Vox reports U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., reintroduced her Data Protection Act, which would create a federal privacy regulator that absorbs the U.S. Federal Trade Commission's privacy enforcement powers. In addition to previously proposed responsibilities, the new agency would review the privacy implications of mergers that include transferring the data of at least 50,000 users. The bill also contains some limits on data collection and usage practices while prohibiting reidentification of deidentified data. Editor's note: IAPP Legal Research Fellow Cathy Cosgrove previously analyzed the 2020 version of the Data Protection Act.
17 June 2021
Gillibrand reintroduces Data Protection Act
Related stories
Governor signs Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act
New threads in the patchwork: Key trends in US comprehensive state privacy law amendments
A View from DC: Former FTC Chair Khan reflects on her privacy legacy
Notes from the IAPP Canada: The growing need for collaboration
Key takeaways from Ireland's DPC annual report