The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

A U.S. privacy law could be good for Google - but bad for you

- By Marcy Gordon and Matt O’brien

WASHINGTON » Congress is taking the first steps toward setting national rules governing how companies use consumers data — although one of its goals might be to prevent states from enacting stronger privacy protection­s of their own.

The approach being pondered by policymake­rs and pushed by the internet industry leans toward a relatively light government touch. That’s in contrast to stricter European rules that took effect in May and a California law that takes effect in 2020. Other states are also considerin­g more aggressive protection­s.

However it works out, any regulatory push will find it challengin­g to reconcile the concerns of privacy advocates who want people to have more control over the use of their personal data — where they’ve been, what they view, who their friends are —and the powerful companies who mine that informatio­n for profit.

During a Senate hearing Wednesday, several Democratic senators warned that a national law could simply be used to override state efforts. Calling that pre-emption the “Holy Grail” for the industry, Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii said it won’t get the bipartisan support it needs if the goal is merely to replace California’s law with a weaker, “non-progressiv­e” federal statute.

Senior executives from AT&T, Amazon, Apple, Google, Twitter and Charter Communicat­ions all told senators that they support a federal proposal that could negate “inconsiste­nt” state privacy laws. Facebook, which faced a major congressio­nal grilling over privacy back in April, was not present at the hearing.

Apple, which doesn’t rely on advertisin­g for revenue, was the most vocal in support of a stronger federal law. Bud Tribble, Apple’s vice president of software technology, said the bar would have to be “high enough in the federal legislatio­n” to provide meaningful consumer protection­s.

The Senate Commerce Committee hearing comes amid increasing anxiety over safeguardi­ng consumers’ data online and recent scandals that have stoked outrage among users and politician­s. The committee’s chairman, Republican Sen. John Thune of South Dakota, said both Republican­s and Democrats now want to reach consensus on a national privacy law that “will help consumers, promote innovation, reward organizati­ons with little to hide and force shady practition­ers to clean up their act.”

An early move in President Donald Trump’s tenure set the tone on data privacy. He signed a bill into law in April 2017 that allows internet providers to sell informatio­n about their customers’ browsing habits. The legislatio­n scrapped Obama-era online privacy rules aimed at giving consumers more control over how broadband companies like AT&T, Comcast and Verizon share that informatio­n.

Allie Bohm, policy counsel at the consumer group Public Knowledge, said examples abound of companies not only using the data to market products but also to profile consumers and restrict who sees their offerings: African Americans not getting access to ads for housing, minorities and older people excluded from seeing job postings.

What is needed, privacy advocates maintain, is legislatio­n to govern the entire “life cycle” of consumers’ data: how it’s collected, used, kept, shared and sold.

The 28-nation European Union put in strict new rules this spring that require companies to justify why they’re collecting and using personal data gleaned from phones, apps and visited websites.

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The Associated Press

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