It's worth pushing for this. Most of what little privacy protection we get these days is a side effect of laws in the EU. It would be nice to actually have some of those legal protection here as well.
One step closer to banning this kind of databrokerage as an industry.
How? We're not allowed to have experion delete our data, what makes these different?
Also, if you think your data is "deleted" after they confirm your request, i have a bridge to sell you.
Nothing Is Ever Good
Yay, we could get the same protections Europeans already have. I hope it passes.
This would be great, because it would "validate" GDPR.
Data protection requests would be more likely to be planned-for and succeed if users didn't have to say/prove they were an EU citizen.
Certainly, as a UK citizen who has these protections, but not specifically GDPR, it can be difficult leverage these rights.
More countries adopting these kind of laws will hopefully resolve into a global standard of "right to be forgotten", as long as it doesn't collapse into an XKCD#927 scenario (https://xkcd.com/927)
The California Consumer Protection Act could be useful for other states to make their own equivalents. Or push the Federal Government to make one.
A number of US states went live with similar laws at the beginning of this year, and they do seem to be effective.
Republicans will vote this down claiming it uses the wrong bathroom
The uh, bipartisan part, kinda hints that both republicans and democrats are pushing it.
Let's make this topic about being able to have better control over your data, rather then pitching sides against each other.
To be honest this doesn't involve any "culture war" dumbassery so unless Fox starts spewing about how the bill is woke and will turn your kids gay I don't think anyone outside of the usual suspects would vote against it.
Then again the GOP will make the most innocuous thing into a political shitshow, so who knows.
They write their own useful, not-crappy bills and then vote against them all the time.
They don't need any culture war talking points, they just want everything broken and everyone miserable.
Unironically right to be forgotten stuff is a major benefit to a person who's gone through social transition because it does things like let them get rid of their dead name on the internet.
Finally some good stuff, though lobbyists will most likely never let it pass (or drum up some bs about how it "could delete evidence" in some crime case)
I've been reading through the bill and I have concerns. The bill requires data brokers to register with the commission and they store PII sufficient to identify an individual. Because the registered brokers must report back that they've removed the data, it does give the commission an awful lot of data on people's online activities. Not everyone wants their data linked that way. But as long as I can still do things the hard way, I'm not opposed.
Those data brokers also are subject to data retention laws, which were specifically in place to make sure that all data could be collected in a certain time period. It doesn't matter if they delete everything after 6 months so long as it was copied to an entity not subject to these deletion laws by then (and it is)
I'd support a law that required brokers to disclose every entity they copied / shared the data with, but I'm convinced that would be a nonstarter.
It’s so hard to be enthusiastic about news like this these days.
And why aren’t they required to get my consent before doing this again?
It's worth pushing for this. Most of what little privacy protection we get these days is a side effect of laws in the EU. It would be nice to actually have some of those legal protection here as well.
One step closer to banning this kind of databrokerage as an industry.
How? We're not allowed to have experion delete our data, what makes these different?
Also, if you think your data is "deleted" after they confirm your request, i have a bridge to sell you.
Nothing Is Ever Good
Yay, we could get the same protections Europeans already have. I hope it passes.
This would be great, because it would "validate" GDPR.
Data protection requests would be more likely to be planned-for and succeed if users didn't have to say/prove they were an EU citizen.
Certainly, as a UK citizen who has these protections, but not specifically GDPR, it can be difficult leverage these rights.
More countries adopting these kind of laws will hopefully resolve into a global standard of "right to be forgotten", as long as it doesn't collapse into an XKCD#927 scenario (https://xkcd.com/927)
The California Consumer Protection Act could be useful for other states to make their own equivalents. Or push the Federal Government to make one.
A number of US states went live with similar laws at the beginning of this year, and they do seem to be effective.
Republicans will vote this down claiming it uses the wrong bathroom
The uh, bipartisan part, kinda hints that both republicans and democrats are pushing it.
Let's make this topic about being able to have better control over your data, rather then pitching sides against each other.
To be honest this doesn't involve any "culture war" dumbassery so unless Fox starts spewing about how the bill is woke and will turn your kids gay I don't think anyone outside of the usual suspects would vote against it.
Then again the GOP will make the most innocuous thing into a political shitshow, so who knows.
They write their own useful, not-crappy bills and then vote against them all the time.
They don't need any culture war talking points, they just want everything broken and everyone miserable.
Unironically right to be forgotten stuff is a major benefit to a person who's gone through social transition because it does things like let them get rid of their dead name on the internet.
Finally some good stuff, though lobbyists will most likely never let it pass (or drum up some bs about how it "could delete evidence" in some crime case)
I've been reading through the bill and I have concerns. The bill requires data brokers to register with the commission and they store PII sufficient to identify an individual. Because the registered brokers must report back that they've removed the data, it does give the commission an awful lot of data on people's online activities. Not everyone wants their data linked that way. But as long as I can still do things the hard way, I'm not opposed.
Those data brokers also are subject to data retention laws, which were specifically in place to make sure that all data could be collected in a certain time period. It doesn't matter if they delete everything after 6 months so long as it was copied to an entity not subject to these deletion laws by then (and it is)
I'd support a law that required brokers to disclose every entity they copied / shared the data with, but I'm convinced that would be a nonstarter.
It’s so hard to be enthusiastic about news like this these days.
And why aren’t they required to get my consent before doing this again?
On some GDPR shit?