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The recently introduced the American Privacy Rights Act (APRA) represents the latest attempt to pass a comprehensive federal privacy law in the US that would vern privacy generally across the country. The draft bill proposes novel compromises on controversial topics such as federal pre-emption and rights of private action, which need refinement and are likely to be changed in the legislative process. The attempt to cover not-for-profit entities without accounting for their different purposes seems ill conceived and raises constitutional concerns. This paper examines the APRA in its constitutional, historical and policy contexts.
Determann et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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