Establishes the New York child data protection act to protect minors from having their personal data accessed; provides exceptions in certain circumstances.
NEW YORK STATE ASSEMBLY MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT OF LEGISLATION submitted in accordance with Assembly Rule III, Sec 1(f)
 
BILL NUMBER: A8149A
SPONSOR: Rozic
 
TITLE OF BILL:
An act to amend the general business law, in relation to establishing
the New York child data protection act
 
PURPOSE:
The purpose of this bill is to protect the privacy of children and young
adults by restricting digital services from collecting or using the
personal data of users they know are under the age of 18 without
consent, and requiring safeguards for the sale or disclosure of the
personal data of users they know are under the age of 18.
 
SUMMARY OF SPECIFIC PROVISIONS:
Section 1 creates a new article 39-FF titled The New York Child Data
Protection Act. The article prohibits online sites from collecting,
using, sharing, or otherwise processing any personal data of individuals
under the age of 18 without informed consent. It also prohibits disclos-
ing any data of minors to third parties unless there is a written bind-
ing agreement.
This act covers conduct that occurs wholly or partly in New York State
and authorizes the Attorney General to bring proceedings or special
actions when online platforms violate this law.
Section 2 provides a severability clause.
Section 3 provides the effective date.
 
JUSTIFICATION:
Children now live much of their lives online. They learn online, social-
ize online, and shop online. They make mistakes online, and they discov-
er who they are online. Right now, there's nothing stopping websites or
other digital services from monitoring every minute detail of our chil-
dren's online lives, creating profiles of every decision our children
make or avoid. This information can be used against our children's
interests, including by precisely crafting and targeting advertisements
children are uniquely ill-suited to resist, or by haunting children with
records of teenage experiences as they move from childhood to adulthood.
Children should be able to freely experience the online world without
concern of omnipresent monitoring and recording. They should be free to
be children, without needing to second guess the long term consequences
of every decision. This bill will help children in New York to have that
experience again, through two main provisions:
First, this bill will require privacy be the rule, not the exception.
If a digital service knows a user is a minor or the service is primarily
directed to minors, it will default to only being able to use that
child's data in ways that are strictly necessary to provide the service.
It won't be able to sell that data, or use it in ways that the user-or
user's parents, for children under thirteen-don't affirmatively say that
they want.
Second, once information has seeped into the larger ecosystem it can be
almost impossible to track down and remove, so this bill will require
that digital services that use third-party service providers contractu-
ally restrict those third parties from using the personal data of minors
except for specified purposes, with accompanying safeguards to ensure
compliance.
This bill ensures that while children's privacy is protected, it does
not require age verification. It requires, however, digital services to
respect browser or device signals that a user is a minor, which will
help parents and teens browse the internet without restrictions while
preserving their privacy.
 
PRIOR LEGISLATIVE HISTORY:
This is a new bill.
 
FISCAL IMPACTS:
This bill has minimal fiscal impacts on the State or localities.
 
EFFECTIVE DATE:
Effective one year after the bill is signed into law.
STATE OF NEW YORK
________________________________________________________________________
8149--A
2023-2024 Regular Sessions
IN ASSEMBLY
October 13, 2023
___________
Introduced by M. of A. ROZIC, REYES, SHIMSKY, MAGNARELLI, HEVESI,
BUTTENSCHON, FAHY, DICKENS, McMAHON, GLICK, DE LOS SANTOS, DURSO,
McDONOUGH, GANDOLFO, SIMON, ZACCARO, DeSTEFANO, WALLACE, BERGER,
BURDICK, SEAWRIGHT, McDONALD, BEEPHAN, SMULLEN, MANKTELOW,
J. A. GIGLIO, SLATER, ARDILA, SILLITTI, DARLING, K. BROWN, EPSTEIN,
LEVENBERG, WEPRIN, BICHOTTE HERMELYN, LUPARDO, MIKULIN, PAULIN, SOLAG-
ES, SANTABARBARA, L. ROSENTHAL, DAVILA, BURGOS, CHANDLER-WATERMAN,
TAYLOR, ZEBROWSKI, JENSEN, KIM, RIVERA, ZINERMAN, MAHER, WALKER,
CUNNINGHAM, CONRAD, CLARK, JACKSON, DAIS, RAJKUMAR, FALL, LUNSFORD,
FORREST, LEE, GIBBS, ANDERSON, LAVINE, STERN, BRAUNSTEIN, DINOWITZ,
JEAN-PIERRE, SEPTIMO, KELLES, CARROLL, MAMDANI, HUNTER, BARRETT, BRON-
SON, PHEFFER AMATO, O'DONNELL, COOK, GUNTHER, BURKE, AUBRY, JONES,
STIRPE, SAYEGH, RAGA, GALLAHAN, TAPIA, THIELE, GALLAGHER, ALVAREZ,
SIMONE, EICHENSTEIN, PRETLOW, MORINELLO, SHRESTHA, EACHUS, MEEKS,
JACOBSON, BRABENEC -- Multi-Sponsored by -- M. of A. GONZALEZ-ROJAS,
WOERNER -- read once and referred to the Committee on Science and
Technology -- recommitted to the Committee on Science and Technology
in accordance with Assembly Rule 3, sec. 2 -- committee discharged,
bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said
committee
AN ACT to amend the general business law, in relation to establishing
the New York child data protection act
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-bly, do enact as follows:
1 Section 1. The general business law is amended by adding a new article
2 39-FF to read as follows:
