A Montana neurotechnology privacy law enacted this year “signals a shift toward integrating neural data protections within existing biological data laws,” Morrison Foerster lawyers Linda Clark, Melissa Crespo and Katherine Wang blogged Friday.
California fiscal hawks added multiple privacy bills to the Senate Appropriations Committee’s suspense file during a livestreamed meeting Monday. A state finance official raised red flags on measures involving data-driven pricing and AI chatbots.
Companies should pay particular attention to how California enforces contract requirements in the California Consumer Privacy Act, Greenberg Traurig attorney Darren Abernethy said Thursday during a TrustArc webinar.
Colorado's proposed draft amendment on kids' privacy in a rulemaking for implementing changes to the Colorado Privacy Act reflect the ongoing trend of states expanding privacy protections for their constituents beyond federal law, said Morgan Lewis lawyers in a blog post Tuesday.
SB-318 is a legislative proposal to update SB-205, Colorado’s AI Act (see 2508070039).
States show growing interest in privacy laws covering neural and neurotechnology data, Future of Privacy Forum (FPF) said Tuesday. Four states have enacted laws so far: Montana, California, Connecticut, and Colorado.
Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) signed a bill amending a state law protecting the privacy of judges, according to a Monday update on the legislature’s website.
California Privacy Protection Agency rules on automated decision-making technology (ADMT) and other subjects could receive Office of Administrative Law approval before the end of September.
Colorado’s proposed kids privacy rules show “a continued commitment by regulators to protect the data of minors,” Goodwin privacy attorney Jacqueline Klosek and two colleagues blogged Thursday.
Though many states have fallen short in filling gaps in federal privacy protections for health and genetic information, a few are trying, said Orrick lawyers in a Friday blog post. The lawyers said that public interest in genetic data is on the rise, though the recent 23andMe bankruptcy proceedings exposed concerns about what information is protected and what is not (see 2506100051 and 2506180018).