California Strikes Back…For Data Privacy! | McCarter & English, LLP jdsupra.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from jdsupra.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
That this past year was the most challenging year in your professional life is an almost certainty. You were forced to learn entirely new statutory schemes, absorb new local health.
[co-author: Taylor Daly]
On Wednesday, December 9, the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee held a hearing titled “The Invalidation of the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield and the Future of Transatlantic Data Flows.” During the hearing, both Chairman Roger Wicker (R-MS) and Ranking Member Maria Cantwell (D-WA) underscored the need to assess how United States businesses can confidently conduct data transfers in compliance with EU laws as negotiations continue to replace the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield agreement.
The hearing included testimony from James Sullivan, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Services at the International Trade Administration (ITA), who indicated that all teams in the ITA’s Office of Digital Services Industries have met, on multiple occasions, with members of the Biden-Harris transition team, and have prepared a transition memorandum on the state of play around the Privacy Shield. Peter Swire of the Cross-Border Data Forum emphasized the need to negotiate a
On September 28, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed AB-713 into law, which more closely aligned the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) with the federal Health Insurance.
Killi Ltd.: Killi Featured in Business Insider
New York, New York (Newsfile Corp. - December 10, 2020) -
Killi, (TSXV: MYID) (OTCQB: MYIDF), the startup that pays users for their data, is rolling out a recurring monthly payment to win more consumers.
This marks a strategic shift toward more passive data-sharing, which the startup hopes will prove more attractive for consumers.
Killi pays users to share location, shopping, browsing, and spending data. It sells that data, and splits the profits with users 50/50.
The startup is betting that the increased focus on consumer data control will be a tailwind for its consent-focused platform.