Greetings from Portsmouth, New Hampshire!

The IAPP is welcoming U.S. Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan to the keynote stage at the Global Privacy Summit 2022 in Washington, D.C., next month. It's an exciting addition to a stacked program, but her appearance is arguably the must-see portion of the conference for those zeroed in on the U.S. privacy landscape.

There is no telling what Khan has in store for her remarks, but they will be some of the first privacy-focused comments we've heard from the chair, who is inching closer to the one-year anniversary of her appointment. Beyond a preliminary motion to begin a privacy rulemaking that's likely to take years to complete, we've only heard bits and pieces of Khan's privacy visions.

Much of the relative status quo and silence we've witnessed to may have more to do with limitations than unwillingness to act. There's a lot working against the FTC, including limited resources and an ongoing commissioner vacancy that's creating a party-line stalemate on pending work that may require a majority vote. Both issues hampering Khan and the commission are at the mercy of U.S. Congress.

First, Congress failed to pass the Build Back Better Act. At one point that proposal would've given the FTC $1 billion in new funding for a privacy division before being trimmed to $500 million. Either figure could've been transformative, but lawmakers haven't indicated whether limited discussions to revive parts of the Build Back Better proposal would include the funding provision.

While the FTC can ultimately make do without additional funding, it can't be wholly effective without a full commissioner roster. Commissioner nominee Alvaro Bedoya is in the midst of a second tour through the Senate confirmation process after his initial nomination expired at the end of the 2021 calendar year. Recent reports suggest Bedoya's nomination could soon make it to a full Senate vote, but a return of prior political cards that have been played to hold up the process are always possible to return.

It all amounts to some unexpected hurdles in what was expected to be a transformative period for the Khan-led commission. Any reassurances Khan may try to offer on the intended direction of the FTC will likely be met with a mix of concurrence and rebuttal from FTC Commissioner Noah Phillips, who is also slated to speak during a breakout session at GPS.

It's going to make for some interesting privacy theatre, which IAPP Staff Writer Jennifer Bryant and I will hopefully bring to life in our GPS coverage for those of you unable to attend the conference.

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The European Parliament and Council reached a provisional agreement on the Digital Markets Act, regulation targeting online advertising, messaging services and other practices of large technology platforms.

“The agreement ushers in a new era of tech regulation worldwide. The Digital Markets Act puts an end to the ever-increasing dominance of Big Tech companies,� Parliament’s Internal Market and Consumer Protection Committee Rapporteur Andreas Schwab said in a news release. “From now on, they must show that they also allow for fair competition on the internet. The new rules will help enforce that basic principle. Europe is thus ensuring more competition, more innovation and more choice for users.�

The Digital Markets Act introduces do's and don’ts for “core platform services,� including social networks and search engines, defined as “gatekeepers� — companies with a market value of more than 75 billion euros or an annual turnover of 7.5 billion. Under the legislation, personal data for targeted advertising will only be allowed with a gatekeepers’ explicit consent and gatekeepers will be required to give users choice over their browser, virtual assistants or search engines.

The regulation also requires that large messaging services including WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger will have to “open up and interoperate with smaller messaging platforms, if they so request,� according to Parliament’s press release.

The DMA was tabled 18 months ago alongside the Digital Services Act, which includes provisions on “dark patterns� and children’s privacy protections, European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager said during a press conference. While work on the DSA continues, DMA agreement followed “a lot of discussions in the trilogue about the scope of obligations,� Vestager said, as well as “heated debates� and “real political engagement� throughout negotiations. She added the ban on data collection for purposes of targeted advertising without “effective consent� was added through that process.

“What we have learned over these years is we can correct in specific cases, we can punish illegal behavior, but when things become systemic then we need regulation as well, because if there is a systemic misbehavior, if there are entrenched positions, then we need regulation to come in,� Vestager said. “For companies that play a role as gatekeepers now the Digital Markets Act will set the rules of the game.�

A finalized version of the DMA will face an upcoming final vote before Parliament and would take effect “sometime in October,� Vestager said. Gatekeepers that do not comply could face fines of up to 10% of total worldwide turnover, with the fine increasing to 20% for repeat violations.

