactions. In Advisory
Opinion 1990–04 (American Veterinary
Medical Association), for example, the
Commission approved credit card
transactions under 11 CFR 102.6, which
addresses combined payments of
contributions and dues by check. The
Commission also has construed 11 CFR
102.8, which applies when a
contribution is received, and 11 CFR
110.1(b)(6) and 110.2(b)(6), which
describe when a contribution is made,
in the context of electronic
contributions.18 Should the Commission
15 Advisory Opinion 2007–04 (Atlatl); Advisory
Opinion 2004–19 (DollarVote); see also Advisory
Opinion 2012–09 (Points for Politics).
16 Advisory Opinion 2011–06 (Democracy
Engine); Advisory Opinion 2006–08 (Brooks); see
also Advisory Opinion 2011–19 (GivingSphere).
17 Advisory Opinion 2012–22 (skimmerhat); but
see Advisory Opinion Request 2012–08 (Repledge)
(no advisory opinion issued).
18 Advisory Opinion 2012–35 (Global Transaction
Services Group, Inc.); Advisory Opinion 2008–08
(Zucker); see also Advisory Opinion 2012–26
(Cooper for Congress, ArmourMedia, Inc., and mQube, Inc.); Advisory Opinion 2012–09 (Points for
Politics); Federal Election Commission, Campaign
Guide: Congressional Candidates and Committees
23, 74 (Aug. 2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/
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revise these regulations to address
electronic contributions expressly? If so,
should the regulations take the same
approach as those taken previously? If
not, why not, and what approach should
they take instead?
Recently, the Commission approved
the use of text messaging to process
contributions in a series of advisory
opinions.19 Should the Commission
amend its regulations to address
contributions made by text message? If
so, should the regulations take the same
approach as the advisory opinions?
Should any revised regulations also
address issues that were not addressed
in the advisory opinions, such as how
political committees should report the
receipt of contributions made by text
message? What related issues should the
Commission address?
The Commission is also considering
whether and, if so, how to revise the
paper-oriented definitions of ‘‘money’’
and determinations of ‘‘disbursement’’
in its regulations. For example, the
regulatory definition of ‘‘contribution’’
defines ‘‘money’’ as ‘‘currency * * *,
checks, money orders, or any other
negotiable instruments payable on
demand.’’ 11 CFR 100.52(c); see also 11
CFR 100.111(d) (similarly defining
‘‘money’’ in the definition of
‘‘expenditure’’), 102.10 (requiring
disbursements to be made by check or
‘‘similar draft’’ drawn on accounts
established at the committee’s campaign
depository). In several advisory
opinions, the Commission has
interpreted the term ‘‘similar draft’’ to
include electronic disbursements.20
Should the Commission revise its
regulations to provide expressly that
contributions, expenditures, and
disbursements include funds transferred
electronically? Should any revised
regulations take the same approach as
the advisory opinions? If not, why not,
and what approach should they take
instead?
Finally, the Commission is
considering whether to revise its
regulations that expressly apply only to
cash contributions so that they also
expressly apply to certain electronic
pdf/candgui.pdf (describing when a credit card
contribution is ‘‘received’’).
19 See Advisory Opinion 2012–17 (Red Blue T
LLC, ArmourMedia, Inc., and m-Qube, Inc.);
Advisory Opinion 2012–26 (Cooper for Congress,
ArmourMedia, Inc., and m-Qube, Inc.); Advisory
Opinion 2012–28 (CTIA—The Wireless
Association); Advisory Opinion 2012–30
(Revolution Messaging, LLC); Advisory Opinion
2012–31 (AT&T Inc.).
20 See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1993–04 (Cox)
(approving a ‘‘computer driven billpayer service’’
that included the disbursement of funds by
electronic transfer); Advisory Opinion 1982–25
(Sigmund) (concluding that a wire transfer qualifies
as a ‘‘similar draft’’).
