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      The fight over the fight for California’s privacy future

      WIRED · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 23 September, 2020 - 09:25

    The fight over the fight for California’s privacy future

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty Images)

    When state Senator Bob Hertzberg learned that an ambitious privacy initiative had gotten enough signatures to qualify for the ballot in California, he knew he had to act quickly.

    “My objective,” he says, “was to get the damn thing off the ballot.”

    It was the spring of 2018. Facebook’s emerging Cambridge Analytica scandal had cast a harsh light on the tech giants’ data-gathering practices, spurring calls for more consumer privacy protections. The initiative was the brainchild of Alastair Mactaggart, a wealthy San Francisco real estate developer, who had the idea in the shower in 2015 and funded the effort out of pocket. Mactaggart enlisted his neighbor Rick Arney and Mary Stone Ross, a former CIA analyst and lawyer, to help craft the ballot measure. None had any background in data privacy or, for that matter, anything related to the tech industry.

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