Texarkana Gazette

Law may force small firms to reveal data practices

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg

NEW YORK—A Rhode Island software company that sells primarily to businesses is making sure it complies with a strict California law about consumers’ privacy.

AVTECH Software is preparing for what some say is the wave of the future: laws requiring businesses to be upfront with customers about how they use personal informatio­n. California has already passed a law requiring businesses to disclose what they do with people’s personal informatio­n and giving consumers more control over how their data is used—even the right to have it deleted from companies’ computers.

Privacy rights have gotten more attention since news earlier this year that the data firm Cambridge Analytica improperly accessed Facebook user informatio­n. New regulation­s also took effect in Europe.

For AVTECH, which makes software to control building environmen­tal issues, preparing now makes sense not only to lay the groundwork for expansion, but to reassure customers increasing­ly uneasy about what happens to their personal informatio­n.

“People will look at who they’re dealing with and who they’re making purchases from,” said Russell Benoit, marketing manager for the Warren, R. I.-based company.

Aware that California was likely to enact a data law, AVTECH began reviewing how it handles customer informatio­n last year. Although most of the company’s customers are businesses, it expects it will increase its sales to consumers.

While it may yet face legal challenges, the California Consumer Privacy Act is set to take effect Jan. 1, 2020. It covers companies that conduct business in California and that fit one of three categories: those with revenue above $25 million; those that collect or receive the personal informatio­n of 50,000 or more California consumers, households or electronic devices; and those who get at least half their revenue from selling personal informatio­n.

Although many small businesses may be exempt, those subject to the law will have to ensure their systems and websites can comply with consumer inquiries and requests. That may be an added cost of thousands for small companies that don’t have in-house technology staffers and need software and consulting help.

Under California’s law, consumers have the right to know what personal informatio­n companies collect from them, why it’s collected and to whom the businesses share, transfer or sell it. That informatio­n includes names, addresses, email addresses, browsing histories, purchasing histories, profession­al or employment informatio­n, educationa­l records and informatio­n about travel from GPS apps and programs. Companies must give consumers at least two ways to find out their informatio­n, including a tollfree phone number and an online form, and companies must also give consumers a copy of the informatio­n they’ve collected.

Consumers also have the right to have their informatio­n deleted from companies’ computer systems, and to opt out of having the informatio­n sold or shared.

The law was modeled on the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, which took effect May 25. The California Legislatur­e passed its law to prevent a more stringent proposed law from being placed on the November election ballot.

Frank Samson hopes the California law will help prevent what he sees as troubling marketing tactics by some in his industry, taking care of senior citizens. When people inquire about senior care companies online, it’s sometimes on sites run by brokers rather than care providers themselves.

“It may be in the fine print, or it may not be: We’re going to be taking your info and sending it out to a bunch of people,” said Samson, founder of Petaluma, Calif.- based Senior Care Authority.

That steers many wouldbe clients to just a handful of companies, he says, and can mean seniors and families get bombarded with calls while dealing with stressful situations.

But many unknowns remain about the California law. The state attorney general’s office must write regulation­s to accompany several provisions. There are inconsiste­ncies between different sections of the law, and the Legislatur­e would need to correct them, said Mark Brennan, an attorney with Hogan Lovells in Washington, D.C., who specialize­s in technology and consumer protection laws. Questions about the law might need to be litigated, including whether California can force businesses based in other states to comply, Brennan said. There are similar questions about the European GDPR.

In the meantime, small business owners who want to start figuring out if they’re likely to be subject to the California law and GDPR can talk to attorneys and technology consultant­s who deal with privacy rights. Brennan suggests companies contact profession­al and industry organizati­ons that are gathering informatio­n about the laws and how to comply.

Some small businesses may benefit, such as any developing software tied to the law. Among other things, the software is designed to allow companies and customers to see what informatio­n has been gathered, who has access to it and with whom it has been shared.

The software, expected to stay free for consumers, could cost companies into the thousands of dollars a year depending on their size, said Andy Sambandam, CEO of Clarip, one of the software makers. But, he says, “over time, the price is going to come down.”

And other states are expected to adopt similar laws.

“This is the direction the country is going in,” said Campbell Hutcheson, chief compliance officer with Datto, an informatio­n technology firm.

 ?? AP Photo/Steven Senne ?? ■ Russell Benoit of Dartmouth, Mass., marketing manager for AVTECH Software, stands behind the door of a server cabinet in the company’s data center Aug. 1 in Warren, R.I. AVTECH, which makes software to control building environmen­tal issues, is preparing for what some say is the wave of the future: laws requiring businesses to be up-front with customers about how they use personal informatio­n.
AP Photo/Steven Senne ■ Russell Benoit of Dartmouth, Mass., marketing manager for AVTECH Software, stands behind the door of a server cabinet in the company’s data center Aug. 1 in Warren, R.I. AVTECH, which makes software to control building environmen­tal issues, is preparing for what some say is the wave of the future: laws requiring businesses to be up-front with customers about how they use personal informatio­n.

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