Delete Request and Opt-Out Platform (DROP) rules will take effect Jan. 1, the same day that the accessible deletion platform goes live, the California Privacy Protection Agency announced at the CalPrivacy Board’s meeting Friday. Also at the meeting, CalPrivacy General Counsel Philip Laird walked the board through a presentation on how consumers and data brokers will interact with DROP.
California Privacy Protection Agency legislative staff is closely watching potential preemption efforts on Capitol Hill while developing possible bills to tighten the California Consumer Privacy Act in its home state’s legislature, said an agency official during the CalPrivacy Board’s meeting Friday. The proposed bills would add whistleblower protections, require alternative methods for submitting consumer privacy requests and expand California’s deletion right to cover all personal information collected about a consumer.
CHICAGO -- Work in the House on a national privacy bill has continued even during the government shutdown, Venable’s Michael Signorelli said during a panel Tuesday at the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) ad law conference. But with a year to go until the 2026 midterm elections, timing could be a problem, the privacy and advertising attorney said. “The calendar is no one’s friend right now.”
SAN DIEGO -- The right to delete seems simple, maybe deceptively so, though California's new Deletion Request and Opt-Out Platform (DROP) is attempting to reduce complications, panelists said during IAPP's privacy and security conference Friday.
The California Privacy Protection Agency’s rulemaking priorities should include discussion of four items: opt-out preference signals, “reducing friction in the exercise of privacy rights,” disclosures and notices, and employee data, according to meeting materials for the CPPA Board’s Friday meeting (see 2510280048).
SAN DIEGO – “Privacy should be easy” for businesses to implement and consumers to effectuate, said Tom Kemp, executive director of the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA), during the closing keynote at IAPP's privacy and security conference Friday. At a panel Thursday, other CPPA employees spoke about regulations aimed at making privacy and privacy rights easier.
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The California Privacy Protection Agency could have a decision from the state's Office of Administrative Law (OAL) on Delete Act regulations just in time for the CPPA board's Nov. 7 meeting.
California added to companies’ increasing worries “about being viewed as ‘selling’ personal data” earlier this month when Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) signed an update to the California Delete Act, Sheppard Mullin attorneys Lissa Thomas and Kathryn Smith blogged Thursday.
The California Privacy Protection Agency launched a webpage for consumers Friday previewing the agency’s upcoming Delete Request and Opt-Out Platform (DROP), Executive Director Tom Kemp posted on LinkedIn. The agency plans to release the accessible data deletion mechanism Jan. 1.