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Keypoint: Although weakened from its original version, the Oklahoma bill would (if enacted) provide substantial privacy rights to Oklahoma residents and, in some respects, provide more privacy protections than found in the CCPA.
On March 4, 2021, the Oklahoma House of Representatives passed the Oklahoma Computer Data Privacy Act by a vote of 85-11 with 5 excused. The bill, which is perhaps best described as a heavily-modified version of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), will now move to the Oklahoma Senate.
The Oklahoma bill was the subject of extensive reporting last month after a prior version of the bill, which included a private right of action, passed unanimously through the House Technology Committee. However, the private right of action was deleted in a significantly modified version of the bill that was introduced earlier this week.
Virginia Governor Signs Nation s Second Comprehensive Consumer Data Privacy Law | Hudson Cook, LLP
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Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act: Second US State Passes Comprehensive Data Privacy Legislation | Latham & Watkins LLP
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In today’s world, data is power. Healthcare providers have massive amounts of rich health data at their fingertips. Yet historically, third-party vendors to healthcare providers often have derived financial benefits from secondary use of this data through aggregating and brokering de-identified data to downstream customers.
That is beginning to change as healthcare providers are taking back control of their data assets.
Truveta, Inc., a new startup led by 14 of the largest health systems in the U.S., has formed to pool together their vast and diverse data in order to take back control over how their patients’ de-identified data is shared and used. Truveta’s goal is to leverage patient data to improve patient care, address health inequity, accelerate the development of treatments and reduce the time to make a diagnosis.