The passage of the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) has now raised the question as to whether the measures companies have implemented to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) will satisfy the CCPA. Unfortunately, the answer is largely, “No.”
CCPA vs GDPR:
Table 1 – Other Differences
| GDPR | CCPA | |
| Basis for consent | Opt in | Opt out |
| Who it applies to | Any organization holding personal data on EU citizens | For-profit entities that process personal data of California residents and either:
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| Rights for individuals | Access to data being held, right to erasure, correction, and object to automated processing. Right to notification if there is a data breach. | Right to disclosure and objection relating to who data is being sold to, no discrimination if individual objects to data sold. Right of access to data being held. Right to know how personal data is being used. Right to know who data has been provided to. |
| When does it come into force | May 25, 2018 | Jan 1, 2020 |
| Financial Penalties | 4% of turnover or €20m (whichever is greater) | $7,500 per violation. $750 or actual damages for each individual, whichever is greater |
| Time allowed to respond to a request | 1 month | 45 days |
Our compliance consultants are here to help if you have any questions on how to properly apply these new regulations to your organization.