Digital Rights Defenders Sound Alarm Over Big Tech's Efforts to 'Erode' California's Landmark Privacy Law

Digital rights advocacy groups are sounding the alarm about legislation in California backed by Big Tech that critics warn would water down a landmark data privacy law the state adopted last year.

“Tech companies are saying that they support privacy yet still deploy their money and pressure to silence real privacy bills.”
—EFF

“Tech companies are saying that they support privacy yet still deploy their money and pressure to silence real privacy bills,” the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a nonprofit civil liberties group, said in a statement. “We will not let them kill strong privacy bills in the dark.”

Last June, state legislators passed and then-Gov. Jerry Brown, a Democrat, signed the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). As Common Dreams reported at the time, some observers charged that CCPA—which replaced a bolder ballot initiative—didn’t go far enough.

Others, however, argued that with the law, “California could be the bellwether for the privacy movement” and set a new national standard.

Lawmakers, voters, consumer advocates, experts, and business interests all seem to agree that some amendments are needed before the law takes effect on Jan. 1, 2020. However, warnings are mounting that—in the words of Los Angeles Times columnist Michael Hiltzik—”big business is trying to gut California’s landmark privacy law.”

Detailing how “business has begun to take steps to roll back parts of the law,” Hiltzik wrote for the Times Friday:

Hiltzik’s column came just ahead of the California Assembly Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee’s hearing Tuesday to consider a series of bills related to CCPA.

Late Monday, it was revealed that the committee would not hear A.B. 1760, a bill proposed by Democratic Assemblywoman Buffy Wicks that was backed by EFF, other privacy advocates, and, according to ACLU polling, a huge majority of the public.

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