
A privacy bill introduced
Tuesday by four Democrats on the Senate Commerce Committee would give consumers new rights to control how their data is collected and used.
The Consumer Online Privacy Rights Act of 2019, introduced by Sens. Maria Cantwell (Washington), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Amy
Klobuchar (Minnesota), and Ed Markey (Massachusetts), would enshrine the privacy framework unveiled last week by lawmakers in four Senate committees -- Commerce, Judiciary, Banking and HELP (Health,
Education, Labor and Pensions).
“In the growing online world, consumers deserve two things: privacy rights and a strong law to enforce them,” Cantwell stated Tuesday.
The 59-page proposed bill appears to create an opt-in system for online behavioral targeting.
The measure provides that companies must obtain consumers' affirmative consent before
transferring “sensitive” data -- which is broadly defined as including web-browsing activity across sites. The bill's definition of sensitive data also includes biometric information and
precise location data.
Justin Brookman, director of privacy and technology policy at Consumer Reports, says most ad tracking would probably be covered.
The law “could lead to
constant pop-up consent screens on websites like we’ve seen in Europe,” he writes on Medium. “However, the bill sets conditions for affirmative consent that many
of today’s cookie consent screens would not meet."
Cantwell's proposed bill would not override stronger state laws. The measure would also allow consumers to sue over violations.
“When consumers have the ability to advocate for themselves, they are better protected against abuse,” a one-page summary of the bill states.
The measure also includes provisions that would prohibit companies from serving ads for housing, employment, credit or education based
on people's actual or perceived race, religion, sex or other factors that would violate civil rights laws.
The proposed bill has the backing of numerous consumer advocates, including Georgetown law professor David Vladeck, former head of the Federal Trade
Commission's consumer protection bureau.
The ad industry group Privacy for America stated that the bill “offers a solid basis for discussion moving forward.”
But the group
added: “As currently constructed, the bill would allow a patchwork of state laws and not produce the strong, single set of consumer protections that would preserve the economies of
scale, consumer benefits, and innovation that accompany the responsible use of data.”