3 ARTICLE 39-FF
4 NEW YORK CHILD DATA PROTECTION ACT
5 Section 899-ee. Definitions.
6 899-ff. Privacy protection by default.
7 899-gg. Processors.
EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
[] is old law to be omitted.
LBD13150-12-4
A. 8149--A 2
1 899-hh. Ongoing coverage.
2 899-ii. Respecting user-provided age flags.
3 899-jj. Protections for third-party operators.
4 899-kk. Rulemaking authority.
5 899-ll. Scope.
6 899-mm. Remedies.
7 § 899-ee. Definitions. For purposes of this article, the following
8 terms shall have the following meanings:
9 1. "Covered user" shall mean a user of a website, online service,
10 online application, mobile application, or connected device, or portion
11 thereof, in the state of New York who is:
12 (a) actually known by the operator of such website, online service,
13 online application, mobile application, or connected device to be a
14 minor; or
15 (b) using a website, online service, online application, mobile appli-
16 cation, or connected device primarily directed to minors.
17 2. "Minor" shall mean a natural person under the age of eighteen.
18 3. "Operator" shall mean any person who operates or provides a website
19 on the internet, online service, online application, mobile application,
20 or connected device, and who, alone or jointly with others, controls the
21 purposes and means of processing personal data. A person that acts as
22 both an operator and processor shall comply with the applicable obli-
23 gations of an operator and the obligations of a processor, depending on
24 its role with respect to each specific processing of personal data.
25 4. "Personal data" shall mean any data that identifies or could
26 reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly, with a specific natural
27 person or device.
28 5. "Process" or "processing" shall mean an operation or set of oper-
29 ations performed on personal data, including but not limited to the
30 collection, use, access, sharing, sale, monetization, analysis,
31 retention, creation, generation, derivation, recording, organization,
32 structuring, storage, disclosure, transmission, disposal, licensing,
33 destruction, deletion, modification, or deidentification of personal
34 data.
35 6. "Primarily directed to minors" shall mean a website, online
36 service, online application, mobile application, or connected device, or
37 a portion thereof, that is targeted to minors. A website, online
38 service, online application, mobile application, or connected device, or
39 portion thereof, shall not be deemed directed primarily to minors solely
40 because such website, online service, online application, mobile appli-
41 cation, or connected device, or portion thereof refers or links to any
42 other website, online service, online application, mobile application,
43 or connected device directed to minors by using information location
44 tools, including a directory, index, reference, pointer, or hypertext
45 link. A website, online service, online application, mobile application,
46 or connected device, or portion thereof, shall be deemed directed to
47 minors when it has actual knowledge that it is collecting personal data
48 of users directly from users of another website, online service, online
49 application, mobile application, or connected device primarily directed
50 to minors.
51 7. "Sell" shall mean to share personal data for monetary or other
52 valuable consideration. "Selling" shall not include the sharing of
53 personal data for monetary or other valuable consideration to another
54 person as an asset that is part of a merger, acquisition, bankruptcy, or
55 other transaction in which that person assumes control of all or part of
56 the operator's assets or the sharing of personal data with a processor.
A. 8149--A 3
1 8. "Processor" shall mean any person who processes data on behalf of
2 the operator. A person that acts as both an operator and processor shall
3 comply with the applicable obligations of an operator and the obli-
4 gations of a processor, depending on its role with respect to each
5 specific processing of personal data.
