<
div class=”field field–name-body field–type-text-with-summary field–label-hidden”>
<
div class=”field__items”>
<
div class=”field__item even”>
State lawmakers are increasingly shaping the conversation on technology and innovation policy in the United States. As Congress continues to deliberate key issues such as data privacy, police use of data, and artificial intelligence, lawmakers are rapidly advancing their own ideas into state law. That’s why EFF fights for internet rights not only in Congress, but also in statehouses across the country.
This year, some of that work has been to defend good laws we’ve passed before. In California, EFF worked to oppose and defeat S.B. 1076, by State Senator Scott Wilk, which would have undermined the California Delete Act (S.B. 362). Enacted last year, the Delete Act provides consumers with an easy “one-click” button to ask data brokers registered in California to remove their personal information. S.B. 1076 would have opened loopholes for data brokers to duck compliance with this common-sense, consumer-friendly tool. We were glad to stop it before it got very far.
Also in California, EFF worked with dozens of organizations led by ACLU California Action to defeat A.B. 1814, a facial recognition bill authored by Assemblymember Phil Ting. The bill would have made it easy for policy to evade accountability and we are glad to see the California legislature reject this dangerous bill. For the full rundown of our highlights and lowlights in California, you can check out our recap of this year’s session.
EFF also supported efforts from the ACLU of Massachusetts to pass the Location Shield Act, which, as introduced, would have required companies to get consent before collecting or processing location data and largely banned the sale of location data. While the bill did not become law this year, we look forward to continuing the fight to push it across the finish line in 2025.
As deadlock continues in Washi
[…]
Content was cut in order to protect the source.Please visit the source for the rest of the article.