“I think we have created something with an original architecture that’s effective, with more challenging obligations,� Vestager said. “We still have the DSA ahead of us and it has been complicated but successful to find the division of work between the two when it comes to targeted advertising and minors, but there is also democracy in this proposal because a fair marketplace is part of every democracy.�

The regulation has faced concerns over unfairly targeting American companies, including from tech industry groups and companies. An Apple spokesperson told Politico the company is concerned some provisions “will create unnecessary privacy and security vulnerabilities for our users while others will prohibit us from charging for intellectual property in which we invest a great deal.�

Meanwhile, Columbia Law School Henry L. Moses Professor of Law and International Organization Anu Bradford told The New York Times the DMA is gaining global interest.

“Everyone is watching the DMA, be it the leading tech companies, their rivals or foreign governments,� Bradford said. “It is possible that even the U.S. Congress will now conclude that they are done watching from the sidelines when the EU regulates U.S. tech companies and will move from talking about legislative reform to actually legislating.�

Photo by Christian Wiediger on Unsplash

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InfoSecurity Magazine reports a woman in New Orleans, Louisiana, was sentenced to 15 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $205,863 in restitution in connection to attempted fraud using patient data. Ashley Green bought stolen data, including dates of birth, Social Security numbers, bank account numbers and addresses, for $1,000. The information was used to set up fake bank accounts under patients' names and Green withdrew more than $200,000 from separate accounts belonging to patients.
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The Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission to Study Government Use of Facial Recognition Technology in the Commonwealth released its final report and recommendations on law enforcement's use of facial recognition technology, the Boston Herald reports. The report outlines 13 suggestions to balance privacy and the ongoing use of the technology, including purpose limitation, limits on which agencies can use the technology, and a proposed ban on emotion analysis technology.
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U.S. President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced Friday that the U.S. and EU have reached a new trans-Atlantic data flow agreement. Importantly, the agreement is in principle only at this point, and details about the deal are not yet known. 

In a press conference from Brussels, Biden said, "Today we have agreed to unprecedented protections for data privacy and security for our citizens. This new arrangement will enhance the Privacy Shield framework, promote growth and innovation in Europe and in the United States and help companies, both small and large, compete in the digital economy." He added, "This framework underscores our shared commitment to privacy, data protection, and the rule of law. And it’s going to allow the European Commission to once again authorize trans-Atlantic data flows that facilitate $7.3 trillion in economic relationships with the EU." 

Von der Leyen said both sides "found an agreement in principle for a new framework for trans-Atlantic data flows. This will enable predictable and trustworthy data flows between the EU and US, safeguarding privacy and civil liberties. And I really want to thank  Commissioner (Didier) Reynders and Secretary (Gina) Raimondo for their tireless efforts over the past month to finish a balanced and effective solution."

The news comes as Biden visits Europe amid a flurry of activity aimed at strengthening ties with the EU in response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, including the creation of an energy task force to help the EU avoid using Russian oil. 

Though the announcement has been rumored in recent days and weeks, some of the details underpinning the arrangement were highlighted in this White House release. It's those details that will ultimately determine the longevity of a new framework, which has been successfully challenged in court twice by Max Schrems, honorary chairman of EU-based NGO NOYB. 

The recent history of EU-U.S. data flows is a rocky one to say the least. In 2015, the Court of Justice of the EU invalidated the Safe Harbor framework. After intense negotiations between the Obama administration and the European Commission, both sides created Safe Harbor's replacement: Privacy Shield. However, in the summer of 2020, the CJEU invalidated the trans-Atlantic agreement, creating an uncertainty for thousands of companies that regularly exchange data across the Atlantic. 

