consumers or
households. The CPRA also clarifies that the revenue threshold of $25 million applies to revenue from the “preceding calendar year.” § 1798.140(d)(1)(A) and (B).
Restriction on Legislature to Amend: Finally, in response to critics who alleged that the original CCPA became “watered down” by the legislative process, the CPRA limits the power of the state legislature to change the law. The California Legislature may only pass amendments to the statute that “are consistent with and further [its] purpose and intent.” CPRA Section 25.
Tasks for 2021
Updating Links and Policies: As noted above, the CPRA includes new rights to correct and to limit the use of newly defined “sensitive personal information” and regulates the sharing (not just selling) of personal information. As a result, businesses will need to update their “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” links to read “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information,” and include a separate link
PrivacyCheq s COPPA Child Privacy Compliance Tech Updated for New California Regulations
CCPA s New Opt-Out Protocols for Children Aged 13-16 added
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YORK, Pa., Feb. 4, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Today, PrivacyCheq announced that ConsentCheq, its flagship child privacy compliance enterprise software service has been updated to properly administrate privacy management for California children under 17, as required by both the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and its successor the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA). Since its original launch in 2014, the ConsentCheq service has provided operational COPPA parental verification and consent to publishers and app developers with audiences that included children under 13.
WHAT MATTERS? Is your organization ready for California’s latest privacy rights law, enacted at the end of 2020 – the CPRA? This article addresses some key considerations to help you.
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On January 28, 2021, privacy professionals around the world will celebrate Data Privacy Day. This year, we decided to mark the occasion by gathering our team’s thoughts and expectations on what we expect to be the biggest privacy law stories in 2021 and beyond.
Last year we wrote a similar article, attempting to predict how the privacy landscape would unfold in 2020. We got some things right (e.g., the emergence of CCPA 2.0). But, let’s be honest, in March everything changed, including privacy law. As spring turned into summer our writing focused on the privacy law implications of COVID-19, including contact tracing, no contact temperature taking, and the unanticipated collection of heath information, among other unexpected topics. We also took note of developments overseas, including the Court of Justice of the European Union’s
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The recently-passed California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) augments and supplements California’s existing privacy law, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). We are sure many practitioners are wondering how it stacks up with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). See below for Part I of our two part series comparing the CPRA and the GDPR.
HOW DOES THE CPRA CHANGE THE CCPA?
The CPRA makes several significant changes to the CCPA:
It introduces the concept of “
sensitive personal data”;
principles”;
It introduces new rights for consumers; and