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.
Data processors who use databases freely available online or provided by a third party such as a data broker must verify that their formation or sharing isn't "manifestly unlawful," French privacy regulator CNIL warned Friday (in an unofficial translation). Whoever compiles, uploads or shares the database must comply with laws banning theft or distribution of stolen data and must check that the information isn't the result of a data leak, it said.
NTIA should prioritize transparency and open-internet principles and respect individual privacy rights when crafting potential ethical guidelines for researchers who handle pervasive data, consumer and internet advocates said in comments recently posted.
The FTC released some initial insights from the surveillance pricing study, with findings that indicated intermediaries have access to a large amount of data types and sources, as well as tools that can influence prices that consumers see, said the commission in a blog Friday.
Data brokers have a Jan. 31 deadline to provide the California Privacy Protection Agency with full metrics about their responses in 2023 to privacy rights, Kelley Drye attorneys warned in a blog post earlier this week.
The FTC on Tuesday announced two nonmonetary settlements with data brokers related to location data.
New-for-2025 comprehensive privacy bills appeared in Illinois and Oklahoma this week. In Illinois, state Sen. Sue Rezin's (R) proposed measure seems based on California’s law. The Oklahoma proposal, from Sen. Brent Howard (R), takes a Virginia-style approach. Privacy Daily is tracking comprehensive bills in at least five states.
Americans should root for "the overwhelming success” of President-elect Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) in cutting government waste, X CEO Linda Yaccarino told CES attendees Tuesday. X owner Elon Musk is leading DOGE with former Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy.
New York state legislators opened their 2025 session Wednesday, introducing comprehensive and healthcare-focused privacy bills, among other measures related to consumer data. Assemblymember Nily Rozic (D) offered the 2025 version of the New York Privacy Act. However, some of it is "not aligned with other comprehensive privacy laws,” which could make compliance a challenge for businesses, warned Hinshaw & Culbertson privacy attorney Cathy Mulrow-Peattie in an email Wednesday.
Congress and the Trump administration should consider X platform owner Elon Musk’s unconventional ideas, including possibly shuttering the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, Senate Republicans told us in December.