Two main obstacles that have been challenging for an agreement in the wake of the July 2020 CJEU decision are building a workable redress mechanism for EU citizens in the U.S. and whether the U.S. can meet the CJEU's standards for necessity and proportionality. 

IAPP Chief Knowledge Officer Caitlin Fennessy, CIPP/US, who was former Privacy Shield director for the U.S. Department of Commerce, said, "While we have yet to see the details, it seems both sides were working toward a lasting solution. If they wanted a temporary fix, they could have wrapped up talks months ago. Time will tell whether they got there." 

Alton & Bird Senior Counsel Peter Swire, CIPP/US, who co-authored an article on a potential workable redress mechanism, said, "I don’t see redress as an issue for compromise, where one side or the other wins. Instead, redress is like a Rubik’s cube — you only get a lasting solution if you meet all the requirements of EU and U.S. law, within all the limits set by each side’s constitutions." 

Of course, if a new agreement is ultimately finalized, all eyes will be on legal challenges in the EU, particularly from NOYB and Schrems.

In a press release, Schrems said, "We already had a purely political deal in 2015 that had no legal basis. From what you hear we could play the same game a third time now." He added, "The final text will need more time, once this arrives we will analyze it in depth, together with our US legal experts. If it is not in line with EU law, we or another group will likely challenge it. In the end, the (CJEU) will decide a third time. We expect this to be back at the Court within months from a final decision." 

To add on to potential legal issues, last week, the American Civil Liberties' Union's Patrick Toomey and Ashley Gorski wrote an opinion piece for The Hill arguing that a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision, FBI v. Fazaga, "will make it significantly harder for people to pursue surveillance cases, and for U.S. and European Union negotiators to secure a lasting agreement for transatlantic transfers of private data." 

Though uncertainty remains, and it appears it could be some time before we see final text, many in the privacy profession are expressing optimism.

Hogan Lovells Partner Eduardo Ustaran, CIPP/E, said, "We should acknowledge the will of both parties to find a formula that meets the test created by the (CJEU). We should also have confidence in the work undertaken and certainly not dismiss it before the agreed mechanism to provide limitations to the powers of access to data and effective remedies to individuals is even revealed. This is good news for privacy professionals everywhere, not only because it provides a route to more flexible EU-U.S. data flows, but because it shows that it is possible to find a solution to the requirement to apply European data protection standards wherever that data goes." 

Considering the necessity and proportionality portion of the CJEU standard, Fennessy said, "Overcoming the CJEU’s necessity and proportionality critiques is a big hurdle. Necessity and proportionality were long perceived as EU-centric terms tied to long histories of CJEU and European Court of Human Rights jurisprudence. If the US Government can effectively address necessity and proportionality concerns, that will place the US and EU on the same side of the table in future more multilateral negotiations on privacy and surveillance." 

BBB National Programs Senior Vice President, Privacy Initiatives Dona Fraser issued an emailed statement on Friday's announcement, saying the organization, which operates the BBB EU Privacy Shield independent recourse mechanism, "applauds the work of negotiators." 

Fraser continued: "We are well-positioned and ready to ensure that businesses that have opted to remain self-certified to Privacy Shield ... will experience a smooth transition to an enhanced Privacy Shield. In addition, we welcome those businesses who have chosen to pause their Privacy Shield self-certification back into the BBB National Programs’ BBB EU Privacy Shield program." 

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A white paper for nonprofit Common Sense investigated the child privacy risks for children who log into the metaverse with virtual reality technology. According to the white paper, the primary risks are physiological effects, such as nausea, eye strain and other forms of "cybersickness,� privacy risks associated with VR systems that recorded eye and facial movements, and false information and manipulation. The paper said other psychological risks and the potential for sexual abuse need to be further investigated.
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On March 24, Gov. Spencer Cox, R-Utah, signed the Utah Consumer Privacy Act into law, making Utah the fourth state to enact comprehensive consumer privacy legislation. The law goes into effect Dec. 31, 2023.  

