Hunton Andrews Kurth writes:
On May 23, 2024, the U.S. House Committee on Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Data, Innovation, and Commerce approved a revised draft of the American Privacy Rights Act (“APRA”), which was released just 36 hours before the markup session. With the subcommittee’s approval, the APRA will now advance to full committee consideration. The revised draft includes several notable changes from the initial discussion draft, including:
- New Section on COPPA 2.0 – the revised APRA draft includes the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA 2.0) under Title II, which differs to a certain degree from the COPPA 2.0 proposal currently before the Senate (e.g., removal of the revised “actual knowledge” standard; removal of applicability to teens over age 12 and under age 17).
- New Section on Privacy By Design – the revised APRA draft includes a new dedicated section on privacy by design. This section requires covered entities, service providers and third parties to establish, implement, and maintain reasonable policies, practices and procedures that identify, assess and mitigate privacy risks related to their products and services during the design, development and implementation stages, including risks to covered minors.
- Expansion of Public Research Permitted Purpose – as an exception to the general data minimization obligation, the revised APRA draft adds another permissible purpose for processing data for public or peer-reviewed scientific, historical, or statistical research projects. These research projects must be in the public interest and comply with all relevant laws and regulations. If the research involves transferring sensitive covered data, the revised APRA draft requires the affirmative express consent of the affected individuals.
Read more about other changes at Privacy & Information Security Law Blog.