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contributions. For example, cash
contributions in excess of $100 are
prohibited. 11 CFR 110.4. The
Commission seeks comments on
whether prepaid debit, credit, banking,
and gift cards are functionally the same
as cash. If so, should the regulation be
revised to prohibit contributions in
excess of $100 made by prepaid debit,
credit, banking, and gift cards? If not,
why not?
c. Rulemaking vs. Other Guidance
The Commission seeks comments on
whether a rulemaking is the best way for
it to address questions raised by the
receipt of electronic contributions, and
the making of electronic disbursements,
by political committees. As noted above,
the Commission to date has provided
guidance on electronic transactions
largely through advisory opinions,
interpretive rules, and campaign guides.
Are these the best ways for the
Commission to provide guidance on the
subject in light of rapidly evolving
technologies, or would rules on the
subject also be helpful? How should the
Commission craft regulations in order to
minimize the need for serial revisions in
the face of new and emerging
technologies? Given the speed at which
technology has been advancing, the
Commission welcomes comments
suggesting general regulatory criteria or
standards that are flexible and adaptable
enough to apply to new or emerging
technology or business arrangements.
3. Other Electronic Modernization
Issues
The Commission welcomes
comments, including any pertinent data,
concerning any electronic
modernization issues that are not
addressed in this notice and that relate
to the Commission’s administration of
the Act or Chapters 95 and 96 of Title
26.
Dated: April 25, 2013.
On behalf of the Commission.
Ellen L. Weintraub,
Chair, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 2013–10326 Filed 5–1–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715–01–P
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BUREAU OF CONSUMER FINANCIAL
PROTECTION
12 CFR Parts 1024 and 1026
[Docket No. CFPB–2013–0010]
RIN 3170–AA37
Amendments to the 2013 Mortgage
Rules Under the Real Estate
Settlement Procedure Act (Regulation
X) and the Truth in Lending Act
(Regulation Z)
Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
ACTION: Proposed rule with request for
public comment.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule proposes
amendments to some of the final
mortgage rules issued by the Bureau of
Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau)
in January of 2013. These amendments
clarify or correct provisions on the
relation to State law of Regulation X’s
servicing provisions; the small servicer
exemption from certain servicing rules;
the use of government-sponsored
enterprise and Federal agency purchase,
guarantee or insurance eligibility for
determining qualified mortgage status;
and the determination of debt and
income for purposes of originating
qualified mortgages.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before June 3, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. CFPB–2013–
0010 or RIN 3170–AA37, by any of the
following methods:
• Electronic: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail/Hand Delivery/Courier:
Monica Jackson, Office of the Executive
Secretary, Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau, 1700 G Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20552.
Instructions: All submissions should
include the agency name and docket
number or Regulatory Information
Number (RIN) for this rulemaking.
Because paper mail in the Washington,
DC area and at the Bureau is subject to
delay, commenters are encouraged to
submit comments electronically. In
general, all comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov. In addition,
comments will be available for public
inspection and copying at 1700 G Street
NW., Washington, DC 20552, on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 5 p.m. Eastern Time. You can
make an appointment to inspect the
documents by telephoning (202) 435–
7275.
E:\FR\FM\02MYP1.SGM
02MYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 85 (Thursday, May 2, 2013)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 25635-25638]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-10326]
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FEDERAL ELECTION COMMISSION
11 CFR Chapter I
[Notice 2013-07]
Technological Modernization
AGENCY: Federal Election Commission.
ACTION: Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Election Commission requests comments on whether
to begin a rulemaking to revise its regulations in 11 CFR chapter I to
address contributions and expenditures made by electronic means, such
as by credit card, debit card, Internet-based payment processing, and
text messaging; to eliminate or update references to outdated
technologies; and similar issues. The Commission intends to review the
comments received as it decides what revisions, if any, it will propose
making to its rules.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before June 3, 2013. The
Commission will determine at a later date whether to hold a public
hearing on this Notice. If a hearing is to be held, the Commission will
publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing the date and time
of the hearing.
ADDRESSES: All comments must be in writing. Comments may be submitted
electronically via the Commission's Web site at https://www.fec.gov/fosers, reference REG 2013-01. Commenters are encouraged to submit
comments electronically to ensure timely receipt and consideration.
