World

California votes to expand data privacy law

However, American Civil Liberties Union officials oppose the initiative as it is ‘full of loopholes’

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 05 Nov 2020 4:30PM

California votes to expand data privacy law
The California Consumer Privacy Act became law at the start of this year, the toughest of its kind in the US. – Pixabay pic, November 5, 2020

SAN FRANCISCO – California voters supported an initiative expanding a data privacy law criticized by rights watchdogs as having worrying “loopholes” for firms such as Google and Facebook.

The initiative, which got 56% of the vote in Tuesday's election, builds on state law by letting people limit how businesses could use their data such as their location, race and religion.

It also allows regulators to levy fines of up to $7,500 (RM31,106) per violation of children's privacy rights and creates a state agency to enforce the law.

The California Consumer Privacy Act became law at the start of this year, the toughest of its kind in the US.

Like the European Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), applied in the European Union since May 2018, the California law guarantees rights regarding control of online data.

Alastair Mactaggart, a wealthy San Francisco real estate developer, who led support for the original law and is behind the act of refining it, called its passage historic.

"We are at the beginning of a journey that will profoundly shape the fabric of our society by redefining who is in control of our most personal information and putting consumers back in charge of their data," Mactaggart said.

California's American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) officials, however, opposed the initiative, contending it would undermine privacy and increase the burden on people to protect themselves from abuses of their data by big tech companies.

The ACLU of Northern California argued that the initiative was “full of loopholes”.

Flaws in the initiative include "carve-outs written by the credit-reporting industry and new ways to keep consumers in the dark about what companies are doing with their personal information," according to the ACLU.

The initiative limits businesses that have to comply with the law to only companies that buy or sell data of at least 100,000 households a year, the ACLU noted.

Critics point out that Facebook or Google could claim exemption regarding online data they don't pay for but is used to target advertising.

The change to the law also makes it easier for businesses to charge people more if they refuse to let their data be used, according to critics.

Backers of the initiative contended that the laws would set the bar for privacy rights in the US.

"I look forward to ushering in a new era of consumer privacy rights with passage of the California Privacy Rights Act," said Californians for Consumer Privacy, board chairman Andrew Yang. – AFP, November 5, 2020

Related News

Malaysia / 2y

Data-sharing law still in draft stage

World / 3y

Tragedy strikes again: six killed in California plane crash

Music / 3y

Bad Bunny, Blackpink, Frank Ocean headlining historic Coachella

People / 3y

'One Million Years BC' actress Raquel Welch dies at 82

World / 3y

California farm shooting suspect could face death penalty: prosecutor

World / 3y

Seven dead in two shootings in northern California: media reports

Spotlight

Malaysia

Johor state election: MACC receives three reports of alleged corruption

Malaysia

Banks need to do more to help counter rising costs of living – Guan Eng

By Ian McIntyre

Business

BNM holds OPR at 2.75 per cent

Malaysia

MACC: No one off limits in probe into US$13 million luxury property deal

Malaysia

Govt rejects claims Jho Low secretly returned to Malaysia for 1MDB asset talks

Malaysia

School stabbing incident: Suspect claimed she was dissatisfied, allegedly bullied

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Rosmah demands action against Nga over alleged misleading election poster in Johor polls

Malaysia

Malaysia faces RM51.4b 1MDB burden after recovering RM31.3b in funds and assets

You may be interested

World

Tehran retaliates against US bases in the Gulf

World

Trump declares Iran peace accord 'over'

World

Fresh US strikes on Iran deepen ceasefire crisis as Trump warns of escalation

World

China flood death toll rises to 39 in Guangxi as rescue teams race against further typhoon threat

World

Amnesty calls for war crimes probe into Israeli strikes in Lebanon that allegedly killed entire families

World

US-Iran ceasefire under renewed strain as Washington launches fresh strikes

World

21 dead after landslide buries workers in China’s Gansu province

World

Cargo plane wreckage found off Pakistan as search for 5 crew members continues