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Privacy Technology

For $3, a 'Robot Lawyer' Will Sue Data Brokers That Don't Delete Your Personal and Location Info (fortune.com) 26

In January, a new law gave consumers the power to stop companies collecting their personal information. The law, known as the California Consumer Privacy Act (or the CCPA), can be a powerful tool for privacy, but it comes with a catch: Consumers who want to exercise their CCPA rights must contact every data broker individually, and there are more than a hundred of them. But now they have an easier option. From a report: On Thursday, a startup called DoNotPay unveiled a service it calls Digital Health that automates the data-deletion process. Priced at $3 a month, the service will contact more than 100 data brokers on your behalf and demand they delete your and your family's personal information. It will also show you the types of data the brokers have collected -- such as phone number or location info -- and even initiate legal proceedings if the firms fail to comply. The monthly fee also gives subscribers access to DoNotPay's other automated avenging services, like appealing parking tickets in any city, claiming compensation for poor in-flight Wi-Fi, and Robo Revenge, which sues robocallers.
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For $3, a 'Robot Lawyer' Will Sue Data Brokers That Don't Delete Your Personal and Location Info

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  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday March 05, 2020 @02:15PM (#59800436)

    When DoNotPay doesn't delete your personal info, you'll have to hire another robot lawyer to sue them... Then it will just be robot lawyer turtles all the way down.

  • Some irony in the force?
  • So you say, "Delete my data," they say, "OK," and you believe them? I dunno, seems like there'd be a conflict of interest here. I wish there were a way to test whether they still had your info, like if you keep getting a certain ad.
    • It's tricky... for sure. we get requests to Opt-out. But if you aren't broker 'selling' the data, it also doesn't apply.

      and deletion, what about financial audits and archives. There's no time frame for the CCPA, technically if a broker had data from someone in the 60's, they'd still have to report it/delete it...

      It's kind of like the wild west at the moment, businesses trying to do anything not to be sued.

  • Not sure if they've changed it since the last time I tried the app, but it asks for your bank account information as part of being able to use the app. That was a big ol' pile of "nope", as far as I'm concerned.

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