California's Prop 24 Explained by a Programmer
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- čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
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Prop. 24 Full Text: voterguide.sos.ca.gov/proposi...
California Consumer Privacy Act: ccpa-info.com/
Mactaggart Introduces Prop. 24: www.caprivacy.org/a-closer-lo...
The Wire on Prop 24: www.wired.com/story/californi...
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The fun thing about laws like this, though it may not effect the internet as much, is that it's generally cheaper to just adhere to the strictest laws than have separate tooling or servers in this case tfor different areas
First you need good laws to force companies into protecting you. They wont do it unless forced. Second, you need tools to protect yourself when they ultimately find the loophole. It's a cat and mouse game. Great video.
I love your vids your looks and your voice... the way you explain stuff is so mesmerising you need more subs keep it up
Bic - awesome video. Very informative
You always learn from the first time, I guess. The same thing happened with paying for things with credit cards; so now when I visit California, I have to pay extra to use my debit card, and I have to cancel out the debit question to not pay extra when I pop in for a, well, pop.
I was just digging the outro music and then boom bic. Great job.
BIC Hey Rey I was wondering what your views on password managers are? It seems like password managers are a single point of vulnerability which kind of defeats the purpose of security?
Bic... (DS/TT) Also I did some research myself (turns out not enough) and have already voted against. Mainly because it seemed like a good bill but with too may flaws and I figured that they could fix it for the next election. Wish I saw this earlier though. Great info and thank you for making it. I learned a lot.
So I work at a fairly big digital media company in SF on their Trust and Safety team. I'm fairly new to the role, so I'm still researching and trying to learn about the nuances in these initiatives, but I can tell say that ccpa and canada's new law are part of our regular data retrieval/removal/retention request workflow. Luckily most of us on the team are privacy wonks, so it's not a big fight to comply (which can't be said for every company), but either way I can defs say I personally support the protections provided by prop 24 (I mean, I mailed in my ballot weeks ago, I hope I was right lol) I'm interested in seeing what my colleagues think though, they have a lot more industry experience, and I don't think this has come up super recently in chats. I can share what I glean from those though if you're interested.
Also, I need to find my Bic, it's around here somewhere...
Love your song at the end!
isn't gdpr something similar?
At the start I was thinking this sounds a lot like GDPR, but then all the caveats about "lost revenue" and having to manually opt out reminded me of how differently these issues are treated in USA. You have to give the companies so much leeway so their lobbyists don't just squash it right away. Like the pay for privacy part; Facebook could easily say "we expect the user will be using our service until death," and then calculate an absurd amount based on age. Or the fact that it being an opt out means most people wont even bother (because they are not tech literate enough to know) instead of an opt in to share your information (like with GDPR)
Bic
Ps any tips for a nood learning MATLAB
BIC!
So after living in the US for a few years I'm now back in Europe (Germany) where the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) reigns SOMEWHAT supreme. I notice that some functionality in Instagram and Facebook isn't there (mostly stickers?) and pop ups about cookies are abundant.
However, on the other hand I see this move towards more privacy demand play directly into the hands of people that don't want a digital economy and I feel like I'm back in the 90s when it comes to dealing with the government. There was supposed to be a "Digital-Offensive" meaning that systems and especially schools would be upgraded to have computers, books would be on tablets, etc but that was put on ice. But that's a different topic than what you asked for.
I've got a bic somewhere, had it for a few years because I don't smoke, just like the idea of carrying a lighter. Really want a brass zippo now that I think of it, probably never use that either.
Thanks for the info, it's been confusing trying to research all the props this year. So many contradicting opinions out there. Bic.
Nice bic ;) I'm gonna go look into Canadian cyber security laws now and find the loopholes in them :/
I love videos like this
Thank you soooooooo much for the info!!! Way better watching someone educated share the real info!! I buy BIC also! They just seem to last longer 😉! PS I'm from cali also so I'm voting on this shiiiizzzzz!
I work in the call center industry, customer service for the big ones. i've had to comply to GDPA and to the Californian Act. Honestly these laws only hurt the people because we can never provide information to the people until they can prove their identity. And proving an identity its weird and people don't understand what a shared computer can do
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Also I aspire to be an ethical hacker but I can't find any information online on the topic. I can all ready code with lots of different languages so I hope that will help with my job choice. Any advice on how I could learn hacking ?
Thank you for explaining the background of this. Privacy is dead
BIC, you awesome
Is it make for California or it's worldwide that accept this law.
Lots of info to swift through.... bic btw
Does this law only affect California or all states. I’m just kinda curious since I live in Minnesota.
Bic. Do you check proton?
The idea of paying for privacy is crazy. I mean, even if it only costs $5 to protect your data, how many companies will you have to do this for? The fact of the matter is, privacy should be free for all by default. We should have to opt in to have our data harvested and especially to have it sold or shared. I like what they are trying to do, but this portion as a step in the wrong direction.
I think my biggest issue here is the way this takes advantage of the underprivileged. The lower, and possibly middle, class will be taken advantage of while those with the money to do so, will pay to opt out. At least now we're all screwed together.
Another issue here is, how do you pay to opt out? Is it one flat rate of say, $20 per person, or do they charge you according to the data they have? We have your phone number ($5), address, ($0.50), 3 past addresses ($0.10 x 3), and your DoB ($2.50) for a total of $8.30. Pay for privacy is a horrible precedence to set.
BIC make just about everything.
EFF is totally against this, so many loop holes
Bic - here from discord and the tok
Bic i hope you had a good flight.
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bob
Can you do a vid on vpn? Laws are changing constantly and software of all calibers. PIA-Thoughts?
And can an individual use you and grizzly services if they have no money but are happy to share resources? 😂 Signal? 🤦♂️ Thanks for your videos! 💗💓💗
Bic!
Bic :-)
BIC Hey Rey I was wondering what your views on password managers are? It seems like password managers are a single point of vulnerability which kind of defeats the purpose of security?
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