Proposed American Privacy Rights Act of 2024 seeks to establish national consumer data privacy rights, govern Artificial Intelligence and automated decision-making, impose additional obligations on high-impact social media companies and large data holders, supersede state privacy laws, and allow pri...
I truly despise how I can't just assume that something does what it says it does on the title. Gotta read a separate article analyzing it or read it in full myself.
Yeah, that's America for you. Even after reading it I'm still a little confused and distrustful. Everything that it's saying seems good and rational, so why on earth are any Republicans backing it? Have they been tricked into passing an actual good law that is broadly popular? Have they managed to sneak in some insane line promising Meta a right to my first-born's soul?
I heard about it on a somewhat right-leaning youtube channel, China Uncensored - the host was surprised it was bipartisan as well. Honestly that channel has been the only reporting I've seen on it despite how important it is, and I wonder why Pres. Biden and Democrats in general aren't more vocal about the bill considering how widely popular it would be.
It'll be interesting to see what privacy rights we Americans actually have, once it's goes into law.
It's a good article, breaks down a lot of the major points. But I still worry about the 'devil is in the details', and how it effects regular people day-to-day.
If I understand the US system correctly, even if this does become law, its still up for interpretation by the supreme court, so it'll still likely favor Republican interests.
I was able to find this clip on YouTube of the bills' sponsors talking about it on CNBC from before it passed the House. Otherwise practically no broadcast about this.