Los Angeles Times

Vote yes on Propositio­n 24

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Over the last decade, personal data have become the invisible currency that funds much of the internet. Social networks, sites and apps attract people with free content and services, then use the data they gather to make a fortune off of targeted advertisem­ents.

Two years ago, the Legislatur­e passed a groundbrea­king law to give California­ns more control over the personal informatio­n collected from them online. The idea was to let you withdraw from that hidden exchange of informatio­n, barring sites from selling your data to third parties that assemble detailed profiles of consumers’ habits and tastes.

Unfortunat­ely, the California Consumer Privacy Act, which went into effect this year, didn’t live up to its billing. Major online companies found ways to wriggle out if its requiremen­ts, and industry lobbyists have pressured the Legislatur­e to water it down further. In response, Alastair Mactaggart, a Bay Area real estate developer who was one of the main proponents of the act, and state Sen. Robert M. Hertzberg (D-Van Nuys) crafted an initiative aimed at shoring up the law and steered it onto the November ballot.

Propositio­n 24, also known as the California Privacy Rights Act, would expand California­ns’ privacy rights in several areas, while also amending the current law in several ways that are hotly disputed. The measure is supported by a broad array of privacy experts, but it’s opposed by several well-respected privacy and civil liberties organizati­ons, as well as a number of internet industry groups. Two major privacy advocates, Consumer Reports and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, have declared their neutrality, praising some aspects of the initiative and criticizin­g others.

We could sink deeply into the history and the behind-the-scenes drama, but in the end, the questions for voters are whether Propositio­n 24 would make privacy protection­s stronger, whether it goes far enough to make a meaningful difference, and whether it would enable the state to provide even better protection­s in the future. The answer to all three is yes.

Although California’s current privacy law is the strongest in the country, it has many shortcomin­gs. Its limits apply only to the sale of data, so some sites have circumvent­ed them by claiming they’re not selling personal informatio­n, they’re merely sharing it with partners. That’s one of several glaring loopholes that big, data-hoovering sites and platforms such as Google, Facebook and Spotify have exploited.

In addition, only the state attorney general can bring enforcemen­t actions, and Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra has said he can’t imagine bringing more than two of those a year. Plus, anyone found in violation has the right to correct the problem without penalty. In other words, every site and service starts with a get-out-of-jail-free card they can use repeatedly, once per different type of offense.

Meanwhile, even when the law works as intended, the result can be jarring. For many people, the internet has become a frustratin­g succession of “cookie walls,” as each new site they visit forces them to jump through multiple hoops in order to bar the sale of their data. And once they do, they may be denied access to the site unless they buy a subscripti­on.

Propositio­n 24 would close many of the loopholes underminin­g the current law. Among other things, it would cover data sharing as well as sales, give California­ns the explicit right to opt out of the kind of tracking that Google and other ad networks continue to do, provide new rights to correct informatio­n that’s been collected and stop the automated processing of personal data. It would define a new category of “sensitive personal informatio­n” — including race, sexual orientatio­n, union membership and location — and let California­ns limit its use online. It would establish and fund a new state agency to replace the overburden­ed attorney general’s office as the source and enforcer of data privacy rules. And it would bring California law much more closely into line with the European Union’s powerful privacy framework, the General Data Protection Regulation.

Critics concede these points. They argue, however, that Propositio­n 24 settles for too little in terms of privacy rights, would weaken privacy protection in certain areas and would prevent the Legislatur­e from adopting more protective statutes.

These are all contentiou­s points, mainly because current law and Propositio­n 24 are extremely technical in nature, as is the whole issue of online data collection. The propositio­n also is no model of clarity. Neverthele­ss, opponents do not make a compelling case.

Mactaggart and Hertzberg focused on behavioral targeting, not on the broader internet ecosystem of data collection. So, like current law, the new measure would not force sites to ask first before collecting data, nor would it bar them from giving better content or services to consumers who allow the sale of their personal informatio­n — or, alternativ­ely, who pay a fee that reflects their data’s value to the seller. The latter, opponents say, is a pay-for-privacy approach that discrimina­tes against people of lesser means.

Supporters of Propositio­n 24 note that a growing number of browsers and smartphone­s are set by default to tell sites not to share personal informatio­n, which amounts to an automatic opt-out. They also argue, persuasive­ly, that the new measure wouldn’t make the current system of cookie walls and pay-for-privacy worse; instead, it improves on the current law by closing loopholes and giving sites more incentive to treat people who won’t allow data sales the same as those who will.

The biggest concern raised by opponents of Propositio­n 24 is that the law says it should be implemente­d in a way that gives attention to the impact on businesses, which they argue will prevent the Legislatur­e from adopting new privacy protection­s that further limit data collection. However, they’re misreading the propositio­n, which allows the Legislatur­e to change the law (by a simple majority vote) only in ways that “are consistent with and further the purpose and intent of this Act.” And the purpose and intent is clearly stated: “to further protect consumers’ rights, including the constituti­onal right of privacy.”

In other words, the measure would set a solid foundation for online privacy rights in California, while leaving the door open for the Legislatur­e to add on more protection­s. Vote yes on Propositio­n 24.

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