Senator Tammy Baldwin's office issued the following yesterday:
12.13.18
U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin Joins Colleagues to Help Protect People’s Personal Data Online
Data Care Act will stop websites and apps from using personal data against users, protect user information from hacks and hold companies accountable for misuse
WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin
joined 15 of her Senate colleagues in introducing new legislation to
protect people’s personal data online. The Data Care Act, led by
Senator Brian Schatz (D-HI), would require websites, apps and other
online providers to take responsible steps to safeguard personal
information and stop the misuse of users’ data.
“Far too many times, we have seen online
providers fail to meet their users’ expectations about how their
personal data will be collected, used and protected. The current system
is skewed against consumers and we have to fix it,” said Senator Baldwin. “The Data Care Act will provide clear, reasonable rules of the road on user data, and hold companies who fail to follow them accountable.”
“People have a basic expectation that the
personal information they provide to websites and apps is well-protected
and won’t be used against them. Just as doctors and lawyers are
expected to protect and responsibly use the personal data they hold,
online companies should be required to do the same. Our bill will help
make sure that when people give online companies their information, it
won’t be exploited,” said Senator Schatz.
Doctors, lawyers and bankers are legally
required to exercise special care to protect their clients and not
misuse their information. While online companies also hold personal and
sensitive information about the people they serve, they are not required
to protect consumers’ data. This leaves users in a vulnerable position;
they are expected to understand the information they give to providers
and how it is being used – an unreasonable expectation for even the most
tech-savvy consumer. By establishing a fiduciary duty for online
providers, Americans can trust that their online data is protected and
used in a responsible way.
The Data Care Act establishes reasonable
duties that will require providers to protect user data and will
prohibit providers from using user data to their detriment:
- Duty of Care – Must reasonably secure individual identifying data and promptly inform users of data breaches that involve sensitive information;
- Duty of Loyalty – May not use individual identifying data in ways that harm users;
- Duty of Confidentiality – Must ensure that the duties of care and loyalty extend to third parties when disclosing, selling or sharing individual identifying data;
- Federal and State Enforcement – A violation of the duties will be treated as a violation of an FTC rule with fine authority. States may also bring civil enforcement actions, but the FTC can intervene.
- Rulemaking Authority – FTC is granted rulemaking authority to implement the Act.
“Free Press Action welcomes the important
contributions the Data Care Act makes to a growing list of good ideas on
privacy in the Senate. The bill shifts away from a notice and choice
framework alone, where internet users bear all the responsibility and
risk of protecting themselves, with few remedies for violations. Instead
it moves towards putting the duty on companies and other data
collectors where it belongs, to actually prevent such harmful
exploitation and honor people's rights. It also does the right thing by
empowering the FTC to make rules and impose penalties, and let’s state
attorneys general enforce the new protections too. We thank Senator
Schatz and all the co-sponsors for putting so many ideas on the table,
pushing the debate towards even more comprehensive laws,” said Sandra Fulton, Government Relations Director for Free Press Action.
“We commend Senator Schatz for tackling the
difficult task of drafting privacy legislation that focuses on routine
data processing practices instead of consumer data self-management. It
signals an important shift in how Congress views consumer privacy issues
and foreshadows a serious privacy debate in 2019,” said Michelle Richardson, Director of the Privacy and Data Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology.
“EFF thanks Senator Schatz for his leadership on
protecting consumer data privacy. We generally favor legislation
requiring large companies to serve as fiduciaries for their consumers'
data, and to satisfy duties of loyalty, confidentiality, and care for
their users. We look forward to working with the Senator to improve his
bill and to advance information fiduciary protections that will meet the
needs of Internet users and adequately safeguard consumer data privacy
as a part of comprehensive privacy legislation,” said India McKinney, Legislative Analyst for the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EEF).
In addition to Senators Baldwin and Schatz, the Data Care Act
is co-sponsored by Senators Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Michael Bennet
(D-CO), Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Patty Murray
(D-WA), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Martin
Heinrich (D-NM), Ed Markey (D-MA), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Doug Jones
(D-AL), Joe Manchin (D-WV) and Dick Durbin (D-IL).