California’s new data privacy law will change the internet

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After years of legal wrangling, the U.S. finally has a major data privacy law. But it will only apply to California residents, and is far from the kind of protections offered by the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR.

The law, called the California Consumer Protection Act, or CCPA, went into effect at the stroke of midnight on Jan. 1, and provides a host of new legal obligations for companies that collect, sell, and share consumers’ data, as well as protections for those consumers.

But some privacy advocates say the law doesn’t go far enough in its protections, including one of the people who helped draft the original proposal for California’s new privacy initiative.

CCPA will impact more than just Big Tech

According to the bill, any company that collects, shares or sells the information of more than 50,000 people and generated revenue of more than $25 million in the preceding year, has to comply with the new law.

What’s more, companies impacted by the rules don’t have to be based in California; they simply have to do business in the state.

To be clear, the CCPA doesn’t specifically target the tech industry. While big tech companies ranging from Google to Facebook and Twitter are best known for their use of consumer data and surfing habits to sell ads, CCPA will impact far more than Silicon Valley’s biggest names.

The legislation will also apply to companies that collect consumer information via things like loyalty cards: think Walmart and Home Depot.

“The CCPA always started as a, basically, a private [Freedom of Information Act] request, so that you could go to a business and actually find out, not in legalese, but in plain English, what they are collecting about you,” explained Mary Stone Ross, a cybersecurity expert who helped craft the public initiative that would eventually become CCPA.

What you get from CCPA

If you live in California, CCPA gives you a number of privacy protections. The most obvious is the ability to opt out of having your data collected by companies. You’ll see a pop-up window or some other note asking if you’d like to stop allowing companies to sell your data to third parties.

FILE - This July 16, 2013 file photo shows a sign at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. Facebook has more than doubled its New Mexico footprint with the purchase of more than 400 acres near its new data center. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, File)
Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif. (AP Photo/Ben Margot, File)

“The CCPA adds new rights for consumers to access their personal information that’s held by companies, and it gives them a right to opt out of the sale of that information,” explained Jake Snow, technology and civil liberties attorney at the ACLU of Northern California.

“And so consumers on Jan. 1 will have the ability to exercise those rights with respect to the businesses that hold their personal information, and it will be interesting to see whether companies really give consumers the transparency and control rights that they are guaranteed by the CCPA.”