July 24, 2023
It is shaping up to be the year of U.S. privacy laws! In addition to the Washington My Health My Data Act (see our previous article regarding the widespread implications of this enacted law), we have seen six (6) comprehensive privacy laws signed into law: Florida’s Digital Bill of Rights (SB 262) (FDBR); Iowa’s Act Relating to Consumer Data Protection (SF 262) (ICDPA); Indiana’s Consumer Data Protection Act (SB 5) (INCDPA); Montana’s Consumer Data Privacy Act (SB 384) (MTCDPA); Texas’ Data Privacy and Security Act (HB 4) (TDPSA); and Tennessee’s Information Protection Act (HB 1181) (TIPA).
Each state’s consumer privacy law has many similarities and a few key differences in comparison with the other existing state consumer privacy laws (i.e., California’s CCPA, Colorado’s CPA, Connecticut’s CTDPA, Virginia’s VCDPA, and Utah’s UCPA) (collectively, Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws). In comparison to these Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws, the ICDPA (effective on Jan. 1, 2025) is substantively similar to the UCPA; the FDBR (effective July 1, 2024), the INCDPA (effective Jan. 1, 2026), the TIPA (effective Jan. 1, 2025), and the TDPSA (effective July 1, 2024) largely track to the VCDPA with some limited variations; and the MTCDPA (effective Oct. 1, 2024) is structured similarly to the CTDPA. Thus, businesses that are already in compliance with the Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws, should be familiar with many obligations of the FDBR, ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA.
Below we provide an overview and comparison of some of the key aspects of the FDBR, ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA.
Scope and Exemptions
The scope of the new privacy laws (excluding Florida) largely tracks with many of the Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws applicability thresholds. The below chart details the scope of all currently enacted comprehensive privacy laws:
State | Business | Monetary | Numbers of | Sell/Share | Technology | Platform |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
California |
Conducts business in the State of California, and that satisfies one or more of the following thresholds: | $25,000,000 | 100,000 consumers or households | Derives 50% or more of annual revenues from selling or sharing consumers’ personal information |
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Colorado | Conducts business or produce commercial products or services that are intentionally targeted to Colorado residents and that meet one of the following thresholds: | - | 100,000 consumers | Derives revenue or receives a discount on the price of goods or services from the sale of personal data + processes or controls the personal data of 25,000 or more consumers | ||
Connecticut | Conducts business in Connecticut or persons that produce products or services that are targeted to residents of Connecticut and that during the preceding calendar year meet one of the following thresholds: |
- | 100,000 consumers | Derives more than 25% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + control or process personal data of not less than 25,000 consumers | ||
Florida | Conducts business in Florida or produces a product or service used by residents of Florida and satisfies at least one of the following: | $1,000,000,000 | Derives 50% or more of its global gross annual revenues from the sale of advertisements online, including providing targeted advertising or the sale of ads online | Operates a consumer smart speaker and voice command component service with an integrated virtual assistant connected to a cloud computing service that uses hands-free verbal activation | Operates an app store or a digital distribution platform that offers at least 250,000 different software applications for consumers to download and install | |
Indiana | Conducts business in Indiana or targets Indiana residents and during a calendar year meets one of the thresholds | - | 100,000 consumers | Derives over 50% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + control or process personal data of at least 25,000 consumers | ||
Iowa | Conducts business in Iowa or produces products or services that are targeted to residents of Iowa, and during a calendar year meets one of the following thresholds: | - | 100,000 consumers | Derives over 50% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + controls or processes personal data of 25,000 or more consumers | ||
Montana | Conducts business in Montana or produce products or services targeted to residents of Montana and meet one of the following thresholds: | - | 50,000 consumers | Derives over 25% gross revenue from sale of personal data + controls of processes personal data of 25,000 consumers | ||
Tennessee | Conducts business in Tennessee or target products or services to Tennessee consumers, meet the revenue threshold and one other threshold: | $25,000,000 (+ another category) | 175,000 consumers | Derives over 50% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + controls or processes personal data of 25,000 or more consumers | ||
Texas | Conducts business in Texas or produces a product or service consumed by residents of Texas | - | Processes or engages in the sale of personal data | |||
Utah | Conducts business in Utah or produces a product or service that is targeted to consumers who are residents of Utah | $25,000,000 (+ another category) | 100,000 consumers | Derives over 50% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + controls or processes personal data of 25,000 or more consumers | ||
Virginia | Conducts business in the Commonwealth or produce products or services that are targeted to residents of the Commonwealth and that (i) during a calendar year meet one of the following thresholds: | - | 100,000 consumers | Derives over 50% of gross revenue from sale of personal data + control or process personal data of at least 25,000 consumers |
Exemptions
The FDBR, ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA provide protections to consumers acting only in an individual or household context, and explicitly exclude consumers acting in a commercial or employment context. Each law also expressly exempts financial institutions, affiliates of financial institutions, data subject to the Gramm Leach Bliley Act (GLBA), data regulated by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), persons who are subject to the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), nonprofits, and higher education institutions. Of note, the INCDPA also exempts from applicability public utilities and affiliated service companies, and licensed riverboat casino owners operating facial recognition programs approved by the Indiana gaming commission.
