The emergence of an alternative internet betanews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from betanews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Apple and Google are making big privacy moves to wipe out third-party cookies that marketers use to target and measure digital ads.
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The ad industry is undergoing massive changes under the privacy era.
Apple, Google and others are making new changes that limit tracking how advertisers target and measure ads. And privacy laws like the California Consumer Privacy Act and Europe s General Data Protection Regulation are clamping down on how marketers collect and use data.
Facebook, Health Net hacks show need for national privacy law latimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from latimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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The Florida Senate appears poised to hit the brakes on privacy legislation that has thus far soared through committees in both legislative chambers. The House version (HB 969) and the Senate Version (SB 1734) would have not only created the same consumer privacy rights as the CCPA, the bills would have created
massive private rights of action, far broader than any other privacy law in the United States.
Today, a “strike all” Committee Amendment was offered to the Senate version. TRANSLATION – the Senate Rules Committee, where SB 1734 is now pending, is proposing a “friendly amendment” that would strike the entirety of SB 1734 and replace it with a new version.
Opinion: Recent Hacks Prove U.S. Needs Federal Privacy Rules
Data from the recent Facebook breach appeared to be several years old and Health Net did not disclose the details of their own breach until months later. Would a national privacy law change things for the better? by David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times / April 6, 2021 Shutterstock
(TNS) How many data breaches will it take before our leaders accept the need for a national privacy law?
More than half a billion Facebook users, including 32 million in the United States, found out over the weekend that their personal information was accessed by hackers. Names, birth dates, locations, phone numbers, email addresses and other information were posted on a website used by cyberthieves. The data appeared to be several years old.