6 9. "Third-party operator" shall mean an operator who is not the oper-
7 ator:
8 (a) with whom the user intentionally and directly interacts; or
9 (b) that collects personal data from the direct and current inter-
10 actions with the user.
11 § 899-ff. Privacy protection by default. 1. Except as provided for in
12 subdivision six of this section and section eight hundred ninety-nine-jj
13 of this article, an operator shall not process, or allow a processor to
14 process, the personal data of a covered user collected through the use
15 of a website, online service, online application, mobile application, or
16 connected device, or allow a third-party operator to collect the
17 personal data of a covered user collected through the operator's
18 website, online service, online application, mobile application, or
19 connected device unless and to the extent:
20 (a) the covered user is twelve years of age or younger and processing
21 is permitted under 15 U.S.C. § 6502 and its implementing regulations; or
22 (b) the covered user is thirteen years of age or older and processing
23 is strictly necessary for an activity set forth in subdivision two of
24 this section, or informed consent has been obtained as set forth in
25 subdivision three of this section.
26 2. For the purposes of paragraph (b) of subdivision one of this
27 section, the processing of personal data of a covered user is permissi-
28 ble where it is strictly necessary for the following permissible
29 purposes:
30 (a) providing or maintaining a specific product or service requested
31 by the covered user;
32 (b) conducting the operator's internal business operations. For
33 purposes of this paragraph, such internal business operations shall not
34 include any activities related to marketing, advertising, research and
35 development, providing products or services to third parties, or prompt-
36 ing covered users to use the website, online service, online applica-
37 tion, mobile application, or connected device when it is not in use;
38 (c) identifying and repairing technical errors that impair existing or
39 intended functionality;
40 (d) protecting against malicious, fraudulent, or illegal activity;
41 (e) investigating, establishing, exercising, preparing for, or defend-
42 ing legal claims;
43 (f) complying with federal, state, or local laws, rules, or regu-
44 lations;
45 (g) complying with a civil, criminal, or regulatory inquiry, investi-
46 gation, subpoena, or summons by federal, state, local, or other govern-
47 mental authorities;
48 (h) detecting, responding to, or preventing security incidents or
49 threats; or
50 (i) protecting the vital interests of a natural person.
51 3. (a) For the purposes of paragraph (b) of subdivision one of this
52 section, to process personal data of a covered user where such process-
53 ing is not strictly necessary under subdivision two of this section,
54 informed consent must be obtained from the covered user either through a
55 device communication or signal pursuant to the provisions of subdivision
A. 8149--A 4
1 two of section eight hundred ninety-nine-ii of this article or through a
2 request. Requests for such informed consent shall:
3 (i) be made separately from any other transaction or part of a trans-
4 action;
5 (ii) be made in the absence of any mechanism that has the purpose or
6 substantial effect of obscuring, subverting, or impairing a covered
7 user's decision-making regarding authorization for the processing;
8 (iii) clearly and conspicuously state that the processing for which
9 the consent is requested is not strictly necessary, and that the covered
10 user may decline without preventing continued use of the website, online
11 service, online application, mobile application, or connected device;
12 and
13 (iv) clearly present an option to refuse to provide consent as the
14 most prominent option.
15 (b) Such informed consent, once given, shall be freely revocable at
16 any time, and shall be at least as easy to revoke as it was to provide.
17 (c) If a covered user declines to provide or revokes informed consent
18 for processing, another request may not be made for such processing for
19 the following calendar year, however an operator may make available a
20 mechanism that a covered user can use unprompted and at the user's
21 discretion to provide informed consent.
22 (d) If a covered user's device communicates or signals that the
23 covered user declines to provide informed consent for processing pursu-
24 ant to the provisions of subdivision two of section eight hundred nine-
25 ty-nine-ii of this article, an operator shall not request informed
26 consent for such processing, however an operator may make available a
27 mechanism that a covered user can use unprompted and at the user's
28 discretion to provide informed consent.
29 4. Except where processing is strictly necessary to provide a product,
30 service, or feature, an operator may not withhold, degrade, lower the
31 quality, or increase the price of any product, service, or feature to a
32 covered user due to the operator not obtaining verifiable parental
33 consent under 15 U.S.C. § 6502 and its implementing regulations or
34 informed consent under subdivision three of this section.