Alternatively, comments may be submitted in paper form. Paper comments
must be sent to the Federal Election Commission, Attn.: Amy L.
Rothstein, Assistant General Counsel, 999 E Street, NW., Washington, DC
20463. All comments must include the full name and postal service
address of a commenter, and of each commenter if filed jointly, or they
will not be considered. The Commission will post comments on its Web
site at the conclusion of the comment period.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Amy L. Rothstein, Assistant
General Counsel, or Ms. Jessica Selinkoff, Attorney, 999 E Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20463, (202) 694-1650 or (800) 424-9530.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Federal Election Commission is
publishing this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to obtain
comments on whether to revise its regulations at 11 CFR chapter I to
address electronic transactions. Specifically, the Commission is
considering whether to update its regulations to reflect electronic
transactions, such as those made by debit cards, credit cards, gift
cards, Internet-based payment processing, and online banking.\1\ Such a
rulemaking could address the receipt, deposit, accounting,
recordkeeping, reporting, redesignation, and reattribution of
electronic transactions, as well as matching funds, conduit activity,
and contributions by text message. The Commission is also considering
whether to revise its regulations by eliminating or updating references
to outmoded technologies such as telegrams and fax machines.
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\1\ See Rulemaking Priorities for 2012, Agenda Doc. 12-40 (May
24, 2012), https://www.fec.gov/agenda/2012/mtgdoc_1240.pdf.
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As a general matter, the Commission seeks to ensure that the
regulated community is able to take advantage of evolving technological
innovations, while ensuring that the use of the technology is
consistent with the Federal Election Campaign Act, 2 U.S.C. 431 et
seq., as amended, (``the Act'') as well as the Presidential Election
Campaign Fund Act, 26 U.S.C. 9001 et seq., and the Presidential Primary
Matching Payment Account Act, 26 U.S.C. 9031 et seq. (collectively,
``Chapters 95 and 96 of Title 26''). More specifically, here the
Commission invites comments on whether and how it should update its
regulations to take into account electronic transactions in a manner
that provides sufficient guidance to the regulated community while
reducing the need for serial revisions to reflect new and emerging
technologies. Should regulations identify specific, approved means of
engaging in electronic transactions? Or should regulations provide only
general standards or criteria? Would the latter approach increase the
risk of corruption, abuse, or circumvention of the Act, or Chapters 95
and 96 of Title 26, that may not be present with a bright-line rule
that is less technologically flexible?
1. Updating Outmoded Regulations
The Commission is considering whether it should update its
regulations to reflect recent technological advances. For example,
certain regulations refer to technologies that are obsolete or seldom
used today, such as a ``telegram'' (11
[[Page 25636]]
CFR 104.6(c)(1)); ``typewriters'' (11 CFR 114.9(d)); and a ``carbon
copy'' of a check (11 CFR 102.9(b)(2)(iii)). Other regulations refer to
technologies now used only in limited circumstances, such as microfilm,
facsimiles and computer tape. See, e.g., 11 CFR 105.5 (microfilm copies
provided by the Secretary of the Senate), 108.6 (microfilm or facsimile
copies maintained by State officers). How should the Commission
consider addressing these references to seldom used or obsolete
technologies? What other, similar technological references in 11 CFR
chapter I should the Commission consider updating or addressing in a
rulemaking?
Several regulations refer to ``writing,'' ``signature,'' and
``printing'' requirements. The Commission is considering whether it
should revisit these requirements to address electronic documents and
records. For example, Commission regulations provide a means for a
contributor to redesignate a contribution in ``a writing, signed by the
contributor.'' 11 CFR 110.1(b), 110.2(b); see also 11 CFR 110.1(f)
(designations), 110.1(k) (joint contributions and reattributions).
Other regulations require documents to be ``signed'' before being filed
with the Commission, without explicitly providing for the possibility
of electronic signatures. See, e.g., 11 CFR 111.4 (submission of
complaints), 111.23 (designation of counsel), 300.37(d) (certifications
by certain tax-exempt organizations). And some regulations apply to
``printed'' documents and communications without expressly addressing
whether an electronic communication or an attachment to an electronic
message, such as a portable document file or ``PDF,'' is ``printed.''
