Colorado
Summary
Law: The Colorado Privacy Act ('CPA')
Regulator: The Colorado Attorney General ('AG')
Summary: The Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) came into effect on July 1, 2023, making Colorado the third US state to pass its own privacy law. The CPA provides for several privacy rights, including the right to opt out of the processing of personal data, the right to access, correction, and deletion of personal data, and the right to obtain a portable copy of the data. The CPA also imposes obligations on data controllers such as purpose specification, data minimization, and the use of sensitive data, among other requirements. In addition, the CPA requires data controllers to conduct assessments when processing personal data in activities that present a heightened risk to consumers and assigns enforcement powers to the Colorado Attorney General (AG) and District Attorneys.
In addition to the CPA, House Bill 18-1128 for an Act Concerning Strengthening Protections for Consumer Data Privacy (the Act) was signed into law and entered into force on May 29, 2018. The Act amends § 6-1-713 of the Colorado Revised Statutes and concerns, among other things, the disposal of personal identifying information by requiring a written policy to be developed for the destruction or proper disposal of such documents. The Colorado Revised Statutes, as amended by the Act, set out the breach notification requirements, including stipulating the content and time frame for notices to be sent to the AG.
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