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On November 3rd, 2020, California voters decided to vote CPRA into law. It will
go into effect in January 2023 (with a lookback provision starting in 2022) and
have major data compliance implications for all companies that do business
with California consumers. To better understand how we got to CPRA and what
it could mean, let’s review a brief history of the last few years of data privacy in
California.
The Golden State is the spiritual home of software and the internet. It’s no
secret that Silicon Valley took a cavalier attitude towards ideas of user privacy
in the early days of the web. There was simply no governing body producing
and enforcing privacy laws suitable for modern digital networks in the 1990s
and early 2000s.
As lawmakers and consumers began to get wiser, and as more concern arose
over the negative consequences of tech titans’ ability to leverage consumer
data, new regulations were tabled to help protect user privacy. But legislative
language is notoriously difficult to get right. It requires highly specific legalese
to ensure that the intended outcomes are achievable.
This helps explain the first major privacy law to go into effect in California: the
California Consumer Privacy Act. It came into effect on January 1, 2020, and
became legally enforceable on July 1. Although many bright minds worked on
the language, it satisfied nearly no one. Behind the scenes of this initial
legislation is a contentious journey that neatly illustrates the difficulties and
opportunities for passing comprehensive data privacy law in the US.
This effort by Mactaggart alarmed California lawmakers – even those that were
pro-privacy. One, state Senator Bob Hertzberg, was particularly alarmed at
how difficult it would be to amend Mactaggart’s version of the law. Said
Hertzberg in Wired: “The reason we thought it was horrible wasn’t that he
didn’t do a lot of good things that were consumer-facing; of course he did. But
he put a 70 percent threshold. And in my world, a 70 percent threshold gives
the other party all the power.”
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), then, was ultimately Hertzberg
and California’s attempt to appease privacy activists…without putting
Mactaggart’s proposal on the ballot. It was hurried through the legislature and
full of expedient compromise. This can be seen in the way it was received by,
well, pretty much everyone.
The CCPA didn’t meet the brief for consumer usability, nor provide enough
clarity to companies. It placed a disproportionate burden on smaller
businesses, which didn’t have the legal know-how to work the law’s loopholes
in the same way as some of the world’s biggest tech companies. Neither side
could get behind the legislation. Plus, there were major questions about
enforcement; that burden was placed on the California Attorney General, who
was open in their admission that resource constraints would only let them
prosecute a small number of CCPA violations per year.
In the end, Bob Hertzberg himself began urging Mactaggart to put an initiative
to people’s vote. This would, in his view, provide a stronger mandate for a bust
of privacy and suitable mechanisms for regulatory enforcement. Proposition 24,
aka the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA), is the result.
Now, Californians have the opportunity to expand the original CCPA into the
CPRA. This change will see a strong focus on enforcement as well as finer-
grained classification and requirements for businesses that process personal
data. Does this mean that all the CCPA’s issues have been resolved? Far from
it! Many observers (experts included) are still confused about the new
legislation and the specific ways it differs from the previous CCPA.
The 52-page document includes very technical language that makes it difficult
for everyday citizens to understand. One reason to vote for it is that it’s a
strong stand for consumer privacy that doesn’t exist anywhere else in the
country. On the other hand, it’s not clear how the CPRA would play out in real
life. Will it expand consumer privacy protections or diminish them? Even the
original drafters of the CCPA, Mactaggart and Mary Stone Ross, disagree on
this question.
The passage of the CPRA could set a nationwide precedent for similar data
compliance laws. In the absence of a federal privacy law, it will become the de
facto privacy standard for the entire United States. But it’s yet to be seen if the
enforcement mechanism will work as envisioned.
The only certain thing is that the story of US digital privacy law is at the start,
not the end. This is the beginning of a years-long conversation about the role of
data in business and how to balance consumer privacy with the cost of doing
business. Compliance can be tricky at the best of times, but it becomes a lot
easier when you automate the core tasks with a product like Ethyca.
The proposed regulations are broken into nine (9) substantive areas: General
Provisions, Required Disclosures to Consumers, Business Practices for
Handling Consumer Requests, Service Providers, Contractors, and Third
Parties, Verification of Requests, Special Rules Regarding Consumers Under 16
Years of Age, Non-discrimination, Training and Record Keeping, Investigations,
and Enforcement. Notably absent are regulations relating to automated
profiling, cybersecurity audits, and privacy risk assessments—all areas where
guidance was largely expected.
In general, the draft regulations are dense and highly technical, nearly
doubling in length of the current CCPA regulations. And, the regulations may
grow if subsequent drafts incorporate new sections that are not in the first
draft. In any event, if implemented in their proposed form, the CPRA
regulations will require a substantial expansion of privacy compliance
operations for many businesses subject to the law. The details, potential
compliance problems, technical requirements, and unanswered questions are
far too numerous to address in a single blog post. Over the next few weeks, we
intend to analyze the proposed regulations in more detail, focusing on specific
subject matter areas.
Even for a privacy law as expansive as the CPRA, the proposed regulations are
strikingly pro-consumer, capturing an array of concerns and proposals that
privacy advocates have been articulating for several years. The proposed
regulations, for example, have detailed data minimization requirements that
not only require businesses to collect, use, retain, and share personal data in a
manner consistent with the expectations of the average consumer, but would
require businesses to obtain new consumer consent if they process personal
data in a manner that isn’t consistent with these consumer expectations. This
form of consumer right is not explicitly provided by the CPRA, and it could
create significant operational costs for businesses.
