4As Exclusive Guidance On GDPR And CCPA
Agency Considerations For The EU Digital Services Act And EU Digital Markets Act
Federal Privacy Legislation And Regulation
The United States has traditionally approached privacy in what is known as a “sectoral” approach. What this means is that instead of one comprehensive privacy law to cover all industries, the United States has created different sets of privacy laws based on subject matter, i.e. healthcare, credit, education, etc. While that approach has set the rules of the road for privacy for decades, the recent explosion of the use of data by both business and government has increasingly made it clear that the old sectoral approach isn’t going to work going forward.
Privacy For America
Privacy For America is cross-industry initiative co-founded by the 4As. The goal of Privacy For America is to pass comprehensive federal privacy legislation with a strong set of baseline consumer protections, and the flexibility to evolve as technology evolves, without going back to the drawing board every time a new technology raises privacy concerns.
Recent developments around COVID-19 contact tracing and state laws concerning women’s reproductive healthcare following the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization have opened-up a new avenue of conversation between industry, Congress, and the White House as to how comprehensive federal privacy legislation could help address the privacy concerns that have surfaced.
To learn more about Privacy For America, including recent news: https://www.privacyforamerica.com/overview/
State Privacy Legislation And Regulation
While states have long legislated and regulated in discrete areas of privacy, California’s passage of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) in 2018 was the first time a state passed comprehensive privacy legislation. This was significant for multiple reasons, not least of which was the obvious concern from many businesses that they California would just be the first state to do this. And in the years following 2018, that concern has provide to be valid. Many states have begun introducing their own versions of comprehensive privacy legislation, versions that vary greatly from California’s. The 4As continues to be a strong advocate of comprehensive federal privacy legislation, as the issue of privacy and data legislation can simply not be consistently effectuated on a state-by-state basis.
Latest Privacy News
06/17/2022
California Privacy Protection Agency Votes to Begin Rulemaking Process
On June 8, the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) Board voted 4-0 (with one member absent) to initiate…
06/02/2022
California Privacy Protection Agency Publishes First Set of Draft CPRA Rules for Consideration
On May 27, the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) published its first subset of California Privacy Rights Act…
05/26/2022
Bipartisan Senate Bill Introduced to Address Market Dominance of Platforms in Ad Tech
On May 19, Sens. Mike Lee (R-UT), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Ted Cruz (R-TX), and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) introduced…
Resources
Guidance
2025 State Privacy Laws Guidance
Understand the current legal landscape as of February 2025 and be prepared for any shifts on the horizon.
Guidance
Navigating the Health Data Privacy Landscape: A Guide for Agencies
Login to access member-exclusive content Not a 4As member yet? Don’t miss out. Learn more about joining a growing…
U.S. State Privacy Laws: What Agencies Need to Know
In 2023, five state consumer data privacy laws (in CA [CPRA], VA CO, CT, and UT) will go…