35 5. Except as provided for in section eight hundred ninety-nine-jj of
36 this article, an operator shall not purchase or sell, or allow a proces-
37 sor or third-party operator to purchase or sell, the personal data of a
38 covered user.
39 6. Within thirty days of determining or being informed that a user is
40 a covered user, an operator shall:
41 (a) dispose of, destroy, or delete and direct all of its processors to
42 dispose of, destroy, or delete all personal data of such covered user
43 that it maintains, unless processing such personal data is permitted
44 under 15 U.S.C. § 6502 and its implementing regulations, is strictly
45 necessary for an activity listed in subdivision two of this section, or
46 informed consent is obtained as set forth in subdivision three of this
47 section; and
48 (b) notify any third-party operators to whom it knows it disclosed
49 personal data of that covered user, and any third-party operators it
50 knows it allowed to process the personal data that may include the
51 personal data of that user, that the user is a covered user.
52 7. Except as provided for in section eight hundred ninety-nine-jj of
53 this article, prior to disclosing personal data to a third-party opera-
54 tor, or permitting a third-party operator to collect personal data from
55 the operator's website, online service, online application, mobile
A. 8149--A 5
1 application, connected device, or portion thereof, the operator shall
2 disclose to the third-party operator:
3 (a) when their website, online service, online application, mobile
4 application, connected device, or portion thereof, is primarily directed
5 to minors; or
6 (b) when the personal data concerns a covered user.
7 § 899-gg. Processors. 1. Except as provided for in section eight
8 hundred ninety-nine-jj of this article, no operator or processor shall
9 disclose the personal data of a covered user to a third party, or allow
10 the processing of the personal data of a covered user by a third party,
11 without a written, binding agreement governing such disclosure or proc-
12 essing. Such agreement shall clearly set forth instructions for the
13 nature and purpose of the processor's processing of the personal data,
14 instructions for using or further disclosing the personal data, and the
15 rights and obligations of both parties.
16 2. Processors shall process the personal data of covered users only
17 when permitted by the terms of the agreement pursuant to subdivision one
18 of this section, unless otherwise required by federal, state, or local
19 laws, rules, or regulations.
20 3. A processor shall, at the direction of the operator, dispose of,
21 destroy, or delete personal data, and notify any other processor to
22 which it disclosed the personal data of the operator's direction, unless
23 retention of the personal data is required by federal, state, or local
24 laws, rules, or regulations. The processor shall provide evidence of
25 such deletion to the operator within thirty days of the deletion
26 request.
27 4. A processor shall delete or return to the operator all personal
28 data of covered users at the end of its provision of services, unless
29 retention of the personal data is required by federal, state, or local
30 laws, rules, or regulations. The processor shall provide evidence of
31 such deletion to the operator within thirty days of the deletion
32 request.
33 5. An agreement pursuant to subdivision one of this section shall
34 require that the processor:
35 (a) process the personal data of covered users only pursuant to the
36 instructions of the operator, unless otherwise required by federal,
37 state, or local laws, rules, or regulations;
38 (b) assist the operator in meeting the operator's obligations under
39 this article. The processor shall, taking into account the nature of
40 processing and the information available to them, assist the operator by
41 taking appropriate technical and organizational measures, to the extent
42 practicable, for the fulfillment of the operator's obligation to delete
43 personal data pursuant to section eight hundred ninety-nine-ff of this
44 article;
45 (c) upon reasonable request of the operator, make available to the
46 operator all information in its possession necessary to demonstrate the
47 processor's compliance with the obligations in this section;
48 (d) allow, and cooperate with, reasonable assessments by the operator
49 or the operator's designated assessor for purposes of evaluating compli-
50 ance with the obligations of this article. Alternatively, the processor
51 may arrange for a qualified and independent assessor to conduct an
52 assessment of the processor's policies and technical and organizational
53 measures in support of the obligations under this article using an
54 appropriate and accepted control standard or framework and assessment
55 procedure for such assessments. The processor shall provide a report of
56 such assessment to the operator upon request; and
A. 8149--A 6
1 (e) notify the operator a reasonable time in advance before disclosing
2 or transferring the personal data of covered users to any further
3 processors, which may be in the form of a regularly updated list of
4 further processors that may access personal data of covered users.
