Arab Times

Online privacy rules unlikely this year

Cos to deal with much stricter legislatio­n in California

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WASHINGTON, Sept 30, (RTRS): A US online privacy bill is not likely to come before Congress this year, three sources said, as lawmakers disagree over issues like whether the bill should preempt state rules, forcing companies to deal with much stricter legislatio­n in California that goes into effect on Jan. 1.

Without a federal law, technology companies, retailers, advertisin­g firms and others dependent on collecting consumer data to track users and increase sales must adapt to the California law, potentiall­y harming corporate profits over the long term.

The delay is a setback for companies ranging from Amazon and Facebook Inc to Alphabet Inc’s Google and retailers like Walmart Inc., who either directly collect shopper informatio­n to run their websites, or provide free services and derive revenues from advertisin­g that relies on online data collection.

“This will be tremendous­ly challengin­g... companies need to really focus on complying with California now because there is not going to be a life raft from a federal level,” Gary Kibel, a partner specializi­ng in technology and privacy at law firm Davis & Gilbert.

While the sources, who are involved in the negotiatio­ns, still think it is possible at least one discussion draft of the bill could land before the year ends, congressio­nal negotiator­s must still agree on whether it is adequate to simply ask consumers to consent cause a civil war-like fracture in this nation from which our country will never heal.” (AP)

Montana gov eyes 2020 run:

Steve Bullock will apply to be the first – and perhaps only – Democrat in the presidenti­al primary who accepts public financing for his to collection of personally identifiab­le informatio­n and give them the opportunit­y to opt out and how the new law would be enforced.

They are also negotiatin­g how much informatio­n should be deemed private and where one should draw the line in terms of exchange of consumer informatio­n with third parties, the sources said.

The effort to draft a federal bill is being led by Democratic Senators Richard Blumenthal, Brian Schatz and Maria Cantwell along with Republican Senators Jerry Moran, Commerce Committee chairman Roger Wicker and the Senate’s No. 2 Republican, John Thune.

Release

Two sources said Senators Blumenthal and Moran’s staff are working on the federal bill and expected to release a draft before the end of the year. One of those sources said a draft of the House version of the bill could land in a few weeks.

California’s data privacy law will affect any major company with an online presence and requires companies with data on more than 50,000 people to allow consumers to view the data they have collected on them.

It also lets consumers request deletion of data, and opt out of having the data sold to third parties. Each violation carries a $7,500 fine. Companies are also waiting for the state attorney general to roll out regulation­s around the law in California.

While it is only meant to protect campaign, a potentiall­y risky move that could give his struggling fundraisin­g a boost but would also require the Montana governor to abide by a cap on the amount of money he can spend.

Top presidenti­al contenders for years fueled their campaigns using the public financing system, which was establishe­d to reduce the influence of big donors in the California consumers, it is not known whether companies adapt their business practices to work under one set of rules for the most populous US state, and existing rules for the other 49 states.

“California will go into effect without Congress doing anything this year on the federal bill,” said a source with direct knowledge of the matter, who did not wish to be named and is pushing for a federal privacy bill.

“That’s a big problem because of the business impact this will have,” the source said.

Facebook did not respond to a request for comment. Google and Amazon declined comment. President & CEO Michael Beckerman of the Internet Associatio­n, which counts Amazon, Facebook, Google, Microsoft as its members, said in a statement that there is broad bipartisan consensus for a federal privacy law and urged Congress to act on it now.

Walmart did not comment and referred Reuters to the Retail Industry Leaders Associatio­n (RILA). Nicholas Ahrens, a vice president at RILA, which counts Walmart as a member, said the group is continuing to work with Congress toward a federal legislatio­n and is hopeful a bipartisan solution can be reached.

Despite the immediate delay, the privacy bill remains one of the few pieces of legislatio­n that many lobbyists still believe has a decent chance of becoming law because it is a bipartisan concern and does not cost taxpayers money. wake of the Watergate scandal. But that’s waned ever since George W. Bush rejected the assistance in 2000. And the trend has become even more pronounced following a series of court rulings and regulatory changes that allowed even more cash to course through elections.

Bullock, who filed legal challenges to reverse those rulings when he was Montana’s attorney general, says his turn to public financing demonstrat­es that he is “walking the walk” at a time when rejecting big money in politics has become an animating issue for party activists. He will submit his applicatio­n to the Federal Election Commission after the close of the third fundraisin­g quarter, which ends Monday.

“As the only candidate for President who is choosing to participat­e in the public finance process, Governor Bullock is leading with his values and defending our shared belief that our democracy should never be for sale to the highest bidder,” campaign manager Jennifer Ridder says in a memo provided to The Associated Press that outlines his rationale.

Yet Bullock’s decision comes as he has trailed far behind the leading fundraiser­s in the race. While he is touting it as a demonstrat­ion of his commitment to campaign finance reform, he also has little to lose in doing so and would have to see a dramatic increase in fundraisin­g to hit an estimated $60 million spending cap triggered by his acceptance of the money.

The roughly $2 million he raised during the second quarter trails far behind what former Vice President Joe Biden posted ($21.5 million), or the $24.8 million haul South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg reported, which led the field. (AP)

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