Vermont’s compliance this week with the Trump administration’s request for information about Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) participants angered the sponsor of the state's comprehensive privacy bill.
There’s “no valid reason” to amend the Colorado AI Act, the law's House author, Rep. Brianna Titone (D) emailed Privacy Daily on Wednesday.
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is “like a big Lego block” to which state legislators “are constantly adding … Lego pieces,” said Tom Kemp, executive director of the California Privacy Protection Agency, during an IAPP webinar Tuesday. The California Privacy Rights Act, which amended the CCPA, prohibits reducing Californians’ privacy rights, he noted.
A workplace surveillance bill sitting on the Maine governor’s desk requires preparation from employers now, Fisher Phillips privacy attorney Pawel Binczyk said in a blog post Monday.
A Rhode Island measure with “a striking resemblance to” New Jersey's Daniel’s Law will take effect on Jan. 1, JacksonLewis privacy lawyer Mary Costigan and three colleagues noted in a blog post Monday.
So far in 2025, state lawmakers and regulators have focused on data related to health, children, geolocation and biometrics, said Sidley privacy attorneys Colleen Theresa Brown, Sheri Porath Rockwell and Sasha Hondagneu-Messner in a blog post Thursday.
Texas health care practitioners should review where they keep medical data before Sept. 1 to comply with a new state law, SheppardMullin attorneys Julia Kadish and Michael Sutton said in a blog post Friday.
New Jersey’s Office of Consumer Protection delayed until Sept. 2 the deadline to submit comments on draft rules for implementing the New Jersey Data Privacy Act (NJDPA), according to the office’s website. The comments were previously due Aug. 1.
The California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) seeks comments by Aug. 18 at 5 p.m. PT on revised draft rules for implementing a data-deletion mechanism under the California Delete Act, the agency said in a notice Thursday.
States should amend comprehensive privacy laws to remove loopholes for consumer reporting agencies (CRAs), the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) said in a white paper released Tuesday.