Since 2018, 185 comprehensive privacy bills have been considered across 46 states and 13 states have enacted comprehensive privacy bills: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Montana, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Virginia. This has created a conflicting patchwork of privacy laws that confuses consumers and harms all sizes of our country’s businesses. Such a fragmented, “patchwork” approach also unduly wastes resources on complicated compliance efforts, and in the end, compromises privacy protections for the residents and tourists who visit their state.
Congress must finally act to establish a comprehensive national data privacy framework. Doing so will protect consumers’ data and privacy no matter where they live and provide businesses with certainty about their responsibilities. Travel Tech is a member and supports the United for Privacy coalition’s effort to end the privacy patchwork. We further believe that a federal data privacy framework is a fundamental first step towards regulating the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI).
For any data privacy legislation to be successful without causing unnecessary disruptive effects to the US economy, we believe the following should be considered when developing a federal privacy framework: