EU to California: “We just passed the most extensive cyber-security and privacy regulation in history.”
California to EU: “Hold my beer.”
Last time we addressed navigating some tricky provisions of the GDPR, including territorial scope and contracting requirements. The expansive nature of this EU law has had a significant impact, and nowhere was this more widely felt than when the California legislature looked at its privacy landscape and said, “hold my beer.” Okay, so while that is a funny analogy, it’s not quite how things unfolded. A well-funded and passionate individual named Alastair Mactaggart created a ballot initiative regarding privacy. This sent shock waves throughout the business community, and eventually resulted in the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). This piece of legislation was hastily drafted and became the central focus of an eleventh-hour deal to dismiss the ballot initiative, which garnered more than twice the number of votes necessary to make it on the ballot. The CCPA passed as drafted and the ballot initiative was withdrawn. One major advantage of legislation is that it can be modified, and in another nail-biter of a deal between the business community and privacy advocates, a clean-up bill was also passed. The law goes into effect January 1, 2020, but AG enforcement of the law is delayed until the earlier of 6 months after publication of a final rule, or July 1, 2020.
Just like the GDPR, the CCPA is both a data protection and a data privacy regulation. Consumers have four basic rights under the CCPA: the right to notice about what personal information is being collected, the right to access their data, the right to request deletion of their data, and the right to obtain the data collected in an electronic, portable format. A few items of note that jump out when reading the law:
The CCPA still presents major challenges for any company doing business in California. It contains many ambiguities, chief among them the following:
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The CCPA will be enforced by the Attorney General, and the AG’s rule-making process may clear up some of these ambiguities and clarify the requirements. That said, the law also includes a limited private cause of action for data breach, with penalties of $100 to $750 per incident per consumer. Before the consumer can pursue these damages, the company must be notified of the issue and have an opportunity to cure the failure to comply. We question the value of this provision, given that a data breach could be compared to a bell you can’t un-ring.
The California Chamber of Commerce is actively working on a bill to address a narrow set of clean-up issues, including important carve outs to the definition of consumer to exclude vendors, agents and other business-to-business data. In addition, different industries are seeking their own, California-specific modifications. If you are concerned about the content and outcome of these legislative fixes, you should seek to involve yourself in these discussions. Many experts have attributed low odds to achieving meaningful change to the CCPA. If clean-up bills significantly undermine the rights granted to consumers under the CCPA, another ballot initiative is certainly a possibility.
As the fifth largest economy in the world, California’s new privacy legislation will have a massive impact on most businesses. This is especially true given that compliance with privacy law in the US is a 50-state solution, and some companies may be forced to comply with the most restrictive law in those states in order to save the money and time wasted on gradual, piecemeal solutions. The exact steps towards compliance will be different for each organization, but a very high-level road map should include the following components:
Regarding the first bullet on this checklist, please note, under certain circumstances, appointing a formal data privacy officer is required by the GDPR. Regarding the third bullet on this list (“expansive definitions”), we acknowledge that some of you may have glossed over as this sounds like an example of corporate-speak. What we mean is that people inside your organization need to start thinking about privacy in a dramatically different way. When you use the term “personal information” everyone’s brain will (understandably) go to the traditional definition of NPI under the GLBA. It will take time and a good bit of cognitive dissonance for essential decision-makers to understand that the world has shifted, and that personal information now means everything that can be associated with an individual inside California.
Although we haven’t included it on this roadmap, as a pragmatic strategy, companies may find it beneficial to first narrow the categories of personal information they collect, and subsequently, to create a policy regarding the deletion of historical data coupled with a going-forward policy on when data will be deleted. Less data means less data to manage.
After reading this post, some may feel overwhelmed by the costs of compliance and begin to wonder about how we might move towards a clearer and more uniform regulatory environment. Next week we will discuss the potential of enacting uniform federal privacy legislation that could solve for the challenges associated with the CCPA.
THIS BLOG POST AND ASSOCIATED MATERIALS ARE PROVIDED FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND NOT PROVIDED FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVIDING LEGAL ADVICE. YOU SHOULD CONTACT YOUR ATTORNEY TO OBTAIN ADVICE ON ANY PARTICULAR ISSUES. THE OPINIONS AND VIEWS EXPRESSED IN THIS POST REPRESENT THE OPINIONS AND VIEWS OF THE INDIVIDUAL AUTHORS AND MAY NOT REFLECT THE OPINIONS OR VIEWS OF A PARTICULAR COMPANY.
ICSynergy International LLC has provided CyberSecurity strategy and implementation services for over 15 years. Since our early days of delivering world class Identity Management solutions, we always look at Cybersecurity through a people, process and technology lens. This approach becomes even more important when looking at the repercussions of a GDPR or CCPA breach. Let ICSynergy’s team of privacy and security professionals help you to formulate your approach to GDPR and CCPA.
Phone: (214) 764-7644 | 5601 Democracy Drive, Suite 205| Plano, TX 75024
Phone: (214) 764-7644 | 5601 Democracy Drive, Suite 205| Plano, TX 75024
Phone: (214) 764-7644 | 5601 Democracy Drive, Suite 205| Plano, TX 75024
Phone: (214) 764-7644 | 5601 Democracy Drive, Suite 205| Plano, TX 75024
Phone: (214) 764-7644 | 5601 Democracy Drive, Suite 205| Plano, TX 75024
ICSynergy is a trusted Okta Gold partner, with more than 30 successful customer implementations and 30 additional hybrid engagements. Our experience helping organizations of all sizes integrate Okta with their cloud-based and hybrid applications makes us the partner of choice for Okta integrations.
Our experts can assist in your integration of Okta applications such as Single Sign-On (SSO), Multi-factor Authentication (MFA), and lifecycle management – either out-of-the-box, or with a custom solution. With ICSynergy’s SPGateway, we can extend your Okta solution to your on-premises applications, protecting your existing investment.
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