See, e.g., 11 CFR 104.7 (``best efforts''), 110.11(c)(2) (disclaimers
for printed communications). The Commission invites comments on whether
and, if so, how it should consider updating these provisions.
Previously, the Commission concluded that a particular method of
obtaining redesignations of contributions through a combination of
electronic and traditional means met the written signature requirements
in the redesignation provisions at 11 CFR 110.1(b)(5) and 110.2(b)(5),
because that method ``provides a level of assurance as to the
contributor's identity and intent comparable to that of a written
signature.'' \2\ At the same time, the Commission encouraged the use of
innovations in technology to effectuate electronic redesignations and
stated that it would consider, on a case-by-case basis, other methods
of electronic redesignation.\3\ If the Commission decides to revise the
redesignation regulations to include electronic redesigations, what
other methods should it consider? How should the Commission revise the
redesignation rules and other regulations that require ``writings'' or
signatures in order to minimize the need for serial revisions to adapt
to new and emerging technologies?
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\2\ See Interpretive Rule Regarding Electronic Contributor
Redesignations, 76 FR 16233 (Mar. 23, 2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/law/cfr/ej_compilation/2011/notice_2011-02.pdf.
\3\ Id.
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The Commission is also considering whether to revise regulations
that require certain communications to be mailed or hand-delivered to
the Commission without providing for the possibility of electronic
transmission. See, e.g., 11 CFR 1.3 (Privacy Act requests), 112.1(e)
(advisory opinion requests). Should the Commission update these
regulations in light of current technology? If so, how?
2. Providing for Electronic Contributions and Transactions
The Act, Chapters 95 and 96 of Title 26, and Commission regulations
generally refer to contributions by cash or check and to disbursements
by check or draft without taking into account electronic transactions.
Yet, according to the most recent triennial study conducted by the
Federal Reserve System, payments by check have been decreasing and the
``number of noncash payments in the United States . . . increased at a
compound annual rate of 4.6 percent'' from 2006 to 2009.\4\ Electronic
payments--that is, payments made by debit cards; credit cards;
automated clearinghouses; and prepaid debit, credit, banking, and gift
cards--``collectively exceed three-quarters of all noncash payments''
in the United States.\5\
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\4\ Federal Reserve System, 2010 Federal Reserve Payments Study:
Noncash Payment Trends in the United States: 2006-2009 4 (Apr. 5,
2011), available at www.frbservices.org/files/communications/pdf/press/2010_payments_study.pdf.
\5\ Id.
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Consistent with this trend, people increasingly use electronic
means to contribute to political committees. A series of studies by the
Pew Research Center of the 2006, 2008, and 2010 elections shows that
the number of Internet users who make online contributions to
candidates is increasing.\6\ And among adults who donated to
presidential candidates in the 2012 election, 50 percent donated online
or via email.\7\ As of September 2012--only a few months after the
Commission had approved the use of text messaging to make
contributions--ten percent of those who made contributions in the
presidential race did so by ``text message from a cell phone or cell
phone app.'' \8\
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\6\ See, e.g., Aaron Smith, Pew Internet and American Life
Project, The Internet and Campaign 2010 21 (Mar. 17, 2011),
available at https://www.pewinternet.org/~/media//Files/Reports/2011/
Internet%20and%20Campaign%202010.pdf (finding that online
contributions increased from three percent in the 2006 mid-term
elections to four percent in 2010); Aaron Smith, Pew Internet and
American Life Project, The Internet's Role in Campaign 2008 38-39
(Apr. 15, 2009), available at https://www.pewinternet.org/~/media//
Files/Reports/2009/The--Internets--Role--in--Campaign--2008.pdf
(showing that nine percent made online contributions).
\7\ Aaron Smith & Maeve Duggan, Pew Internet and American Life
Project, Presidential Campaign Donations in the Digital Age (Oct.
25, 2012), available at https://www.pewinternet.org/~/media/Files/
Reports/2012/PIP--State--of--the--2012--race--donations.pdf (finding
further that 67 percent donated in person, over the telephone, or
through the mail).
