Kevin Heaphy of Ryley Carlock & Applewhite writes: Last week, the Arizona House of Representatives proposed HB 2729, a new privacy law. HB 2729 is more narrow than the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) in several ways, and has a few kinks to be ironed out. However, it shows that Arizona, like many states, has an…
Category: Laws
Employers Using AI in Hiring Take Note: Illinois’ Artificial Intelligence Video Interview Act Is Now in Effect
Nicole Mormilo, Matthew Jedreski, K.C. Halm, and Jeffrey S. Bosley of Davis Wright Tremaine write: On January 1, 2020, Illinois’ new Artificial Intelligence Video Interview Act (AIVIA) went into effect, meaning Illinois employers must now comply with the law if they use artificial intelligence (AI) to analyze video interviews by job candidates. As we outlined in a prior…
Lawmakers kick the can down the road on discussing the most contentious issues of privacy legislation
Lauren Feiner reports: As California’s digital privacy bill hurtles toward the first day of enforcement on July 1, federal lawmakers are under pressure to establish a national standard. Several proposals are making their way around Congress but two points of contention still threaten to hold up negotiations over new legislation. First is preemption: the question of whether…
INSIGHT: First CCPA-Related Case Foreshadows Five Issues
Ron Raether, Sadia Mirza, Oscar Figueroa, and Mary Kate Kamka of Troutman Sanders LLP write: On Feb. 3, plaintiff Bernadette Barnes filed a class action lawsuit hoping to be the first case to rely on the new California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). The complaint was filed over a data breach that allegedly occurred before the…