The term "personal information" is defined slightly differently across privacy laws, but it always refers to information that can be used to identify an individual such as a name, home address, phone number, and even an IP address. Your business probably collects, stores, and shares personal i...
Bear in mind that service providersmust be engaged under a contractthat prohibits the service provider fromretaining, using, or disclosing the personal informationfor any purpose other than the purposes specified in the contract, or any other purposes permitted under the CCPA (CPRA). For more infor...
In the state of California, under CCPA and now CPRA, the definition of personal information is also very broad and covers directly identifiable information as well as pseudonymous and sensitive data (CPRA only), and also information linked at the household or device level. As the regulatory envir...
The weight of federal and provincial authority, however, has adopted the more practical “reasonable expectations” test. Under this formulation, information is still about an “identifiable” individual “if it is reasonable to expect that an individual can be identified from the information in issue...
This section contains disclosures required by the California Consumer Privacy Act (“CCPA”), the California Privacy Rights Act (“CPRA”), the Consumer Data Protection Act (“CDPA”), the Colorado Privacy Act (“CPA”), the Connecticut Act Concerning Personal Data Privacy and Online Monitoring ...
The California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) expands the definition of personal information as it currently exists in the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). The CPRA adds “sensitive personal information” as a defined term, which means: (l) personal information that reveals: (A) a consumer’...
The California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 (CPRA) becomes operative on January 1, 2023. Among its numerous amendments and additions to the existing California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), the CPRA expands the definition of Personal Information. Specifically, it adds the category of Sensitive ...
Businesses that collect personal data subject to the California CCPA and CPRA or the laws of certain other States, have a responsibility to provide you with notice regarding the categories of personal data to be collected (see “WHAT data may we collect or receive about you?” above), the ...
Under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), California residents have the following data rights: The right to know about the personal information a business collects about them and how it is used and shared; The right to delete personal information collected from them (with some exceptions)...
under the CCPA/CPRA. You can make choices to allow or prevent such uses (see the section below on how to opt-out). Depending on your choices, during the past twelve months, we may have “shared” information to advertising networks, data analytics providers, social networks and advertising ...