Days ahead of the Jan. 31 deadline for data broker registration, the California Privacy Protection Agency announced that Connecticut-based data broker Key Marketing Advantage (KMA) agreed to pay $55,800 for failing to register and pay a fee in 2024.
Privacy Daily is providing readers with the top stories from last week, in case you missed them. All articles can be found by searching on the title or by clicking on the hyperlinked reference number.
Despite financial pressure, geopolitical instability, more data protection rules and other challenges, the privacy profession continues demonstrating "an extraordinary capacity for adaption and resilience," the International Association of Privacy Professionals (IAPP) said in a report published Tuesday. Nine of 10 companies responding to this year's survey said they feel at least somewhat confident about their privacy governance program, it said.
Florida lawmakers are turning their attention to kids’ social media and AI regulation now that the debate over comprehensive privacy is behind them, Rep. Fiona McFarland (R) told us in a recent interview.
European collaboration with the U.S. on privacy issues is going to be tough, representatives from the European Commission and European Parliament said Tuesday at a Data Protection Day conference in Brussels.
Legislators in states like Texas, Connecticut, New York and Massachusetts can set the tone for privacy-related AI laws in 2025, stakeholders told the Multistate AI Policymaker Working Group during a public feedback session Monday.
Finding common ground on data protection "remains a challenging task, primarily because privacy is deeply shaped by cultural, legal, and economic contexts," Ginervra Cerrina Feroni, vice-president of Italian privacy watchdog Garante, said in an email. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), for example, is rooted in a fundamental rights-based approach, while frameworks like the Global Cross Border Privacy Rules (CPBR) system emphasize voluntary compliance and flexibility, reflecting different traditions and priorities.
A new privacy protocol aims at getting consumers quicker responses from businesses when they seek to exercise their data rights under a growing body of state laws. Consumer Reports and a group of privacy compliance companies will release the Data Rights Protocol (DRP) on Tuesday after nearly four years of development, CR told Privacy Daily. OneTrust, Transcend, Yorba and CR’s Permission Slip announced that they added DRP to their systems and are working to move it to production.
Montana legislators mulled two privacy bills from the author of the state’s 2023 comprehensive law during hearings Thursday. At one livestreamed session, Montana Sen. Daniel Zolnikov (R) urged the Senate Energy and Telecom Committee to clear a fix of another data bill from that year, the Genetic Information Privacy Act. Later, during an Education Committee hearing, the state senator urged support for a bill that gives students “the right to be forgotten.”
President Donald Trump's reported decision to fire the three Democratic members of the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board (PCLOB) is raising concerns about the future of the hard-won trans-Atlantic data privacy framework (DPF), privacy experts said. It's not yet clear what impact Trump's Executive Order might have, however, and the European Commission is monitoring the situation, it said.