\8\ Id.
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a. General Industry Practice
In light of these trends, the Commission is considering whether and
how to revise its regulations to address electronic contributions and
other transactions. As a preliminary matter, the Commission seeks
information on general industry practice. How are commercial and
consumer electronic transactions conducted generally? What are the
industry standards, practices, and safeguards? How do vendors and
third-party payment processors, such as PayPal, verify the payer's
identity and attribute payments made by credit card? What types and
forms of information are typically collected and maintained? What are
the standard practices of third-party payment processors, such as
PayPal or Square? What are the intermediate steps in processing
electronic transactions? Do vendors or third-party payment processors
typically process multiple recipients' funds through merchant accounts?
What are the general timeframes for each step of these electronic
processes? What are typical accounting practices with regard to
merchant accounts? How do these practices differ, if at all, for
prepaid debit, credit, banking and gift card transactions? How might
practices change in light of emerging technologies? Are there other
forms of electronic payment--such as by electronic wallet or swipe,\9\
P2P (or
[[Page 25637]]
person to person) platform,\10\ mobile app, or Twitter hashtag \11\--
that the Commission should consider if it decides to revise its rules?
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\9\ See, e.g., Tara Siegel Bernard & Claire Cain Miller, Swiping
Is the Easy Part, N.Y. Times, Mar. 24, 2011, at B1, available at
https://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/24/technology/24wallet.html?_r=0.
\10\ See, e.g., Fed. Fin. Inst. Examination Council, Online
Person-to-person (P2P), Account-to-Account Payments and Electronic
Cash, IT Examination HandBook InfoBase, https://ithandbook.ffiec.gov/it-booklets/retail-payment-systems/payment-instruments,-clearing,-and-settlement/card-based-electronic-payments/online-person-to-person-(p2p),-account-to-account-(a2a)-payments-and-electronic-
cash.aspx (last visited Feb. 26, 2013).
\11\ See, e.g., Heather Kelly, Twitter and Amex to Let You Pay
with a Hashtag, CNN (Feb. 12, 2013), https://www.cnn.com/2013/02/11/tech/social-media/twitter-hashtag-purchases; see also https://chirpify.com/ (social media purchase platform).
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b. Political Committee Practice
The Commission also seeks information on how political committees
receive electronic contributions. Do political committees' practices
differ from general commercial industry standards and practices? If so,
how do they differ? Are political committees' practices comparable to
those of nonprofit organizations that receive electronic donations at
the Federal, State, or local level? What legal or practical
considerations or constraints drive any such differences? What role, if
any, should commercial industry standards and practices play in the
Commission's consideration of requirements for electronic contributions
received by political committees?
The Commission also seeks information on recordkeeping practices
for electronic transactions. Commission regulations require political
committees to maintain records of contributions and disbursements in
ways that do not explicitly account for electronic transactions. See,
e.g., 11 CFR 102.9(a)(4) (requiring a ``photocopy of each check or
written instrument or a digital image of each check or written
instrument''), 102.9(b)(2) (requiring records such as cancelled checks,
receipts, and carbon copies for disbursements over $200). Although the
Commission has interpreted its recordkeeping regulations in the context
of electronic transactions,\12\ should the Commission revise these
regulations to address expressly recordkeeping requirements for
electronic transactions, such as, for example, requiring political
committees that receive credit card contributions to maintain records
with cardholders' names and credit card numbers? See, e.g., 11 CFR
9034.2(b) (requirements for credit card contributions eligible for
matching funds). Would this requirement be consistent with current
industry practices? Would it need to be updated periodically to reflect
changing technology? What should the recordkeeping requirements be for
contributions made by prepaid debit, credit, banking and gift cards?
Should the regulations take a less specific approach, like that in 11
CFR 104.14(b), which requires records to ``provide in sufficient detail
the necessary information and data from which the filed reports and
statements may be verified, explained, clarified, and checked for
accuracy and completeness''? Alternatively, are the current rules
flexible enough to account for electronic recordkeeping practices
without being revised?
