Update: Senate Vote on Colorado Privacy Act is In
Ale Johnson2022-01-26T22:22:41-07:00The Colorado State Senate has voted to pass the Colorado Privacy Act unanimously. The bill moves to the House for voting next.
The Colorado State Senate has voted to pass the Colorado Privacy Act unanimously. The bill moves to the House for voting next.
Consumer data requests may become more prevalent as new data request technology emerges, making a data management solution imperative.
Washington State, Oklahoma, and Florida are three states that were unsuccessful in passing privacy laws during April 2021 legislative sessions.
The California Privacy Protection Agency will set rules and help the attorney general enforce CCPA and CPRA, when it goes into effect.
Washington state Senate passes bill 5062 and moves it to the House of Representatives for a vote.
Alaska becomes the next state to push for privacy legislation. Governor Dunleavy proposed Senate Bill 116 and House Bill 159 on March, 31 2021.
Voted 89-9 in the Virginia House and unanimously in the Senate, Gov. Northam has signed the Consumer Data Protection Act into law.
Apple recently announced its current release iOS 14.3 will introduce a new privacy information section.
On December 10, 2020, CA Attorney General proposed a new set of modifications to the CCPA regulations. Offline data and Do Not Sell are among the changes.
California voters said "yes" to Proposition 24, known as the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA). The CRPA expands California's landmark consumer privacy law, adding a level of complexity that aims to strengthen consumer privacy protections.
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) proposed updates continue to roll in as the third set of proposed modifications released by the California Department of Justice were submitted for comment through October 28, 2020.
Governor Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 1281 on Tuesday, September 29, 2020. The bill extends the business-to-business and employee partial moratoria, also known as employee privacy rights, until the end of 2022.
CPRA would allow consumers the right to correct their data, potential exemptions for unstructured data in right to know requests, the creation of a category for sensitive information, and stricter rules for protecting a minor's data by tripling the fines associated with violating a minor's privacy rights.
Privacy automation gives companies the ability to operationalize privacy rights requests, including responses across multiple business units, while accommodating high volumes of data subject requests.
QuikSense is a standalone, contactless temperature sensor can read temperatures quickly and directly from an individual’s wrist with the highest level of temperature accuracy on the market.
On August 31, 2020, the California Legislature passed Assembly Bill 1281, extending the business-to-business and employee partial moratoria also referred to as employee privacy rights, until the end of 2021.
Privacy rights regulation is expanding beyond the GDPR and CCPA with Brazil’s privacy law referred to as the LGPD (Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados Pessoais) now effective.
California’s Attorney General Xavier Becerra submitted the final regulations of the CCPA to the Office of Administrative Law (OAL).
IntraEdge proudly introduces QuikSense powered by Truyo, a standalone, contactless temperature wrist sensor that was designed with privacy in mind.
All aspects of a privacy program that are exposed to the public, should be handled lawfully and ethically in these ever-changing times.
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Truyo, an IntraEdge company, powered by Intel®, offers customers true consent and data privacy rights management automation.
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