California Attorney General Targets Location Data in New Investigative Sweep

Alston & Bird
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This week California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced a new investigative sweep under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). We have anticipated this sweep for some time based on the focus and the direction of a number of inquiries, investigations, and enforcement proceedings initiated by Attorney General Bonta’s office over the past 12-24 months.

The Notices of Violation issued by the Attorney General’s office will give rise to meaningful risks for many of the receiving businesses. We anticipate the Attorney General’s team will focus on granular technical details of data collection via mobile apps including through the third-party SDKs[1] that are ubiquitous across digital mobile products. How these and other digital analytics tools collect and transfer data, including precise location data, is often not well understood even by the internal digital marketing, data analytics, and product development teams that deploy and use the tools. This blind spot has created a zone of risk for many businesses that would not consider themselves a part of the “location data industry” referenced in the Attorney General’s announcement.

The interactions with the Attorney General’s office in these investigations and in enforcement proceedings can also change focus when the Attorney General’s staff suspects compliance gaps in other sensitive areas, such as use of mobile apps by children or in connection with healthcare or other sensitive activities. Careful and detailed internal legal/technical data flow analyses are therefore critical to quickly identifying the full scope of potential risk and framing the strategy for engaging with the Attorney General. For those businesses that have not received notices, this is another opportunity to close the gap between digital advertising, data analytics, and mobile app development and these emerging and increasingly clear legal privacy standards relating to precise location data and use of third-party SDKs in mobile apps.

[1] “SDK” refers to a software development kit. These tools, many of which are free, are commonly used by mobile app teams to shorten app development timelines and quickly add features and functions to mobile apps.

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DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations. Attorney Advertising.

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