On May 13th, New York State Senator Kevin Thomas, Chair of NY’s Consumer Protection Committee, reintroduced the New York Privacy Act (“NYPA”), a comprehensive consumer privacy law.
By Aaron Nicodemus2021-05-21T16:50:00+01:00
A recent survey of 100 executives from Fortune 500 companies found more than half are struggling to balance easy access to company data with privacy and security compliance.
The survey was commissioned by software vendor Privacera and conducted by marketing agency Lead to Market. Among the findings, 58 percent of respondents said access restrictions were impacting the productivity of their analytic teams.
This issue is particularly thorny for companies that store personally identifiable information (PII) on cloud servers. Eighty-five percent of respondents said they used at least two cloud servers for data analytics and storage. Forty percent reported using five or more.
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The passage of Prop 24, the California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 (“CPRA”), has caused a bit of confusion among businesses in California. The confusion stems from the fact that the CPRA has an effective date of January 1, 2023, amending the existing California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) when it takes effect, but also immediately extending the current
limited exemptions under the CCPA for employment-related data, also to January 1, 2023. (Without the CPRA, the limited exemptions would have already expired.) It appears that this labyrinth of amendments, extensions, and exemptions has misled some businesses subject to CCPA (the rules for which will change a little under the CPRA) into believing that they are completely exempt from privacy obligations until 2023 with respect to job applicants, employees, owners, directors, officers, medical staff, and contractors (collectively “employees and applicants”). This
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The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is still relatively
new, and now there is another expansive privacy law in California,
the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA).
In November 2020, California voters approved of the CPRA, which
expands privacy rights and requirements beyond the CCPA. For
example, the CPRA does the following:
Redefines covered businesses and expands
applicability to those sharing information.
Introduces a new category and rights for sensitive
personal information.
Expands other consumer rights, such as the right to amend
inaccurate information.
Updates requirements for clearly disclosing information use and
Friday, May 21, 2021
The passage of Prop 24, the California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 (“CPRA”), has caused a bit of confusion among businesses in California. The confusion stems from the fact that the CPRA has an effective date of January 1, 2023, amending the existing California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) when it takes effect, but also immediately extending the current
limited exemptions under the CCPA for employment-related data, also to January 1, 2023. (Without the CPRA, the limited exemptions would have already expired.) It appears that this labyrinth of amendments, extensions, and exemptions has misled some businesses subject to CCPA (the rules for which will change a little under the CPRA) into believing that they are completely exempt from privacy obligations until 2023 with respect to job applicants, employees, owners, directors, officers, medical staff, and contractors (collectively “employees and applicants”). This is not the case! In sh