5 § 899-hh. Ongoing coverage. 1. Upon learning that a user is no longer
6 a covered user, an operator:
7 (a) shall not process the personal data of the covered user that would
8 otherwise be subject to the provisions of this article until it receives
9 informed consent pursuant to subdivision three of section eight hundred
10 ninety-nine-ff of this article, and
11 (b) shall provide notice to such user that they may no longer be enti-
12 tled to all of the protections and rights provided under this article.
13 2. Upon learning that a user is no longer a covered user, an operator
14 shall provide notice to such user that such user is no longer covered by
15 the protections and rights provided under this article.
16 § 899-ii. Respecting user-provided age flags. 1. For the purposes of
17 this article, an operator shall treat a user as a covered user if the
18 user's device communicates or signals that the user is or shall be
19 treated as a minor, including through a browser plug-in or privacy
20 setting, device setting, or other mechanism that complies with regu-
21 lations promulgated by the attorney general.
22 2. For the purposes of subdivision three of section eight hundred
23 ninety-nine-ff of this article, an operator shall adhere to any clear
24 and unambiguous communications or signals from a covered user's device,
25 including through a browser plug-in or privacy setting, device setting,
26 or other mechanism, concerning processing that the covered user consents
27 to or declines to consent to. An operator shall not adhere to unclear or
28 ambiguous communications or signals from a covered user's device, and
29 shall instead request informed consent pursuant to the provisions of
30 paragraph a of subdivision three of section eight hundred ninety-nine-ff
31 of this article.
32 § 899-jj. Protections for third-party operators. Sections eight
33 hundred ninety-nine-ff and eight hundred ninety-nine-gg of this article
34 shall not apply where a third-party operator is processing the personal
35 data of a covered user of another website, online service, online appli-
36 cation, mobile application, or connected device, or portion thereof,
37 provided that the third-party operator received reasonable written
38 representations that the covered user provided informed consent for such
39 processing, or:
40 1. the operator does not have actual knowledge that the covered user
41 is a minor; and
42 2. the operator does not have actual knowledge that the other website,
43 online service, online application, mobile application, or connected
44 device, or portion thereof, is primarily directed to minors.
45 § 899-kk. Rulemaking authority. The attorney general may promulgate
46 such rules and regulations as are necessary to effectuate and enforce
47 the provisions of this article.
48 § 899-ll. Scope. 1. This article shall apply to conduct that occurs in
49 whole or in part in the state of New York. For purposes of this article,
50 commercial conduct takes place wholly outside of the state of New York
51 if the business collected such information while the covered user was
52 outside of the state of New York, no part of the use of the covered
53 user's personal data occurred in the state of New York, and no personal
54 data collected while the covered user was in the state of New York is
55 used.
A. 8149--A 7
1 2. Nothing in this article shall be construed to prohibit an operator
2 from storing a covered user's personal data that was collected pursuant
3 to section eight hundred ninety-nine-ff of this article when such
4 covered user is in the state.
5 3. Nothing in this article shall be construed to impose liability for
6 commercial activities or actions by operators subject to 15 U.S.C. 6501
7 that is inconsistent with the treatment of such activities or actions
8 under 15 U.S.C. 6502.
9 § 899-mm. Remedies. Whenever it appears to the attorney general,
10 either upon complaint or otherwise, that any person, within or outside
11 the state, has engaged in or is about to engage in any of the acts or
12 practices stated to be unlawful in this article, the attorney general
13 may bring an action or special proceeding in the name and on behalf of
14 the people of the state of New York to enjoin any violation of this
15 article, to obtain restitution of any moneys or property obtained
16 directly or indirectly by any such violation, to obtain disgorgement of
17 any profits or gains obtained directly or indirectly by any such
18 violation, including but not limited to the destruction of unlawfully
19 obtained data, to obtain damages caused directly or indirectly by any
20 such violation, to obtain civil penalties of up to five thousand dollars
21 per violation, and to obtain any such other and further relief as the
22 court may deem proper, including preliminary relief.
23 § 2. Severability. If any clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision,
24 section or part of this act shall be adjudged by any court of competent
25 jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair, or
26 invalidate the remainder thereof, but shall be confined in its operation
27 to the clause, sentence, paragraph, subdivision, section or part thereof
28 directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment shall have
29 been rendered. It is hereby declared to be the intent of the legislature
30 that this act would have been enacted even if such invalid provisions
31 had not been included herein.
32 § 3. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become a
33 law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any
34 rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act on its
35 effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
36 effective date.