The UCPA is both similar to and different from the consumer privacy laws of California, Virginia and Colorado. Namely, it draws heavily from the Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act and several of its VCDPA-like components are also contained in the Colorado Privacy Act. At first glance, certain aspects of the law bear resemblance to the California Consumer Privacy Act. In practice, however, the substance of the UCPA takes a lighter, more business-friendly approach to consumer privacy than all three of its predecessors.

Scope

Closely resembling the scope of the VCDPA, the UCPA “applies to any controller or processor who:

  • conducts business in the state or produces a product or service that is targeted to consumers who are residents of the state;
  • has annual revenue of $25,000,000 or more; and
  • satisfies one or more of the following thresholds:
    • during a calendar year, controls or processes personal data of 100,000 or more consumers; or
    • derives over 50% of the entity’s gross revenue from the sale of personal data and controls or processes personal data of 25,000 or more consumers.â€�

But unlike the VCDPA, which lacks an annual revenue threshold, only entities making $25 million or more in annual revenue that also satisfy at least one of the additional thresholds listed above will be subject to the UCPA. By including multiple threshold requirements, the scope of the UCPA is narrower compared to other state privacy laws on the books. The annual revenue threshold requirement means smaller entities, even if they satisfy the other thresholds, will not be subject to the UCPA. Likewise, larger entities that meet the annual revenue threshold will not fall under the law unless they also meet an additional threshold.      

Some key definitions also factor into determining the scope of the law. Under the UCPA, a “consumer� is defined as “an individual who is a resident of the state acting in an individual or household context.� However, like the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA explicitly excludes individuals “acting in an employment or commercial context.� Therefore, entities need not include the personal data of such individuals when considering whether they fall within the law’s scope.  

The UCPA contains a VCDPA-like definition of “sale,� which is defined as “the exchange of personal data for monetary consideration by a controller to a third party.� Instead of drawing from the CCPA and CPA — where personal data exchanged for “monetary or other valuable consideration� constitutes a sale — an exchange of personal data under the UCPA will qualify as a sale only if the consideration is monetary. The law explicitly excludes certain types of disclosures from the definition of sale, most of which are almost identical to the exclusions contained in the VCDPA and CPA. For example, disclosures to processors and a controller’s affiliate are excluded, as are disclosures to a third party to provide a product or service requested by the consumer. However, the UCPA’s definition of sale also explicitly excludes “a controller’s disclosure of personal data to a third party if the purpose is consistent with a consumer’s reasonable expectations.�   

Like the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA explicitly excludes deidentified data and publicly available information from its definition of “personal data.� But the UCPA goes further by also excluding “aggregated data,� which is defined as “information that relates to a group or category of consumers: (a) from which individual consumer identities have been removed; and (b) that is not linked or reasonably linkable to any consumer.�

The key takeaway is that the UCPA’s scope is narrower than the CCPA, VCDPA and CPA: It applies to a smaller set of entities and more categories of data fall outside the law’s reach.

Exemptions

In addition to its relatively narrow scope, the UCPA also contains broad exemptions. As with the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA includes both entity- and data-level exemptions.

Controllers and processors that fall under an entity-level exemption need not comply with the UCPA, even if the personal data would otherwise fall within the scope of the law. Notably, the UCPA exempts institutions of higher education and nonprofits, as well as covered entities and business associates pursuant to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act and financial institutions governed by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. Government entities and contractors are also exempt from the law, as are tribes and air carriers.

As for the data-level exemptions, the UCPA does not apply to information subject to HIPAA, GLBA, the Fair Credit Reporting Act, the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, and the Farm Credit Act. Data processed or maintained in the course of employment, including job applicant data, is also exempt.  

Consumer rights

Consumers are provided four main rights under the UCPA.

