Data Privacy: Balancing Customer Protection with Quality Web Experiences
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Does data privacy even matter anymore? There are conflicting reports detailing how data privacy works, when its safeguards fail, and what to expect in the future. In this taxing time, Sky Cassidy, CEO of MountainTop Data, says there needs to be a middle ground, where consumers trust providers to use their data responsibly, and marketers employ cleaner user data to create better online experiences.
There’s a disconnect between willingly surrendering privacy data and the consequences of a data breach. In the COVID-19 landscape, customers believe their personal data is less secure than ever.
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2020 was a year to remember (or maybe forget), but there was still so much happening in the world of eDiscovery and Information Governance, and the Ipro Newsroom was there to cover it. Here are the top 10 articles of 2020!
Read how joining these two global companies and their technologies will provide the most innovative workflow in the legal industry, extending across the entire Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) from Information Governance, to In-Place Early Data Assessment, through eDiscovery and beyond.
The California Attorney General’s Office recently released a
As background, the Attorney General’s Office had only just recently given notice of a third set of modifications on October 12, 2020. The third set of modifications revised the regulations relating to the notice of a consumer’s right to opt-out of the sale of their personal information. Our
previous post detailed the specific changes in the third set of modifications.
The Attorney General’s Office received around 20 comments in response to the third set of modifications; these modifications have not yet been accepted and finalized. The fourth set of modifications are in response to the comments to the third set of modifications and are intended to clarify and conform the proposed regulations to existing law. The changes made include:
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In a November 2019 article titled “New year to ring in nation’s most comprehensive privacy law,” we gave an update on the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), the nation’s most robust consumer privacy law that governs the collection of personal information by certain businesses regardless of whether they are physically located in California.
Nearly one year later, a majority of California voters approved the California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 (CPRA), which amends and expands the CCPA and establishes the nation’s first government regulator dedicated to consumer privacy.
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On December 10, 2020, less than two months
after proposing previous modifications, the California Attorney
General s Office proposed a fourth set of modifications to the
California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) regulations based on
comments received from the previous modifications proposed. The
comment period for this new set of modifications ends on December
28, 2020.
The fourth set of modifications offer two changes to the
CCPA s right to opt-out of sale rule. First, they
clarify that only businesses that sell personal
information (as opposed to businesses that collect
personal information) must provide consumers with an offline notice