Privacy and Social Media Bills Pass as Calif. Legislative Session Wraps
California state legislators approved privacy and social media bills before adjourning Saturday. Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) will now consider signing the measures into law. On privacy, the Assembly voted 55-15 Saturday to concur with Senate amendments to AB-1008, which would…
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Export Compliance Daily combines U.S. export control news, foreign border import regulation and policy developments into a single daily information service that reliably informs its trade professional readers about important current issues affecting their operations.
clarify that personal information under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) can exist in different formats, including physical and digital. Meanwhile, the Senate voted 38-0 to concur with Senate changes to SB-1223, which would amend the CCPA to include “neural data” as a type of sensitive personal information. However, a bill on automated decision-making (AB-2930) stalled in the Senate. The legislature passed several bills about social media. The Assembly voted 58-0 to concur with Senate amendments to AB-2481, which would create a mechanism for people who report threatening content on social networks. The Senate voted 28-2 to finally pass SB-976, which would provide parental controls, including the ability to decide whether their children see a chronological news feed or one based on an algorithm, the current default. Senators unanimously concurred with the Assembly to pass SB-1283, which would require schools to adopt limits or bans on student use of smartphones in an effort to keep kids off social platforms when on campus. The legislature previously passed a similar Assembly (see 2408280033). And the Senate voted 36-0 to send the governor SB-1504, which would tighten a cyberbullying law that requires social platforms to have reporting mechanisms. However, the legislature failed to bring to a final vote AB-3172, which would have established civil penalties for a big social media platform that “breaches its responsibility of ordinary care and skill to a child” younger than 18. Lawmakers approved many other telecom and internet bills last week (see 2408300039).