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\12\ See Advisory Opinion 1995-09 (NewtWatch) (approving a
proposal to maintain records supporting electronic fund transfers);
Advisory Opinion 1993-04 (Cox); Advisory Opinion 1994-40 (Alliance
for American Leadership); see also Federal Election Commission,
Campaign Guide: Congressional Candidates and Committees 75-76 (Aug.
2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/candgui.pdf (describing
recordkeeping for credit card disbursements).
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Other recordkeeping considerations that arise in the context of
electronic transactions relate to the use of merchant accounts. The Act
and Commission regulations require all receipts to be deposited into a
political committee's campaign depository account within ten days of
receipt. 2 USC 432(h)(1); 11 CFR 103.3(a); see also 11 CFR
102.2(a)(1)(vi) (disclosure of campaign depositories). Although the
Commission has previously opined on the treatment of merchant accounts
in specific factual situations,\13\ the Commission seeks information on
the current uses of merchant accounts by political committees. Do
contributions to political committees made via credit card or other
electronic means customarily pass through a merchant account before
being deposited by the committees in their campaign depositories?
Should merchant accounts themselves be considered campaign
depositories? Why or why not? How can an electronic contribution that
is processed through a merchant account containing funds designated for
multiple recipients be traced for recordkeeping, disclosure and audit
purposes in a manner that provides assurances comparable to a ``paper
trail''? \14\
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\13\ See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1999-22 (Aristotle Publishing)
(concluding that political committees receiving credit card
contributions through merchant account should disclose that account
as a campaign depository).
\14\ See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1993-04 (Cox), n. 2 (discussing
recordkeeping and ``paper trails''); Advisory Opinion 1999-22
(Aristotle Publishing) (approving a vendor's use of a single
merchant ID to process contributions subsequently forwarded to
multiple political committees).
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In several recent advisory opinions, the Commission has addressed
electronic contributions to political committees that are processed by
incorporated commercial vendors or payment processors. In some of these
opinions, the Commission concluded that the transaction was permissible
under 11 CFR 110.6, which prohibits corporations from acting as
conduits or intermediaries, because the corporation was acting as a
vendor to the political committee recipient.\15\ In other advisory
opinions, the Commission concluded that the transaction was permissible
because the corporations were providing services to the
contributors.\16\ Most recently, the Commission explained that some
contributions made through electronic payment processors were not
subject to 11 CFR 110.6 because they were not contributions to an
intermediary earmarked for a candidate.\17\ Should the Commission
consider revising its regulations at 11 CFR 110.6 to address electronic
contributions processed by incorporated commercial vendors and payment
processors? If so, what approach should the regulations take? Should
the regulations also address how to treat fees paid to commercial
vendors and payment processors to process electronic contributions?
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\15\ Advisory Opinion 2007-04 (Atlatl); Advisory Opinion 2004-19
(DollarVote); see also Advisory Opinion 2012-09 (Points for
Politics).
\16\ Advisory Opinion 2011-06 (Democracy Engine); Advisory
Opinion 2006-08 (Brooks); see also Advisory Opinion 2011-19
(GivingSphere).
\17\ Advisory Opinion 2012-22 (skimmerhat); but see Advisory
Opinion Request 2012-08 (Repledge) (no advisory opinion issued).
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Other regulations that do not expressly address electronic
contributions also have been interpreted by the Commission to apply to
electronic transactions. In Advisory Opinion 1990-04 (American
Veterinary Medical Association), for example, the Commission approved
credit card transactions under 11 CFR 102.6, which addresses combined
payments of contributions and dues by check. The Commission also has
construed 11 CFR 102.8, which applies when a contribution is received,
and 11 CFR 110.1(b)(6) and 110.2(b)(6), which describe when a
contribution is made, in the context of electronic contributions.\18\
Should the Commission
[[Page 25638]]
revise these regulations to address electronic contributions expressly?
If so, should the regulations take the same approach as those taken
previously? If not, why not, and what approach should they take
instead?
