The Privacy Pulse–July
???Hey, I'm?Jared Moscow–the Director of Product, Privacy at the?IAB Tech Lab. This is the July issue of The Privacy Pulse, a monthly newsletter. I’ll share privacy-world happenings that I am seeing in the form of news stories, tweets, and more. It’s a new space for me and it is rapidly evolving. Thanks for reading!
?? What’s new this month?
?? Each month I’ll highlight 10 stories. This won’t be an exhaustive list! However, these links are worthy of a quick glance to a full read.?
?? US Privacy Legislation
On July 18th, the Governor of Oregon signed the Oregon Consumer Privacy Act (OCPA) into law. Oregon becomes the twelfth US state with a privacy law and the sixth US state to pass a privacy law in 2023. The requirements of the OCPA are similar to other US state privacy laws–though there is an interesting expansion to consumer rights. Oregon will be the first state to provide consumers with the right to request specific third parties a data controller has disclosed personal data with. No other state requires this level of specificity when it comes to identifying third parties. The OCPA goes into effect July 1, 2024–the same day as the Texas Data Privacy and Security Act.
???????? EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework
It was near impossible to miss the headlines announcing the finalization of the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework. As this story dominated privacy news for the first two weeks of July, I found myself wondering ... What the heck is an adequacy decision? Maybe you already knew the answer to this. But if you're also not a lawyer, fear not, the good folks at the European Commission put together a handy FAQ on the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework:
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Caitlin Fennessy –VP & Chief Knowledge Officer at IAPP–did a fantastic job summarizing the top 3 takeaways from the decision:
There are two questions that I’m left asking. First, what does this mean for the current $1.3B fine Meta is facing? Second, when does Max Schrems get involved? More from AdExchanger on the second tidbit:
?? ???CJEU Decision
Keeping our focus on the EU, let’s chat about Meta & the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The CJEU decision is notable because it opens the door for competition authorities to determine data protection issues–a responsibility previously held solely by EU Data Protection Authorities. Zooming out from Meta, this is noteworthy for Adtech as implications ripple into running behavioral and personalized advertising under GDPR.
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If you are reading this and you work in Advertising, I highly recommend both analysis posts from Miko?aj Barczentewicz :
? Sandbox Gradual Availability
Our summer of Sandbox marches on. The delivery of Chrome 115 ushered in the start of general availability for a set of Privacy Sandbox web-platform APIs focused relevance and measurement. By the August edition of the Privacy Pulse, 99% of Chrome browsers will have access to the available sandbox APIs. There are a lot of caveats around throttling up general availability in the dev blog. The key concern? Stability.
In addition to the shipment news, Google shared a detailed technical overview of how Google Ads products have started to leverage sandbox APIs for measurement.
7. Combining the Event and Aggregate Summary Reports from the Privacy Sandbox Attribution Reporting API
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While it’s exciting to see these APIs available, I’m more interested to see how much the APIs are actually used. Here’s to hoping we see usage metrics from third parties in Q3 and Q4.
?? Sensitive data
Sensitive data is, by nature, sensitive! Some companies can’t seem to use it correctly, legally, or just keep their hands off of it entirely. Two stories from July on such use:
8. Tax prep companies shared private taxpayer data with Google and Meta for years, congressional probe finds: Yikes! Meta using questionable data to target ads and train AI models. I’ve seen this movie before. What makes this version so spicy is the inappropriate use of taxpayer data. Meta & Google had tracking pixels on TaxAct, TaxSlayer, and H&R Block websites. So every taxpayer using one of these sites has had their sensitive data leverage to enhance behavioral targeting practices? If you used TurboTax, are you in the clear? It’s hard to see an upside here for consumers.
8a. Attacks on Tax Privacy: How the Tax Prep Industry Enabled Meta to Harvest Millions of Taxpayers' Sensitive Data: Full report from Senator Warren’s office.
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9. FTC Gives Final Approval to Order Banning BetterHelp from Sharing Sensitive Health Data for Advertising, Requiring It to Pay $7.8 Million: From the Federal Trade Commission release:
In an action first announced in March, the FTC charged that BetterHelp used and disclosed consumers’ email addresses, IP addresses, and health questionnaire information to Facebook, Snapchat, Criteo, and Pinterest for advertising purposes despite promising consumers that it would only use or disclose personal health data for limited purposes.
Sure, the fine might be relatively small, but people are watching what you do!
??Threads
Transparently, even though the launch hype was through the roof, I have not tried Threads. Maybe I’ve outgrown my ‘early-adopter’ phase? Rest assured, if Meta rolls out a product with ambitious user growth numbers north of 100M, the privacy hawks will be waiting. This story from Forbes is a super interesting comparison of privacy on Threads vs. Instagram vs. Twitter. Did you know you can’t delete your Threads profile without deleting your Instagram account? That should play nicely with GDPR deletion requirements.
???Bonus Bucket
July was overflowing with privacy news on the big tech front. Let’s discuss a few stories:
???Privacy Changes
Can we make adtech more complex? How about simultaneous releases from Apple and Google that further challenge marketers' capabilities. That’s exactly the storm July has delivered with the rollout of iOS 17 and Chrome 115. WWDC gave marketers' their first real warning signs for the coming changes across the Apple product suite. While marketers' have had a much longer time–years–to prepare for the rollout of Privacy Sandbox APIs in Chrome.
????Adtech & DC
I’m a big fan of the IAPP , their events, and the content they produce. This article from Cobun Zweifel-Keegan, J.D., CIPP/US, CIPM helps capture the privacy problem areas we’re thinking about in adtech. It’s a refresher on the challenges ahead and what the advertising industry is doing to work together on solutions.
?? What's new in Privacy at Tech Lab?
Updates on the Privacy Working Groups for July
Global Privacy Working Group
Accountability Working Group
PIAT
???Around the Horn
Tweets & Threads from June that touch on privacy, advertising, and related Tech Lab items:
European Parliament Audit Lara O'Reilly
Privacy Resources for Sensitive Data Amy Olivero
Thread on CJEU judgement Eric Seufert
Frameworks Joe Duball
iOS Fingerprinting Tommy Mysk
??? July Shouts:
???That’s a wrap for July! See you in August.
Managing Director, IAPP D.C.
1 年Thanks for the shoutout, Jared. So glad that the piece resonated with you. I truly appreciate the work that IAB Tech Lab does to rise to the challenge. I'd love to catchup and hear about your priorities sometime!