Connect with us

Privacy

Positive and Negative Responses to Committee’s Action on American Data Privacy and Protection Act

The American Data Privacy and Protection Act cleared committee 53-2, with pushback from California legislators.

Published

on

Photo of House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. from eenews.net

WASHINGTON, July 21, 2022 – While the passage of national privacy legislation out of the House Energy and Commerce Wednesday was generally applauded by many, concerns were still expressed as to how an enacted form of the bill will interact with state’s own privacy laws.

During Wednesday’s markup of the American Data Privacy and Protection Act, H.R. 8152 – which passed by a 53-2 vote in committee – Reps. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., and Nanette Diaz Barragán, D-Calif., voted against the bill after they expressed concern it would override California’s own privacy laws. Eshoo proposed her own amendment, a flexibility mechanism which would allow states to add their own privacy provisions on top of a federal baseline, but it was not adopted.

“[The federal law] calls into question the state agency’s authority to enforce privacy protections, and it prevents California from strengthening privacy protections in the future,” said Eshoo in a statement, adding she sees it as an improvement for much of the rest of the country.

Meanwhile, in a statement following the passing of the bill – which must go through a vote on the House floor– the technology group Computer and Communications Industry Association said that while the prospect of a national privacy law is promising, there is concern about a preemption clause in the bill that would “allow states to enact their own privacy laws that could be independently and inconsistently enforced by various state and federal actors.

“Congress has a real opportunity to pass meaningful federal privacy legislation with uniform ‘rules of the road’ that will protect individuals while enabling innovation,” said the trade group’s president Matt Schruers. “But legislators must avoid the possibility of a patchwork quilt of state regulations and regulators that would tie up innovators with inconsistent and unnecessary compliance obligations. We look forward to working with Congress to ensure that privacy legislation creates a sustainable and uniform national privacy policy.”

The ADPPA formulates a national data privacy framework, a set of consumer data privacy rights and appropriate enforcement mechanisms, including children’s privacy and harmful online content.

Others praise long-awaited bill

“Free Press Action is eager for this long-awaited moment to place civil rights at the forefront of online protections, and as the centerpiece of this truly thoughtful and hard-won compromise,” said Matt Wood, vice president of policy and general counsel at media advocacy group Free Press Action

In another statement, consumer organization Consumer Reports supported a stronger bill than its previous iteration. “The bill is considerably stronger today than it was a month ago,” said Justin Brookman, its director of technology policy. “We’d like to see more refinements, but there’s no doubt that this bill offers real privacy protections that don’t exist today. We look forward to continue working with policymakers on the legislation to ensure the digital rights of Americans are truly protected.”

Trade group US Telecom’s also weighed in, with Brandon Heiner, senior vice president of government affairs, commending the committee for passing bill.

“While there is more work to be done,” Heiner said, “we look forward to continuing to work with Congress to ensure any privacy law provides all of America’s broadband customers the protection they deserve.”

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Broadband's Impact

CES 2024: Industry Wants Federal Data Privacy Law

The current patchwork of state laws makes compliance difficult, said representatives from T-Mobile and Meta.

Published

on

Photo of the panel by Jake Neenan

LAS VEGAS, January 12, 2024 – Industry stakeholders called for federal data privacy legislation at CES on Thursday.

“I think oftentimes companies can be in the position of opposing additional regulation at the federal level,” said Melanie Tiano, director of federal regulatory affairs at T-Mobile. “But this is probably one of those areas where that’s not the case, in part because of the flurry of activity going on at the state level, which makes compliance in the U.S. marketplace extraordinarily confusing and difficult.”

The New Jersey legislature cleared one such bill on Monday. If that’s signed into law by the state’s governor, it would bring the number up to 13. Federal efforts, notably the American Data Privacy and Protection Act, have stalled in recent years.

“We will continue to be seriously committed to getting legislation done in a bipartisan way. That’s not always easy right now, but we’re continuing to work on that” said Tim Kurth, chief counsel for the House Innovation, Data and Commerce Subcommittee.

Simone Hall Wood, privacy and public policy manager at Meta, said “privacy regulation should not inhibit beneficial uses of data.” The company has argued it has a legitimate interest in data use practices that the European Union has found to be out of compliance with its data privacy law, the GDPR.

Industry groups, including the Consumer Technology Association, which runs the CES conference, have advocated for a light-touch privacy law in the United States, in contrast with the more comprehensive European standard.

