The Catoosa County News

Ga. fares poorly in report for laws for online privacy

- By T.A. Defeo

Georgia ranks among the worst states for its laws governing online privacy.

The Peach State scored 3.5 out of 25 points in a new analysis from Comparitec­h, a website focused on cyber security and online privacy. The site analyzed laws governing online privacy to determine how states ranked based on 22 key criteria.

“Georgia features toward the bottom of our rankings for privacy by state due to its lack of a comprehens­ive data privacy law and failure to cover a number of other key areas,” Rebecca Moody, head of data research at Comparitec­h, told The Center Square.

“Scoring 3.5 out of 25, Georgia manages to score a point for having a data disposal for companies (this doesn’t cover government entities, though), a law to protect K-12 student informatio­n, and a shield law to protect journalist­s,” Moody said. “The half point stems from the inclusion of genetic data privacy within its insurance code.”

While Georgia ranked ahead of neighborin­g North Carolina (3), it

was behind Alabama (5), Florida (5), South Carolina (5.5) and Tennessee (5.5).

Comparitec­h rated California as the best state for online privacy, ahead of Utah and Virginia. It rated Idaho as the worst state for online privacy, just ahead of Pennsylvan­ia and Mississipp­i.

“Georgia’s score would improve dramatical­ly if it were to introduce a comprehens­ive data privacy law — like the Georgia Computer Data Privacy Act that was introduced at the Senate early last year but died in committee,” Moody added. “Having such a law would help provide comprehens­ive data protection to all types of consumers/users and ensure basic privacy protection­s are offered for personal data collected by companies.”

 ?? Shuttersto­ck/townnews.com Content Exchange ?? Comparitec­h head of data research Rebecca Moody said Georgia having an online privacy law “would help provide comprehens­ive data protection to all types of consumers/users and ensure basic privacy protection­s are offered for personal data collected by companies.”
Shuttersto­ck/townnews.com Content Exchange Comparitec­h head of data research Rebecca Moody said Georgia having an online privacy law “would help provide comprehens­ive data protection to all types of consumers/users and ensure basic privacy protection­s are offered for personal data collected by companies.”

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