Likewise, the proposed regulations explicitly address the use of “dark patterns”
that limit consumer autonomy through subtle steering techniques. The
regulations provide a number several time examples of prohibited dark
patterns, such as consent banners that provide choices such as “Accept All”
and “Ask Me Later” that are not symmetric or equal. Businesses are also
prohibited from providing mechanisms for exercising consumer rights that are
more difficult in degree than the steps required for exercising pro-business
options. Font size for privacy policy links has to be no smaller than that used
by businesses for other links. There are prohibitions against the use of
unnecessary jargon, and examples of disclosures that are confusing to
consumers. These proposals signal the CPPA’s focus on transparency and the
elimination of unnecessary and confusing privacy disclosures. In addition to
the substance of their disclosures, businesses will need to consider the
presentation of consumer choices.
The new right of correction, for example, will require many U.S.-based
companies to build new intake and processing mechanisms. Whether a
business must honor a correction request, the records that it may need to
provide consumers to justify a decision not to honor a correction request, and
the documentation to support business decisions not to correct may require an
adjudication process not dissimilar to FCRA correction mechanisms. For
companies that rely on personal data provided by third parties – as opposed to
their records the correction process is even more complex.
One thorny operation issue involves the processing of browser opt-out signals
that conflict with specific privacy settings chosen by consumers, for example
with loyalty programs where consumers consent to provide certain personal
information. In many cases, these conflicts must be resolved in favor of
maximizing opt-out rights unless the business obtains additional consumer
consent. For many businesses, managing such conflicts may alter the calculus
of choosing a particular manner of enabling opt-out rights. The operational
complexity of enabling opt-out rights may trigger deeper consideration about
what ad tech model businesses may want to utilize once the CPRA becomes
effective.
One of the more notable ways in which the CPRA broadens consumer privacy
rights is through the expansion of obligations on third parties. Whereas the
CCPA required that businesses push certain privacy obligations onto service
providers through required contractual language, the CPRA goes even further
by introducing “contractors” as a new category of service provider and
expanding the provisions that must be included in a contract with a service
provider or contractor to avoid vicarious liability. The proposed regulations do
allow a service provider or contractor to use the personal data of consumers to
improve its applications.
The proposed regulations also modify the safe harbor afforded to businesses
that meet the contractual requirements for service provider and contractor
agreements by noting that businesses that don’t conduct any due diligence or
auditing of their service providers or contractors may not be able to argue that
they were unaware of a contractual violation.
The use of Third Parties Tools May Be Unavoidable for Some Companies
Even before the release of the proposed regulations, California was arguably
the most pro-consumer privacy law in the U.S. The proposed regulations, as
noted, move the law in a decidedly more pro-consumer way. Other states’
laws, particularly Utah and Virginia, are decidedly more business-friendly and
will not be subject to the same kind of detailed rule-making as California. It is
therefore a distinct possibility that when the CPRA regulations are finalized,
they will impose significantly more onerous requirements than other states.
Much will depend on what shape the final CPRA regulations take and how
closely other states hew to the CPRA model. Colorado is also going through a
rule-making process for the Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) and if the state lands
somewhere close to California in its rule-making, the calculus may again shift
toward a singular model for businesses that are subject to multiple state
privacy laws. If other states pass Utah-style privacy laws in 2022 or 2023,
businesses may begin to balkanize their privacy compliance programs. The
potential for this schism may push Congress to pass a federal privacy law.
Needless to say, there is more to come. As businesses fully digest the proposed
CPRA regulations, we are likely to see a significant push by the business
community for the relaxation of the proposed regulations. We will provide
more analysis about particular proposed regulations soon.
The first major change from CCPA to CPRA is the definition of “sensitive data.”
The definition is still admittedly broad, but the category items include
government-issued identifiers, account log-in credentials, financial account
information, precise geolocation, contents of certain types of messages, and
many more.
CPRA would also require a business to inform consumers of the length of time
the business intends to retain each category of personal information and
sensitive personal information or the criteria used to determine that period.
This highly significant new business obligation is somewhat hidden among the
CPRA’s notice obligations, forcing businesses to take a careful look at the
personal data they have stored and delete unnecessary data much more
regularly.
Finally, the CPRA places new contractual and direct obligations on service
providers, contractors, and third parties. This change to aligns with the
separate and distinct obligations the GDPR places on processors.
New obligations are also placed directly on service providers and contractors.
CPRA mandates that they cooperate with and assist businesses in providing
requested personal information in response to verifiable consumer requests as
well as correcting or deleting information or limiting the use of sensitive
personal information in response to such requests, each with some exceptions.
Publicly available information includes not only public records from federal,
state, or local governments, but CPRA takes it a step further.
Many covered businesses will surely appreciate the expanded employee data
moratorium, which the CPRA extends until Jan. 1, 2023. The act makes clear
that personal information collected by a business in the employment context
would not be covered until 2023, providing time for the adoption of another bill
to govern data protections in that context.
More specifically, the CPRA states that it does not apply to personal
information collected from an individual acting as a job applicant, an employee,
owner, director, officer, staff member, or contractor, including benefits
administration and maintenance of emergency contact information.
The CPRA creates the first agency in the United States dedicated solely to
privacy – the California Privacy Protection Agency or CPPA. This agency will
implement and enforce the act as well as have subpoena and audit powers. The
CPPA would also be charged with building public awareness about privacy
risks, providing guidance to businesses and consumers, and “be [appointed]
from among Californians with expertise in the areas of privacy, technology, and
consumer rights.”
The agency could levy administrative fines of up to $2,500 per violation of the
act or up to $7,500 per intentional violation or violation involving minors. It
would also absorb the rulemaking authority granted under the act from the
Attorney General’s Office. The CPPA would receive at least $10 million in
annual funding beginning in 2021–22 with $5 million in the first year.
CPRA is not going to be the last privacy law of its kind in the United States. It
is important now, more than ever, for organizations to develop a compliant
privacy program that can adapt to the current privacy laws as well as future
legislation.
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