Consumer Rights
Consumer Rights | California | Colorado | Connecticut | Florida | Indiana | Iowa | Montana | Tennessee | Texas | Utah | Virginia |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Know | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Access | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Data Portability | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Deletion | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Correction | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
Non-discrimination | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Opt-out of Sale | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Opt-out of Targeted Advertising/Sharing | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Yes |
Opt-out of Profiling | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
Opt-out of Sensitive Data | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Opt-out of Collection Collected Through Voice or Facial Recognition | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No |
Appeals | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes |
Obligations and Restrictions
General Obligations
As with Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws, businesses subject to the FDBR, ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA must:
DPIA
Similar to Colorado, Connecticut, and Virginia, the FDBR, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA require annual data protection impact assessments (DPIAs).
DPIAs are required under the FDBR, INCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA (activities created or generated after July 1, 2023, for the FDBR and after July 1, 2024, for INCDPA and TIPA) for the following activities: (a) processing of data for purposes of targeted advertising; (b) the sale of personal data; (c) the processing of data for purposes of profiling if certain risk factors are met; (d) the processing of sensitive data; and (e) any processing activities that present a heightened risk of harm.
Businesses subject to the MTCDPA must have compliant DPIAs by Jan. 1, 2025, if they engage in the following: (a) targeted advertising; (b) the sale of personal data); (c) the processing of personal data for the purposes of profiling in which the profiling presents certain reasonably foreseeable risks; and (d) the processing of sensitive data.
Tennessee Affirmative Defense
Unlike any other state's privacy law, the TIPA establishes a first of its kind affirmative defense against enforcement for businesses that reasonably conform to the NIST Privacy Framework or other documented policies, standards, and procedures designed to safeguard consumer privacy. However, it is presently unclear what ‘reasonably conformity’ entails or how invoking this affirmative defense would impact litigation.
Children in Montana and Florida
The MTCPDA expands privacy rights for children between the ages of 13 and 16 like California and Connecticut. Businesses are prohibited from processing personal data for the purpose of targeted marketing or the sale of data without consent if the business has actual knowledge that the consumer is between 13 and 16 years of age.
The FDBR adds online protections for children similar to California’s Age-Appropriate Design Code Act (CAADCA, A.B. 2273) (see our previous article regarding the implications of the CAADCA). The FDBR prohibits social media platforms and online game or gaming platforms (online platform) that provide online services, products, games, or features likely to be predominately accessed by children from processing the personal data of any child if the online platform has actual knowledge of or willfully disregards that such processing may result in substantial harm or privacy risk to children. Under the FDBR, substantial harm or privacy risk to children means processing personal information in such a way that it may result in “any reasonably foreseeable substantial physical injury, economic injury, or offensive intrusion into the privacy expectations of a reasonable child under the circumstances,” including mental health disorders, patterns of use that indicate or encourage addictive behaviors, violence, sexual exploitation, promotion of drugs, predatory practices, and financial harm.
Online platforms are also prohibited from profiling children unless all of the following are met: (1) the online platform can demonstrate it has appropriate safeguards in place to protect children; (2) profiling is necessary to provide the online service, product, or feature requested with which children are actively and knowingly engaged; and (3) the online platform can demonstrate a compelling reason that profiling does not pose a substantial harm or privacy risk to children. The FDBR also restricts the use of children’s geolocation data and the use of dark patterns to lead, or encourage, a child to take certain actions, similar to the CAADCA. Subject businesses will likely have to conduct a privacy assessment to determine if their online platform creates risks to children and to ensure that any children’s personal data will not be used beyond what is minimally necessary.
