Current:Home > MyImagine making shadowy data brokers erase your personal info. Californians may soon live the dream -TradeSphere
Imagine making shadowy data brokers erase your personal info. Californians may soon live the dream
View
Date:2025-04-12 02:53:36
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — You may not know it, but thousands of often shadowy companies routinely traffic in personal data you probably never agreed to share — everything from your real-time location information to private financial details. Even if you could identify these data brokers, there isn’t much you can do about their activities, even in California, which has some of the strongest digital privacy laws in the U.S.
That’s on the verge of changing. Both houses of the California state legislature have passed the Delete Act, which would establish a “one stop shop” where individuals could order hundreds of data brokers registered in the state to delete their personal data — and to cease acquiring and selling it in the future — with a single request.
The Delete Act isn’t law yet; it still needs to pass a second vote in the state Senate, after which its fate is up to Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat who hasn’t said whether he’ll sign it. But if enacted, its impact could extend well beyond state lines given California’s history of setting trends of this sort.
Here’s what you need to know.
WHAT THE BILL DOES
While California law already gives individuals the right to request data deletion, doing so currently require making separate requests to hundreds of data brokers registered in the state, many with their own unique requirements for drafting and handling such requests. Even then, nothing stops these companies from simply reacquiring that data once they delete it.
The Delete Act would require the state’s new privacy office, the California Privacy Protection Agency, to set up a website where consumers can verify their identity and then make a single request to delete their personal data held by data brokers and to opt out of future tracking. Proponents call it a “do not track” signal similar to the “do not call” list for telemarketers maintained by the Federal Trade Commission.
California already regulates data brokers, but the Delete Act would strengthen those provisions by requiring the companies to disclose more information about the data they collect on consumers and beefing up the state’s enforcement mechanisms.
MEET THE DATA BROKERS
The Electronic Privacy Information Center, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit focused on bolstering the right to privacy, defines data brokers as companies that collect and categorize personal information, usually to build profiles on millions of Americans that the companies can then rent, sell or use to provide services. The data they collect, per EPIC, can include: “names, addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, gender, age, marital status, children, education, profession, income, political preferences, and cars and real estate owned.”
That’s not to mention “information on an individual’s purchases, where they shop, and how they pay for their purchases,” plus “health information, the sites we visit online, and the advertisements we click on. And thanks to the proliferation of smartphones and wearables, data brokers collect and sell real-time location data.”
Privacy advocates have warned for years that location and seemingly non-specific personal data — often collected by advertisers and amassed and sold by brokers — can be used to identify individuals. They also charge that the data often isn’t well secured and that the brokers aren’t covered by laws that require the clear consent of the person being tracked. They’ve argued for both legal and technical protections so that consumers can push back.
ARE DATA BROKERS THAT BAD?
Data brokers say they get a bad rap for serving a vital need. The president of the Consumer Data Industry Association, which describes itself as “the voice of the consumer reporting industry,” called the Delete Act “severely flawed” and warned in a Wednesday release that it could lead to unintended consequences by undermining consumer fraud protections, hurting the competitiveness of small businesses and entrenching big platforms such as Facebook and Google that collect vast amounts of consumer data but don’t sell it.
That CDIA official, Dan Smith, also argued that the heart of the bill — the one-stop data deletion program — could potentially allow malicious outsiders to impersonate consumers and delete their data without permission, although he didn’t explain what a third party might have to gain by deleting a consumer’s data without permission. (The Delete Act specifically exempts credit reporting agencies such as Experian, Equifax and TransUnion, whose reports are often required for big-ticket consumer purchases such as homes or cars.)
The CDIA did not immediately reply to a request for clarification.
WHAT ABUSE OF DATA BROKER INFORMATION LOOKS LIKE
In other respects, though, the information collected by these companies can be startlingly easy to abuse. The general lack of U.S. restrictions on what brokers can do with the vast amount of data they collect means there’s aren’t many legal protections to prevent outsiders from spying on politicians, celebrities and just about anyone that’s a target of idle curiosity — or malice.
Back in mid-2021, for instance, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops announced the resignation of its top administrative official, Monsignor Jeffrey Burrill, ahead of a report by the Catholic news outlet The Pillar that probed his private romantic life. The Pillar said it obtained “commercially available” location data from a vendor it didn’t name that it “correlated” to Burrill’s phone to determine that he had visited gay bars and private residences while using Grindr, a dating app popular with gay people.
The Pillar alleged “serial sexual misconduct” by Burrill, as homosexual activity is considered sinful under Catholic doctrine and priests are expected to remain celibate. Following an extended leave, Burrill has since resumed his ministry in the small town of West Salem, Wisconsin, according to the Catholic News Service.
veryGood! (56)
Related
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- College football coaching carousel: A look at who has been hired and fired this offseason
- Google will start deleting ‘inactive’ accounts in December. Here’s what you need to know
- Georgia Senate Republicans propose map with 2 new Black-majority districts
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Jennifer Lawrence Reacts to Plastic Surgery Speculation
- Full transcript of Face the Nation, Nov. 26, 2023
- No-call for potential horse-collar tackle on Josh Allen plays key role in Bills' loss to Eagles
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Failed wheel bearing caused Kentucky train derailment, CSX says
Ranking
- 'Most Whopper
- Politics and the pulpit: How white evangelicals' support of Trump is creating schisms in the church
- 32 things we learned in NFL Week 12: Playoff chase shaping up to be wild
- Paul Lynch, Irish author of 'Prophet Song,' awarded over $60K with 2023 Booker Prize
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Diplomas for sale: $465, no classes required. Inside one of Louisiana’s unapproved schools
- Natalie Portman on children working in entertainment: 'I don't believe that kids should work'
- NFL Week 12 winners, losers: Steelers find a spark after firing Matt Canada
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Finding a place at the Met, this opera sings in a language of its own
2024 NFL draft first-round order: New England Patriots in contention for top pick
Elon Musk visits Israel to meet top leaders as accusations of antisemitism on X grow
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Caretaker charged in death of her partner and grandmother in Maine
Diplomas for sale: $465, no classes required. Inside one of Louisiana’s unapproved schools
Carolina Panthers fire coach Frank Reich after just 11 games
Like
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Qatar is the go-to mediator in the Mideast war. Its unprecedented Tel Aviv trip saved a shaky truce
- A growing series of alarms blaring in federal courtrooms, less than a year before 2024 presidential election