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California Consumer Privacy Act – The Top 5 Things You Need to Know

On June 28, 2018 Governor Brown signed off on the strictest set of data privacy laws to date in the United States – the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (full text here). Learn more about how it compares to the former ballot initiative here.

The Consumer Privacy Act will give Californians unprecedented rights to know what information businesses collect about them, where that information comes from, and control how that information is shared. It applies to all companies that “do business” in California and that exceed one of the following thresholds:

  • Annual gross revenues of more than 25 million dollars
  • Processes the personal information of 50,000 or more California residents, households or devices annually
  • Receives 50% or more annual revenue from selling the personal information of California residents

According to a recent study by the International Association of Privacy Professionals, this means that over 500,000 US companies will be affected by the Consumer Privacy Act – including small to medium sized businesses.

Given the far-reaching effects of the Consumer Privacy Act, here are the top 5 things businesses should know about this new law:

1. The “Right to Know”: California consumers will have the ability to make a request, once every 12 months, to receive the following information about them:Continue Reading California Consumer Privacy Act – The Top 5 Things You Need to Know

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California Privacy Update: Tentative Compromise on Consumer Privacy Act

6/28/2018 Update: Governor Brown signed AB-375 into law on the afternoon of June 28, 2018. The law is named the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018, and will take effect in January 2020. This will give industry and lawmakers some time to regroup and fine tune the regulations under this new act.

In a last-minute attempt to keep the California Consumer Privacy Act initiative off the November ballot, California lawmakers reached a tentative deal with ballot sponsor Alastair Mactaggart on June 21st to push forward a legislative privacy bill. The deal depends on the bill passing both houses and being signed by Governor Brown by June 28th.

The proposed bill, introduced by State Assembly member Ed Chau and state senator Robert Hertzberg, would give California consumers unprecedented rights to know what information businesses collect about them, where that information comes from, and how that information is shared. The bill also gives consumers the power to stop companies from selling their data.

Continue Reading California Privacy Update: Tentative Compromise on Consumer Privacy Act

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Metaverse Law Discusses GDPR and State Privacy Laws on KUCI 88.9 FM Privacy Piracy Radio

On Monday, June 25 at 8 A.M. Pacific, attorney Lily Li appeared as a guest star on KUCI 88.9 FM’s Privacy Piracy radio show. During the half-hour segment, Ms. Li discussed the impact of the recent General Data Protection Regulation, growing developments in state privacy regulation, and the California Consumer Privacy Act.

To listen to this broadcast, please click on the MP3 below.

KUCI 88.9 FM is a commercial free radio station, based out of the University of California – Irvine. For more information, see http://kuci.org/

Privacy Piracy is a half-hour public affairs radio show broadcasting on KUCI 88.9 FM. The show is co-hosted by attorney and privacy consultant Mari Frank and production engineer Lloyd Boshaw. For more information, see http://privacypiracy.org/

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