Global Privacy Signals
Both the MTCDPA and TDPSA will require subject businesses to recognize global browser privacy signals by Jan. 1, 2025.
Selling Data in Texas and Florida
The TDPSA and FDBR require subject businesses to notify consumers if they are selling sensitive and/or biometric data. The TDPSA requires the following specific language within privacy notices if the subject business sells such data: “NOTICE: We may sell your sensitive personal data” and/or “NOTICE: We may sell your biometric data.” Similarly, the FDBR requires subject businesses to have the following similar language in privacy notices: “NOTICE: This website may sell your sensitive personal data” and/or “NOTICE: This website may sell your biometric personal data.”
Florida’s Unique Requirements – Additional Opt-Out Rights, Consumer Consent, Voice and Facial Recognition, Retention, and Government Influence
In addition to the right to opt-out of targeted advertising, the sale of personal data, and certain types of profiling, FDBR also provides consumers with the right to opt-out of the collection or processing of sensitive data and the collection of personal data through voice recognition or facial recognition features. FDBR also requires consumer consent for the processing and sale of sensitive data. Additionally, any device that has voice and/or facial recognition, video and/or audio recording, or any other electronic, visual, thermal, or olfactory feature that collects data may not use such features for surveillance when such features are not in active use by the consumer, unless otherwise authorized by the consumer.
Subject businesses are prohibited from using or retaining personal data after the expiration or termination of a contract or two (2) years after the consumer’s last interaction with the subject business. However, the FDBR provides four exemptions to its retention requirements: (1) provide a good or service requested by the consumer, or reasonably anticipate the request within the context of an ongoing business relationship; (2) debug to identify and repair errors; (3) enable solely internal uses that are reasonably aligned with the expectations of the consumer; and (4) the subject business processes personal data pursuant to exemptions for certain uses of consumer personal data.
Unlike any other state privacy laws, the FDBR limits government employees and officers’ interaction with social media platforms. Under the FDBR, government employees and officers are prohibited from using their positions or state resources to request social media platforms remove content or accounts and from initiating or maintaining any agreements or working relationships with social platforms for the purpose of content moderation.
Enforcement
The FDBR, ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA do not provide a private right of action, thus each state’s Attorney General has exclusive authority to enforce each privacy law. Each law’s cure period varies:
Businesses that are found to violate the ICDPA, INCDPA, TIPA, and TDPSA will be subject to monetary penalties of up to $7,500 per violation. The FDBR authorizes civil penalties of up to $50,000 per violation and grants the Florida Department of Legal Affairs rulemaking authority to assist in the implementation of FDBR. Under the TIPA, a court may also award treble damages for any willful or knowing violations. Of note, the MTCDPA does not specify any specific penalties or capped damage amounts.
Next Steps
As noted above, many of the obligations these new privacy laws impose on businesses are not new obligations, rather extensions of Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws obligations to new states. A good initial step and a continuous step for those already complying with Existing Comprehensive Privacy Laws is to ensure its data mapping is regularly updated. Knowing your businesses data flows can help ensure you have proper procedures are in place for notice, consent, and consumer request requirements.
There are over a dozen other states, including Oregon, Washington, Hawaii, and New Hampshire, with pending consumer privacy legislation. Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough will continue to monitor those state privacy laws and consumer privacy obligations. For more information about the ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, and TIPA or if your business needs assistance complying with the ICDPA, INCDPA, MTCDPA, and TIPA before they take effect, or other privacy or consumer protection issues, please contact a member of Nelson Mullin’s privacy and cybersecurity practice.
Established in 1897, Nelson Mullins is an Am Law 100 firm of more than 1,000 attorneys, policy advisors and professionals with 33 offices in 17 states and Washington, D.C. For more information, go to www.nelsonmullins.com.
These materials have been prepared for informational purposes only and are not legal advice. This information is not intended to create, and receipt of it does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. Internet subscribers and online readers should not act upon this information without seeking professional counsel.