Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
- Democratic
- Assemblymember
- District 16
The California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 (CCPA) grants to a consumer various rights with respect to personal information, as defined, that is collected by a business, as defined, including a requirement that a business have the affirmative authorization of the consumer or the consumer's parent or guardian, as provided, before selling or sharing the personal information of a consumer that the business has actual knowledge is less than 16 years of age. The California Privacy Rights Act of 2020, approved by the voters as Proposition 24 at the November 3, 2020, statewide general election, amended, added to, and reenacted the CCPA. The CCPA establishes the California Privacy Protection Agency and vests it with full administrative power, authority, and jurisdiction to implement and enforce the CCPA. This bill would, except if certain conditions are met, prohibit a developer, as defined, from using the personal information of a consumer less than 16 years of age, as specified, to train or fine-tune, as defined, an artificial intelligence system or service unless the consumer or the consumer's parent or guardian, as specified, has affirmatively authorized that use of the consumer's personal information. The bill would require, if affirmative authorization is given, a developer to deidentify and aggregate the personal information subject to the authorization before using the personal information to train or retrain an artificial intelligence system or service. The bill would define "artificial intelligence" to mean an engineered or machine-based system that, for explicit or implicit objectives, infers from the input it receives how to generate outputs that can influence physical or virtual environments and would define "train" to mean to expose artificial intelligence to data in order to alter the relationship between inputs and outputs. The California Privacy Rights Act of 2020 authorizes the Legislature to amend the act to further the purposes and intent of the act by a majority vote of both houses of the Legislature, as specified. This bill would declare that its provisions further the purposes and intent of the California Privacy Rights Act of 2020.
In committee: Held under submission.
Read second time and amended. Re-referred to Com. on APPR.
From committee: Amend, and do pass as amended and re-refer to Com. on APPR. (Ayes 11. Noes 0.) (June 25).
From committee chair, with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to committee. Read second time, amended, and re-referred to Com. on JUD.
In Senate. Read first time. To Com. on RLS. for assignment.
Read third time. Passed. Ordered to the Senate. (Ayes 73. Noes 0. Page 5319.)
Read second time. Ordered to third reading.
From committee: Do pass. (Ayes 15. Noes 0.) (May 8).
Read second time and amended.
From committee: Amend, and do pass as amended and re-refer to Com. on APPR. (Ayes 11. Noes 0.) (April 23).
From committee chair, with author's amendments: Amend, and re-refer to Com. on P. & C.P. Read second time and amended.
From printer. May be heard in committee March 17.
Read first time. To print.
Bill Text Versions | Format |
---|---|
AB2877 | HTML |
02/15/24 - Introduced | |
04/18/24 - Amended Assembly | |
04/30/24 - Amended Assembly | |
06/17/24 - Amended Senate | |
06/27/24 - Amended Senate |
Document | Format |
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04/20/24- Assembly Privacy and Consumer Protection | |
05/06/24- Assembly Appropriations | |
05/09/24- ASSEMBLY FLOOR ANALYSIS | |
06/21/24- Senate Judiciary | |
08/02/24- Senate Appropriations |
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