Right to access. Consumers have “the right to:

  • confirm whether a controller is processing the consumer’s personal data; and
  • access the consumer’s personal data.â€�

Right to delete. Consumers have “the right to delete the consumer’s personal data that the consumer provided to the controller.� Importantly, the UCPA does not afford consumers the right to delete all personal data that a controller has about them. Under the UCPA, a consumer only has the right to delete the personal data they provided to the controller.

Right to data portability. Consumers have “the right to obtain a copy of the consumer’s personal data, that the consumer previously provided to the controller, in a format that:

  • to the extent technically feasible, is portable;
  • to the extent practicable, is readily usable; and
  • allows the consumer to transmit the data to another controller without impediment, where the processing is carried out by automated means.â€�

Right to opt out of certain processing. Consumers have “the right to opt out of the processing of the consumer’s personal data for the purposes of targeted advertising; or the sale of personal data.�

Unlike the VCDPA and CPA, the right to opt out of profiling is absent from the UCPA. And unlike the CPA, controllers subject to the UCPA are not required to recognize universal opt-out signals as a method for consumers to exercise their opt-out rights.

Notably absent from the UCPA is the right to correct. Unlike its counterparts in California, Virginia and Colorado, the law does not grant Utah consumers the right to correct inaccuracies in their personal data.

To exercise any of the above rights, the UCPA, like the VCDPA and CPA, states that controllers are to specify the means for consumers to submit a request. Unlike the VCDPA and CPA, however, the law has no additional requirements for controllers to consider when prescribing these means, such as reliability or taking into account the ways in which consumers normally interact with the controller.

Obligations

Transparency. Like most consumer privacy laws, the UCPA requires a controller to provide consumers with a “reasonably accessible and clear privacy notice.� Privacy notices must include:

  • The categories of personal data processed by the controller.
  • The purposes for processing the data.
  • How consumers may exercise their rights.
  • The categories of personal data the controller shares with third parties, if any.
  • The categories of third parties, if any, with whom the controller shares personal data.

If personal data is sold to a third party or used for targeted advertising, the controller must “clearly and conspicuously disclose� the means for consumers to exercise their opt-out rights.

Consent to process children’s personal data. Controllers processing the personal data of consumers known to be under the age of 13 are required to obtain verifiable parental consent and process such data in accordance with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act.

Under the UCPA, processing children’s data is the only activity that requires affirmative consent. Unlike the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA does not require consent to process a consumer’s sensitive data. The law merely requires controllers to provide consumers “clear notice and an opportunity to opt out� before processing their sensitive data.    

Security. As with the CCPA, VCDPA and CPA, controllers must “establish, implement, and maintain reasonable administrative, technical, and physical data security practices designed to protect the confidentiality and integrity of personal data.�

Nondiscrimination. Controllers are prohibited from “discriminat(ing) against a consumer for exercising a right by:

  • denying a good or service to the consumer;
  • charging the consumer a different price or rate for a good or service; or
  • providing the consumer a different level of quality of a good or service.â€�

Controllers may, however, offer “a different price, rate, level, quality, or selection of a good or service to a consumer� if the consumer opted out of targeted advertising or if the offer relates to the consumer’s voluntary participation in a bona fide loyalty program.

Responding to consumer requests. Unless an exception applies, controllers are obligated to respond to a consumer’s request within 45 days. When reasonably necessary, a controller may extend the response period by an additional 45 days, provided they “inform the consumer of the extension, including the length of the extension (and reasons for it),� within the initial 45-day response period. Controllers must also notify consumers of any action — or inaction — taken regarding a request before the response period expires.

The UCPA prohibits controllers from charging a fee for responding to a request. A controller may, however, charge a reasonable fee if:

  • The request is a consumer’s “second or subsequent request during the same 12-month period.â€�
  • The request is “excessive, repetitive, technically infeasible, or manifestly unfounded.â€�
  • The controller “reasonably believes the primary purpose in submitting the request was something other than exercising a right.â€�
  • The request “harasses, disrupts, or imposes undue burden on the resources of the controller’s business.â€�

Although the VCDPA and CPA require controllers provide an appeal process for consumers whose requests have been denied, this obligation is not included in the UCPA.  

