Former Ambassador and Deputy Assistant Secretary Daniel Sepulveda joins us to talk about Privacy, CCPA, GDPR, and the fundamental right to control our own data. Listen now!
With all the talk about digital privacy, how that data being used is a question many are asking, and former Ambassador and Assistant Secretary Danny Sepulveda is here to talk data and everything that comes along with it.
In 2018 California passage passed a data privacy law, will other states follow suit in 2019?
There are three big service providers when it comes to Big Data, do we even have to name them anymore?
The genie is out of the bottle on data itself, but there needs to be context around how that data is being used, especially by massive companies with unparalleled power.
Future Commerce is beyond excited to haveformer Ambassador and Assistant Secretary Danny Sepulveda on the show, Danny is currently the VP of Government Relations at Media Math.
Brian wonders if someone will someone show up to the Senate in high-end denim at some point?
Brian says that how corporations use and utilize data is one of the most critical issues of our micro-generation.
So CCPA: or the California Consumer Privacy Act, has set a standard for states to set limits on what big corporations can do with their users' data.
Brian asks Danny if other states will follow California's example, and what is being done on a federal level?
New Jersey and Illinois both have begun to discuss digital privacy laws similar to the CCPA.
In New Jersey, AB 4902, would give users actual control over their personal data privacy.
A 2008 law passed in Illinois bans companies from using a person's scans of people's faces, irises, and fingerprints without consent, and that formerly hypothetical situation has become very real now.
Brian and Danny agree that the genie is pretty much out of the bottle when it comes to this new data-driven society.
In Washington state, the Washington Privacy Act failed to pass the house of representatives, for a multi-layered partisan reason.
Will companies step up to the plate to help retailers comply with CCPA and emerging regulations surrounding digital privacy?
So are any campaigns jumping on the digital-privacy bandwagon for 2020?
Both Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar have spoken about the need to modify and reform current anti-trust laws.
It's pretty troubling that there is an incredible amount of power being concentrated in Silicon Valley.
One of Danny's wishes for consumers in this data-driven market is that they can be seen the way they as the consumer wish to be seen.
One of the ways Brian recommends that retailers can get ahead of this data overload is to collect their own data for customers so that they don't have to get it from someplace else down the road.
Brian asks Danny what his recommendations are for retailers and merchants, long-term and short-term.
Danny says in the short term, retailers need to be focused on building relationships and maintaining relationships with clients and continue providing value.
In the long term, Danny says it is imperative for companies to have in-house team members that know as much about the technology being utilized as the tech companies they partner with.
Go over to Futurecommerce.fm and give us your feedback! We love to hear from our listeners!
Retail Tech is moving fast, and Future Commerce is moving faster.