Some Florida lawmakers aren’t hiding that they want “a backdoor into any end-to-end encrypted social media platforms that allow accounts for minors,” the Electronic Frontier Foundation blogged Friday.
A proposed expansion of Connecticut’s comprehensive privacy law “will make it difficult for companies to use consumer data responsibly to grow their business,” Connecticut business association CBIA warned Friday.
An Arkansas comprehensive privacy bill (SB-258) failed again to get enough votes to pass the Senate on Thursday.
A comprehensive privacy bill cleared the Oklahoma House Government Modernization and Technology Committee on an 8-0 vote Wednesday, despite the bill's sponsor admitting more work is needed.
An Arkansas comprehensive privacy bill nearly died Tuesday evening due to many state senators not voting for or against the measure on the floor.
Assemblymember Josh Lowenthal (D) doesn’t believe tech industry opposition can stop his bill to set civil penalties for big social media platforms that breach their “responsibility of ordinary care and skill” to children under 18, he said at an Assembly Judiciary Committee hearing Tuesday. Also, Lowenthal disagreed with concerns that AB-2, moving in the Assembly after a court blocked California’s age-appropriate design code (see 2503140063), could lead to more litigation.
The Arkansas Senate quickly passed governor-backed legislation to amend the state’s court-enjoined Social Media Safety Act.
The Colorado Senate concurred with House amendments and re-passed a bill setting various requirements for social media companies. Senators concurred on a 35-0 vote and 29-6 to repass SB-86. It will go to the governor next.
Consumer Reports and Electronic Privacy Information Center updated its model comprehensive privacy bill for states, EPIC said Thursday.
Businesses covered by a recently signed Virginia reproductive health privacy bill “will need to implement substantially the same compliance measures in Virginia that they have put in place in Washington State to comply with the My Health, My Data Act,” Hintze privacy lawyers blogged Wednesday.