BOSTON -- How a company communicates with privacy enforcers and responds to potential legal action are major factors in whether a formal, public settlement is issued, Tyler Bridegan, privacy and tech enforcement director in the Texas attorney general's office, said at the IAPP AI Governance conference Thursday.
As litigation over wiretapping and other privacy claims continues to rise, having a cookie banner on your website remains an important defense, said Morrison Foerster lawyers during a webinar Wednesday. But there’s more to it than that, they added.
A recent spate of California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) enforcements has pushed consumer opt-outs to the fore, clarifying what regulators consider important, Cynthia Cole, an intellectual property lawyer at Baker McKenzie, said during a webinar Tuesday.
The FTC’s recent children’s privacy claims against Disney and Apitor suggest companies should carefully scrutinize third-party vendors and software development kits (SDKs), privacy experts told us in recent interviews. The focus on children’s privacy suggests Chairman Andrew Ferguson and Republican commissioner are following through on this administration’s promises to protect children, they said.
Human resources company Sequoia Benefits must pay $8.7 million in a settlement from a 2022 data breach that exposed the personal information of about 580,000 individuals, a federal court ruled in a court document filed Tuesday.
While there is much debate in courts over the Video Privacy Protection Act (VPPA), class certification is one of the largest obstacles, said Morrison Foerster lawyers in a blog post Wednesday.
While companies often understand they risk incurring regulatory fines when they ignore data privacy, many underestimate the real cost of this approach, which includes the potential for lawsuits and class actions, said Bricker Graydon lawyer Nancy Magoteaux in a blog post Tuesday.
A law firm is investigating allegations that Disney violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) by collecting personal data, without parental knowledge or consent, from children who watched its videos online, and using the data to serve them targeted ads.
Privacy Daily is providing readers with the top stories from last week, in case you missed them. All articles can be found by searching the title or clicking on the hyperlinked reference number.
Companies should carefully analyze how third-party vendors are handling data to ensure compliance with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), privacy attorneys said in posts responding to the FTC’s recent action against Disney (see 2509020069) and Apitor (see 2509030057).