Kurth had similar thoughts Thursday, saying the GDPR “really hurt startups and really hurt innovations.”

Still, Woods said establishing a uniform standard is something the law does well.

“It sets certainty across the marketplace for what privacy protections look like for consumers. And so that aspect of it is positive,” she said.

Continue Reading

Broadband's Impact

CES 2024: Biden Administration Announces Deal with EU on Cyber Trust Mark

The White House is looking to get the mark on products “by next year.”

Published

on

Deputy National Security Advisor for Cyber and Emerging Technologies Anne Neuberger at CES.

LAS VEGAS, January 11, 2024 – The United States has entered an agreement with the European Union on a “joint roadmap” for standardized cybersecurity labels, a Biden Administration official announced at CES on Thursday.

“We want companies to know when they test their product once to meet the cybersecurity standards, they can sell anywhere,” said Anne Neuberger, the White House’s deputy national security advisor for cyber and emerging technologies. “They can sell in Paris, Texas, or Paris, France.”

Neuberger said the White House is aiming to get its U.S. Cyber Trust Mark, a voluntary certification for internet of things devices, on consumer products by the end of the year. The effort to mark products like routers, baby monitors, and thermostats as safe from hacking was first announced in October 2022.

The Federal Communications Commission voted in August to seek comment on how to implement various parts of the program, including how to develop and ensure compliance with its cybersecurity standards.

What exactly those standards will be is not yet decided, but the Commission has said it will base the program on criteria developed by the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Those  include encrypting both stored and communicated data and the ability to receive software updates.

The measure is not on the FCC’s tentative January meeting agenda, but Neuberger said the agency is “working toward next steps.”

Continue Reading

Robocall

CES 2024: FCC and AT&T Say Collaboration is Key in Combatting Spam

The Commission has been aggressive on spam this year, and AT&T has been working to improve filters on its networks.

Published

on

Photo of the panel by Jake Neenan

LAS VEGAS, January 10, 2024 – Members of the telecom industry and the Federal Communications Commission emphasized the need for industry and government entities to collaborate in combating scam calls and texts at CES on Tuesday.

“Collaboration is key here,” said Amanda Potter, assistant vice president and senior legal counsel for AT&T.

Current measures

Alejandro Roark, chief of the FCC’s Consumer and Government Affairs Bureau, noted Federal Trade Commission data showing American consumers reported losing $790 million to scam calls and another $396 million to scam texts in 2022.

The Commission took action on preventing both in 2023, expanding its STIR/SHAKEN regime – a set of measures to confirm caller identities – to all providers who handle call traffic, moving to block call traffic from non compliant providers, and issuing multiple fines in the hundreds of millions. Almost every state has entered an agreement with the agency to collaborate on robocall investigations.

In addition, the FCC adopted its first robotext rules and moved to tighten those rules in December, closing the “lead generator loophole” by requiring affirmative consent for companies to send consumers marketing messages. Comments are being accepted on a proposal to institute a text authentication scheme.

For AT&T’s part, Potter said the company has instituted network filters to block messages that are likely to be illegal.

“We’re not going to claim success by any means, but when we have these robust network defenses, that does a lot,” she said, citing a total of 1 billion blocked texts on the company’s networks in July 2023.

AT&T also worked with manufacturers on features allowing consumers to report text as junk when deleting messages, which Potter said has provided extra data to tune spam filters.

What’s next

“We start from a standpoint of maximum flexibility when it comes to messaging,” Potter said, in contrast to voice calls, which are more tightly regulated and required FCC intervention for providers to block. 

“I’m concerned about that being taken away, or perhaps regulation being something of a distraction,” she said.

Roark agreed on flexibility being superior to regulation, although the Commission is moving forward with its proceeding on more expansive text authentication rules. The proposed rules include requiring more providers on the traffic chain to block texts from numbers flagged as scammers by the FCC and requiring measurers to verify the identity of texters, similar to the STIR/SHAKEN system for caller authentication.

The FCC is also taking comments on how AI factors into robocalls and robotexts, both how it’s used to perpetrate them and how the Commission might use AI tools to combat them.

At a House oversight hearing in November, FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel asked Congress for the authority to collect the fines the Commission imposes – a job currently left to the DOJ – and access to more financial information to help the agency’s robocall prevention efforts.

Continue Reading

Signup for Broadband Breakfast News



Broadband Breakfast Research Partner

Trending