Regulating AI should center on limiting the technology's potential risks, labor representatives and other advocates said during a session of the Massachusetts Joint Committee on Advanced Information Technology, the Internet and Cybersecurity. At a hearing Thursday, they said their goal includes protecting state residents from AI's possible harms while also letting them reap its benefits.
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.
Misinformation and amendments derailed a bill on data-driven pricing, also called “surveillance pricing,” that was nearing the finish line in California. After Senate appropriators last week narrowed the legislation to apply only to grocery stores (see 2509020025), Assemblymember Chris Ward (D) punted AB-446 to next year, he said in a statement Thursday.
Consumers filed 214 complaints in the first year since the Oregon Consumer Privacy Act (OCPA) took effect, with the majority concerning online data brokers, according to a report from the state’s DOJ. The right to delete data was consumers' top complaint.
Congress should amend the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act and preempt all state privacy laws from regulating financial services, the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) said in comments to the House Financial Services Committee.
A California bill to set notification deadlines for data breaches passed the Senate unanimously on Thursday and could be headed to the governor’s desk soon. The Senate passed SB-446 on May 28 and it’s been sailing through the Assembly on consent agendas since then (see 2508200033). Meanwhile, state fiscal hawks advanced many privacy and AI bills, while holding back some others, at committee meetings Friday.
A recent court decision on West Virginia's Daniel's Law is the first ruling to find a law protecting the privacy of public officials unconstitutional on First Amendment grounds -- and it will likely influence litigation in other states, said Troutman lawyers in a blog post Aug. 22. It could also lead to West Virginia amending its law, a Klein Moynihan lawyer said Monday.
Colorado's Senate Business Committee on Thursday voted 4-3 to advance a proposal from Senate Majority Leader Robert Rodriguez (D) to update the state's AI law. The bill advanced with four amendments to the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Google and YouTube will pay a combined $30 million to resolve a children's privacy lawsuit that alleged the companies collected personal data and information without consent and used it to deliver targeted ads in violation of the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), California privacy laws and other similar state laws (see 2505120037)
California should lead the way in banning data-driven pricing, Assemblymember Chris Ward (D) told Privacy Daily on Thursday.