Showing posts with label Tobe Liebert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tobe Liebert. Show all posts

Thursday, June 13, 2019

The California Consumer Protection Act: Groundbreaking, but will it be enforced?

By Loyola Law School Lecturer and Reference Librarian Tobe Liebert

Privacy of consumer information is a topic that has received a huge amount of attention in recent years, fueled by the growing public sense that Internet and technology companies are not acting as good guardians of customer information.  With the recent passage of the California Consumer Privacy Act (the CCPA) California thrust itself into the forefront of the debate over what laws are needed to provide adequate privacy and security for personal information.  The CCPA, which will become effective on January 1, 2020, goes far towards creating privacy safeguards in line with the expansive protections found in the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (the GDPR).  But the act remains a work in progress, and there are some serious questions about how vigorously it can be enforced.

One of the most contentious issues discussed during the enactment of the CCPA was whether a “private cause of action” should be included in the act.  A private cause of action refers to the issue of whether a private citizen may bring a civil action to claim damages for violations of the act.  If not, then actions to remedy violations can only be brought by the state, acting through the Attorney General’s office.  Proponents of the inclusion of a private cause of action argued that compliance with the provisions of the CCPA would be much more likely if companies were faced with the possibility of civil actions brought by trial lawyers for violations of the law.  Opponents of a private cause of action believed that it would lead to a flood of lawsuits, imposing a huge and expensive burden on businesses in California.