Utah Considers Proposals to Require Web Services to Verify Users’ Ages, Obtain Parental Consent to Process Teens’ Data
Update: On March 23, Governor Spencer Cox signed SB 152 and HB 311. While amendments were made to both bills, the concerns raised in FPF’s analysis remain. SB 152 leaves critical provisions, such as methods to verify age or obtain parental consent, to be established in further rulemaking, but questions remain regarding whether these can […]
Workplace Discrimination and Equal Opportunity
Why monitoring cultural diversity in your European workforce is not at odds with GDPR Author: Prof. Lokke Moerel* The following is a guest post to the FPF blog from Lokke Moerel, Professor of Global ICT Law at Tilburg University and a lawyer with Morrison & Foerster (Brussels). The guest blog reflects the opinion of the […]
FPF DEI_monitoring_LONG version
1 W orkplace D iscrimination and E qual O pportunity Why monitoring cultural diversity in your European workforce is not at odds with GDPR Prof. Lokke Moerel * 1. Introduction It is a known fact that discrimination persists in today’s labor markets, 1 this despite EU anti – discrimination and equality laws — such as […]
FPF Playbook singles
DECEMBER 2022 THE PLAYBOOK Data Sharing for Research The Future of Privacy Forum (FPF) is a non-profit organization that serves as a catalyst for privacy leadership and scholarship, advancing principled data practices in support of emerging technologies. Learn more about FPF by visiting fpf.org . AUTHORED BY Dr. Sara Jordan PwC, Senior Manager, AI Governance; […]
Five Big Questions (and Zero Predictions) for the U.S. State Privacy Landscape in 2023
Entering 2023, the United States remains one of the only global economic powers that lacks a comprehensive, national framework governing the collection and use of consumer data throughout the economy. Congress made unprecedented progress toward enacting baseline privacy legislation in 2022. However, the apparent impasse in the efforts to move H.R. 8152, the American Data […]
FPF Policy Brief: Comparative Analysis of California and U.K. Age-Appropriate Design Codes
The Future of Privacy Forum’s policy brief provides a comparison of the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (AADC), a first-of-its-kind privacy-by-design law in the United States, and the United Kingdom’s Age-Appropriate Design Code. While there are distinctions between the two codes, the California AADC, which is set to become enforceable on July 1, 2024, was […]
FPF Releases Comparative Analysis of California and U.K. Age-Appropriate Design Codes
The Future of Privacy Forum (FPF) today released a new policy brief comparing the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (AADC), a first-of-its-kind privacy-by-design law in the United States, and the United Kingdom’s Age-Appropriate Design Code. While there are distinctions between the two codes, the California AADC, which is set to become enforceable on July 1, […]
FPF-Comparative Analysis of CA UK Codes of Conduct R3
DECEMBER 2022 POLICY BRIEF: Comparing the UK and California Age-Appropriate Design Codes The Future of Privacy Forum (FPF) is a non-profit organization that serves as a catalyst for privacy leadership and scholarship, advancing principled data practices in support of emerging technologies. Learn more about FPF by visiting fpf.org . AUTHORED BY Chloe Altieri Policy Counsel […]
FPF APAC Comparative Review DIGITAL
BALANCING ORGANIZATIONAL ACCOUNTABILITY AND PRIVACY SELF-MANAGEMENT IN ASIA-PACIFIC A comparative analysis of legal bases for processing of personal data across data protection laws in Asia-Pacific NOVEMBER 2022 AUTHOR Dominic Paulger Future of Privacy Forum (APAC) ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ABLI and FPF gratefully acknowledge the contributions of: • Dr Clarisse Girot, OECD (Paris) • Anna Johnston, Salinger Privacy […]
Federal Court deems university’s use of room scans within the home unconstitutional
I. Summary A federal court recently ruled that a public university’s use of room-scanning technology during a remotely proctored exam violated a student’s Fourth Amendment right to privacy. The decision in Ogletree v. CSU is the clearest indication to date of how courts will treat Fourth Amendment challenges to public higher education institutions’ use of […]