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\18\ Advisory Opinion 2012-35 (Global Transaction Services
Group, Inc.); Advisory Opinion 2008-08 (Zucker); see also Advisory
Opinion 2012-26 (Cooper for Congress, ArmourMedia, Inc., and m-Qube,
Inc.); Advisory Opinion 2012-09 (Points for Politics); Federal
Election Commission, Campaign Guide: Congressional Candidates and
Committees 23, 74 (Aug. 2011), available at https://www.fec.gov/pdf/candgui.pdf (describing when a credit card contribution is
``received'').
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Recently, the Commission approved the use of text messaging to
process contributions in a series of advisory opinions.\19\ Should the
Commission amend its regulations to address contributions made by text
message? If so, should the regulations take the same approach as the
advisory opinions? Should any revised regulations also address issues
that were not addressed in the advisory opinions, such as how political
committees should report the receipt of contributions made by text
message? What related issues should the Commission address?
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\19\ See Advisory Opinion 2012-17 (Red Blue T LLC, ArmourMedia,
Inc., and m-Qube, Inc.); Advisory Opinion 2012-26 (Cooper for
Congress, ArmourMedia, Inc., and m-Qube, Inc.); Advisory Opinion
2012-28 (CTIA--The Wireless Association); Advisory Opinion 2012-30
(Revolution Messaging, LLC); Advisory Opinion 2012-31 (AT&T Inc.).
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The Commission is also considering whether and, if so, how to
revise the paper-oriented definitions of ``money'' and determinations
of ``disbursement'' in its regulations. For example, the regulatory
definition of ``contribution'' defines ``money'' as ``currency * * *,
checks, money orders, or any other negotiable instruments payable on
demand.'' 11 CFR 100.52(c); see also 11 CFR 100.111(d) (similarly
defining ``money'' in the definition of ``expenditure''), 102.10
(requiring disbursements to be made by check or ``similar draft'' drawn
on accounts established at the committee's campaign depository). In
several advisory opinions, the Commission has interpreted the term
``similar draft'' to include electronic disbursements.\20\ Should the
Commission revise its regulations to provide expressly that
contributions, expenditures, and disbursements include funds
transferred electronically? Should any revised regulations take the
same approach as the advisory opinions? If not, why not, and what
approach should they take instead?
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\20\ See, e.g., Advisory Opinion 1993-04 (Cox) (approving a
``computer driven billpayer service'' that included the disbursement
of funds by electronic transfer); Advisory Opinion 1982-25 (Sigmund)
(concluding that a wire transfer qualifies as a ``similar draft'').
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Finally, the Commission is considering whether to revise its
regulations that expressly apply only to cash contributions so that
they also expressly apply to certain electronic contributions. For
example, cash contributions in excess of $100 are prohibited. 11 CFR
110.4. The Commission seeks comments on whether prepaid debit, credit,
banking, and gift cards are functionally the same as cash. If so,
should the regulation be revised to prohibit contributions in excess of
$100 made by prepaid debit, credit, banking, and gift cards? If not,
why not?
c. Rulemaking vs. Other Guidance
The Commission seeks comments on whether a rulemaking is the best
way for it to address questions raised by the receipt of electronic
contributions, and the making of electronic disbursements, by political
committees. As noted above, the Commission to date has provided
guidance on electronic transactions largely through advisory opinions,
interpretive rules, and campaign guides. Are these the best ways for
the Commission to provide guidance on the subject in light of rapidly
evolving technologies, or would rules on the subject also be helpful?
How should the Commission craft regulations in order to minimize the
need for serial revisions in the face of new and emerging technologies?
Given the speed at which technology has been advancing, the Commission
welcomes comments suggesting general regulatory criteria or standards
that are flexible and adaptable enough to apply to new or emerging
technology or business arrangements.
3. Other Electronic Modernization Issues
The Commission welcomes comments, including any pertinent data,
concerning any electronic modernization issues that are not addressed
in this notice and that relate to the Commission's administration of
the Act or Chapters 95 and 96 of Title 26.
Dated: April 25, 2013.
On behalf of the Commission.
Ellen L. Weintraub,
Chair, Federal Election Commission.
[FR Doc. 2013-10326 Filed 5-1-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6715-01-P