Having thorough and understandable guidelines for highly organized data storage is key in data minimization, which saves money in the long run, said a panel of privacy experts during a HaystackID webinar Wednesday on data minimization.
While AI practices continue to raise privacy concerns, privacy laws may create a pathway for AI regulation, said Clark Hill privacy attorney Myriah Jaworski in a Tuesday webinar about the rise of AI liability.
While the intent of a proposed workplace privacy bill in the Nebraska legislature was to ensure that employers don't violate employee privacy, more research is needed to ensure the benefits of artificial intelligence or workplace apps aren't stifled in the regulatory process, said bill sponsor Sen. John Frederickson (R) at a hearing on the bill in front of the Business and Labor Committee Monday.
What constitutes a “covered business” under Vermont’s proposed Age-Appropriate Design Code (AADC) Act dominated arguments at a Senate Insitutions Committee hearing Friday.
Despite the Illinois legislature passing an amendment aimed at clarifying the Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) last year, confusion remains about whether the measure applies retroactively, leaving pending cases in limbo that may take years to resolve, privacy lawyers said.
The Virginia House on Thursday agreed 52-46 to the Senate-amended version of an AI bill (HB-2094). The legislation would create requirements for the development, deployment and use of AI systems considered high-risk.
Minimizing the amount of data collected and stored can diminish the risk of data breach litigation and reduce storage costs, a panel of privacy experts said during an IAPP webinar Wednesday.
The Georgia Senate Economic Development and Tourism Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously in favor of a comprehensive privacy bill (SB-111).
A Montana bill aimed at prohibiting state and local government from purchasing individuals’ private electronic communications and data without a search warrant will make criminal investigations more difficult and burden the government’s ability to carry out its functions, said law enforcement officers and other government officials during a hearing of the state's Senate Judiciary Committee Tuesday.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation expects an "onslaught" of privacy issues in Congress this year, said Maddie Daly, EFF assistant director-federal affairs, in an interview with Privacy Daily. Some of EFF's top priorities, including a national privacy bill, may be "idealistic," but it's still important to push for them, Daly said.