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Government The Internet Privacy United States

California's Politicians Rush To Gut Internet Privacy Law With Pro-Tech Giant Amendments (theregister.co.uk) 59

The right for Californians to control the private data that tech companies hold on them may be undermined today at a critical committee hearing in Sacramento. The Register reports: The Privacy And Consumer Protection Committee will hold a special hearing on Tuesday afternoon to discuss and vote on nine proposed amendments to the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) -- which was passed last year in the U.S. state but has yet to come into force. Right now, the legislation is undergoing tweaks at the committee stage. Privacy advocates are warning that most of the proposals before the privacy committee are influenced by the very industry that the law was supposed to constrain: big tech companies like Google, Facebook, and Amazon.

In most cases, the amendments seek to add carefully worded exemptions to the law that would benefit business at the cost of consumer rights. But most upsetting to privacy folk is the withdrawal of an amendment by Assembly member Buffy Wicks (D-15th District) that incorporated changes that would enhance consumer data privacy rights. Wicks' proposal would have given consumers more of a say of what is done with their personal data and more power to sue companies that break the rules. But the Assembly member pulled the measure the day before the hearing because it was not going to get the necessary votes. If a measure is voted down it cannot be reintroduced in that legislative session.

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California's Politicians Rush To Gut Internet Privacy Law With Pro-Tech Giant Amendments

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  • ... the largest political party in the US.

  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @07:58PM (#58480218)

    This does afford people with more limited protection but it's still better than no protection at all. In time (hopefully) these loopholes can be closed once they are shown to make the law ineffective.

    We need to get money out of politics if we really want to avoid BS like this in the future.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @08:06PM (#58480252)
    I would have required politicians to, whenever they were on TV, to wear a jacket indicating who are their top donors, private donations exempted. It failed to make the ballot, but I loved signing for it outside my grocery store.

    Not so much we need to get money out of politics as we need to show where the money is coming from.
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 23, 2019 @08:36PM (#58480390)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Theoretically, Roe v. Wade [wikipedia.org] found a right to privacy in the Due Process clause of the 14th Amendment. Somehow though it only covers abortion - it doesn't cover any other privacy. The Federal Government is great at determining the limits of your God-given rights, and deciding that an unstated right can exist in some cases (abortion), but that an expressly stated right doesn't exist in other cases (2nd Amendment).
    • the government can take away. That's why the Founders and the Constitution recognized that certain rights

      You can use whatever high sounding language you like. The government can take away anything it likes, just ask the citizens of a country with a constitution that the government has thoroughly ignored.

      The mere existence of a constitution does nothing.

  • I listened to this hearing... and it was a giveaway to tech companies....

    I was pretty disappointed.

    • Follow the money.

      I'd suspect some "donations" will be made.

      • Yep...

        It was very obvious that there were lots of meetings between staff and lobbyists, because so many of them mentioned (fawned) over their working closely with staff in a productive manner, and the ACLU, EFF and even Consumer Reports representatives were just present for the hearing, when all the deals were already done.... By that time it almost seemed as if they had the motions already formulated and they were just hearing the opponents go on, and then take the committee vote. And it was bipartisan,

      • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

        Don't be simple. It isn't always about donations. They are way to transparent. Sometimes it is the promise of a lucrative job after the term is up. After all, the politicians are "experts" on user data after this vote, right? Sometime it is about getting a close family member a good business deal, like Joe Biden's deals with the Ukranians.

        All the talk about getting money out of politics. Pffft! That won't do anything until you get politicians out of politics. What needs to happen is the elimination

  • Where all thought and deed must be monitored and approved by, or sanctioned, if it goes against the diktat of the Democratic Party.

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