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Privacy - September 25, 2019

Privacy activist in California launches new ballot initiative for 2020 election

The activist who spurred California to adopt the country’s first-ever consumer privacy law is readying for another battle: a new ballot initiative that would be even tougher on tech giants and other big businesses that collect people’s personal information.

The proposal, unveiled late Tuesday, is the brainchild of Alastair Mactaggart, a real estate developer whose efforts beginning two years ago resulted in the California Consumer Privacy Act, or CCPA. Building on that success, Mactaggart has set his sights on the 2020 election, hoping that local voters will enact reforms targeting the way companies harness data to make decisions or serve ads.

If the initiative passes, it would grant Web users in the Golden State new rights around their sensitive information, such their health and financial records or precise location. Consumers would have to give their permission before such data could be sold, and they would gain the ability to block companies from monetizing those sensitive insights through targeted ads.

Mactaggart’s proposal also includes the creation of an agency in California to enforce privacy protections, along with tougher penalties for mishaps involving children under age 16. And it would require companies to demystify their secret algorithms when such software is used to profile a person, such as determining their employment prospects or their ability to obtain housing, credit cards, loans or other key services.

The campaign by Mactaggart and his organization, Californians for Consumer Privacy, once again threatens to touch off an expensive, high-stakes war between consumer advocates and well-funded corporations in Silicon Valley and beyond. Many businesses have said that federal regulators, not those in the states, should set a national standard for online privacy. Yet Washington remains paralyzed by indecision, partisan gridlock and industry lobbying, and unable to write widely sought rules protecting privacy even after years of continued scandal.

“Privacy, I think, demands a greater set of protections,” Mactaggart said in an interview, later adding of the fight to come: “I hope it’s not a situation where we have another $6 trillion market cap opposition” — a reference to the value of the publicly traded companies his effort targets.

Two years ago, Mactaggart sought to muscle privacy protections into law much as he is now — by putting the idea before voters. He said he spent more than $3 million of his own money on a ballot initiative that initially drew sharp opposition from tech giants such as Facebook, Google and Uber, whose privacy abuses inspired Mactaggart to act in the first place.

But his campaign obtained more than 600,000 signatures, twice as many as he needed to put the matter to a referendum. The strong show of support forced state legislators, tech companies and privacy advocates to broker a compromise on legislation, which they adopted in 2018.

[California adopted the country’s first major consumer privacy law. Now, Silicon Valley is trying to rewrite it.]

Those protections under CCPA take effect Jan. 1, having survived an all-out, last-minute assault from Facebook, Google and other corporate giants. The law as it stands will grant Web users the ability to see what information is collected about them and stop that data from being sold, while empowering California’s attorney general to penalize the worst offenders. Tech giants had sought to tweak key elements of the rules before the state’s legislature adjourned Sept. 13, but those efforts failed.

“Industry wanted a lot…

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