Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

California governor wants users to profit from online data

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> California Gov. Gavin Newsom has set off a flurry of speculatio­n after he said the state’s consumers should get a piece of the billions of dollars that technology companies make by capitalizi­ng on personal data they collect.

The new governor has asked aides to develop a proposal for a “data dividend” for California residents but provided no hints about whether he might be suggesting a tax on tech companies, an individual refund to their customers or something else.

“Companies that make billions of dollars collecting, curating and monetizing our personal data have a duty to protect it,” the Democrat said in his first State of the State speech Tuesday. “California’s consumers should also be able to share in the wealth that is created from their data.”

Tech companies, for example, sell the data to outside businesses that target ads to users. The European Union and Spain’s socialist government last year each proposed taxing big internet companies like Google, Facebook and Amazon.

Common Sense Media, which helped pass California’s nation-leading digital privacy law last year, plans to propose legislatio­n in coming weeks that would reflect Newsom’s proposal, founder and CEO James Steyer said, without providing details.

Starting next year, California’s European-style privacy law will require companies to tell customers upon request what personal data they have collected and why, which categories of third parties have received it, and allow consumers to delete their informatio­n and not sell it.

U.S. Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia, ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, predicted in November that California would consider legislatio­n that would “send a shiver down the spine” of tech companies.

He described the proposal as returning 25 percent of the value of an individual’s data. It wasn’t clear how the calculatio­n would be made.

Warner’s office said Wednesday that he made the comment after speaking with Steyer. Warner is considerin­g federal legislatio­n requiring companies like California-based Facebook and Google to provide users with annual estimates of what their data is worth to the companies.

Steyer said in a statement that Newsom is “spot on” about consumers having the “right to share in the profits that companies are making off them.”

Axios calculated that the average Facebook user is worth $7.37 to the company, while a Twitter user is worth $2.83, and a Reddit user, about 30 cents. The calculatio­n basically divided the companies’ annual revenue by their monthly active users.

California-based tech giants Facebook and Google did not immediatel­y comment. Newsom’s office would not say who is leading his review. Newsom “is open to constructi­ve input” from national experts and lawmakers, spokesman Brian Ferguson said in a statement.

The governor’s office pointed to proposals elsewhere that would put a tax on data, including one that died in the Washington state Legislatur­e in 2017. That measure would have taxed receipts from the sale of state residents’ personal data at a rate of 3.3 percent.

Mahsau Daee of the Internet Associatio­n said the industry will look forward to reviewing the governor’s eventual proposal but that “free and low-cost, datadriven online services offer California­ns — and all Americans — enormous benefits.”

Jeffrey Chester, executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy, said Newsom “is off to the wrong start” on protecting consumer privacy.

“They shouldn’t be tricked into giving away their privacy for a small discount,” he said in an email. “Selling it for a few bucks isn’t the answer and will make the problem worse.”

Dan Goldstein, president the digital marketing agency Page 1 Solutions, said a tax might not benefit consumers, while some sort of profit-sharing plan would likely return a “pittance of a benefit” to individual­s.

Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes last year suggested that users could band together to negotiate payments or a data tax could be administer­ed, similar to a fund that annually shares oil profits with Alaska residents.

Consumer Federation of California executive director Richard Holober hailed the proposal while alluding to the vast financial divide between rich and poor, particular­ly in California, which is struggling to address homelessne­ss and an affordable housing crisis.

The governor previously asked Silicon Valley companies to match $500 million in state funds with their own low-interest loans for developers to build homes for middle-income residents in some of the state’s costliest areas.

“We have such a disparity here with everyday California­ns who are having trouble paying their rent or sending their kids to college,” Holober said. “California has created a very fertile land for these corporatio­ns to become fabulously wealthy, and they need to give back.”

Newsom’s announceme­nt excited lawmakers who authored California’s privacy law, but they had no informatio­n about it.

Democratic Senate Majority Leader Bob Hertzberg called the proposal “the next frontier of the online data and privacy conversati­on.”

Democratic Assemblyma­n Ed Chau, who is chairman of the Assembly Committee on Privacy and Consumer Protection, said the proposal “highlights the value of data, which has often been described as the new oil in this technologi­cal data-driven economy.”

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2019 photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom receives applause after delivering his first state of the state address to a joint session of the legislatur­e at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Newsom said the state’s consumers should get a “data dividend” from technology companies, like Google and Facebook, who are make by capitalizi­ng on the personal data they collect.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I—ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Tuesday, Feb. 12, 2019 photo, California Gov. Gavin Newsom receives applause after delivering his first state of the state address to a joint session of the legislatur­e at the Capitol in Sacramento, Calif. Newsom said the state’s consumers should get a “data dividend” from technology companies, like Google and Facebook, who are make by capitalizi­ng on the personal data they collect.

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