A group of companies that includes Mozilla (Firefox) and DuckDuckGo have launched a privacy initiative called Global Privacy Control (GPC). A new browser specification, it’s intended to simplify and expedite consumer privacy requests under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). Publishers that have signed on include the New York Times, Washington Post and the Financial Times. Based on user settings, the browser or extension will send a signal to publisher sites. According to GPC, “This signal communicates a Do Not Sell request as outlined in CCPA regulations and conveys a general request that data controllers limit the sale or sharing of the user’s personal data, as outlined in the GDPR.” If it reminds you of the ill-fated “do not track” (DNT) initiative that’s because it’s quite similar in many respects. It was largely ignored by big publishers and ad-tech companies, including Google, Facebook, Yahoo and Microsoft. GPC is totally voluntary. And just like DNT publishers can choose to disregard it. Abine CEO Rob Shavell, whose software company sells privacy solutions, offered a reason publishers might comply: “By complying with this standard, they can avoid some compliance costs and burdens [of CCPA and GDPR].” While not compliance in itself, he added that participation would potentially be helpful in making the case they’re compliant with CCPA. Read more here » |