Google Asks Colorado to Avoid ‘Prescriptive’ Privacy Standards
Colorado’s latest privacy regulation proposal is more burdensome than the EU’s general data protection regulation in its requirement for companies obtaining informed consumer consent for data processing, Google commented Friday (see 2302060037). The proposed regulation’s consent standards require “so much information to be presented in such a scripted manner that it may undermine rather than improve consumer understanding” of how data is processed, said Google. This “prescriptive” approach could result in “consent fatigue” and “checkbox exercises,” the company said. Google suggested Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser (D) remove the proposal’s internal documentation requirements, which are separate from requirements for data protection assessments. The draft rules require companies to analyze and document data minimization and secondary use decisions, “seemingly untethered from any potential risk of harm to consumers or the statute’s data protection assessment requirements,” said Google. This would result in companies accumulating “enormous paper trails” with little consumer benefit, the company said.