Data processing contracts. As is the case under the VCDPA and CPA, processing activities performed by a processor on behalf of a controller must be governed by contract. While the enumerated terms that must be included in a data processing contract are similar to those found in the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA imposes fewer requirements. For instance, a data processing contract under the UCPA need not include a provision requiring a processor to comply with reasonable audits by a controller.

Unlike the VCDPA and CPA, the UCPA does not require controllers to conduct data protection assessments to evaluate the risks associated with data processing activities.

Enforcement

The UCPA does not provide for a private right of action, nor does it allow a consumer to use a violation of the law to support a claim under other Utah laws.

As with the VCDPA, the attorney general has exclusive enforcement authority. The enforcement process itself, however, takes a novel, multi-layered approach. The UCPA tasks the Division of Consumer Protection with “administer(ing) a system to receive consumer complaints� and empowers the division to investigate whether an alleged violation has merit. Referral to the attorney general is required if the director of the division has “reasonable cause to believe that substantial evidence (of a violation) exists.� If the attorney general decides to take action on a referred matter, the office must first provide written notice to the controller or processor. Controllers and processors then have 30 days to cure the violation and provide the attorney general with an “express written statement that the violation has been cured and no further violation of the cured violation will occur.� The attorney general may initiate an enforcement action and impose penalties — actual damages and fines up to $7,500 per violation — if a controller or processor fails to cure the violation or continues to violate the law after providing a written statement otherwise.       

Conclusion

Although the UCPA extends VCDPA-like rights and obligations specifically for Utah consumers and businesses, the law is not likely to add special considerations to an entity’s existing privacy compliance obligations. Facially, the law is narrower and more lenient than its counterparts in California, Virginia and Colorado. Understanding the UCPA as passed, however, is only the beginning. As indicated by its sponsor, Sen. Kirk Cullimore, R-Utah, the UCPA’s current form is intended as a starting point. Depending on how the law works in practice, future amendments are a possibility, especially since the UCPA requires the Utah attorney general and the Division of Consumer Protection to submit a report evaluating its effectiveness by July 1, 2025. The IAPP will continue to monitor any developments and update you accordingly.   

Photo by Brent Pace on Unsplash

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Utah became the fourth U.S. state to pass comprehensive privacy legislation when Gov. Spencer Cox, R-Utah, signed the Utah Consumer Privacy Act March 24. IAPP Westin Research Fellow Taylor Kay Lively, CIPP/US, writes the UCPA primarily draws from the Virginia Consumer Protection Act, but overall, takes a more “business-friendly approach to consumer privacy� compared to California, Colorado and Virginia. The law will apply to data controllers or processors who either conduct business in Utah or market products to state residents, and grosses more than $25 million in annual revenue.
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Dispatch from DC: Privacy Shield, FTC and more

IAPP Managing Director, Washington, D.C., Cobun Zweifel-Keegan, CIPP/US, CIPM, gives a rundown of his latest observations regarding privacy happenings around Capitol Hill. News this week includes the latest on the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield, a reminder from the U.S. Federal Trade Commission that "we can't have data security without privacy" and the National Institute of Standards and Technology announced updates to its work on artificial intelligence.
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A view from Brussels: UK DPI, IDTA and more

IAPP Managing Director, Europe, Isabelle Roccia offers a look at the IAPP Data Protection Intensive: UK 2022, the International Data Transfer Agreements entered into force and the latest on the Digital Markets Act.
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The European Parliament and Council reached a provisional agreement on the Digital Markets Act, regulation targeting online advertising, messaging services and other practices of large technology platforms. Under the legislation, which defines certain “core platform services� as gatekeepers,� personal data for targeted advertising will only be allowed with a gatekeepers’ explicit consent. “I think we have created something with an original architecture that’s effective, with more challenging obligations,� European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager said. IAPP Staff Writer Jennifer Bryant has the details.
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