November greetings!
The Office of Privacy Data Protection (OPDP) is releasing its Washington State Agency Privacy Principles today.
I want to thank everyone who helped OPDP put the document together. The feedback we received from all our stakeholders was invaluable.
The intent of the publication is to guide agency practices to maintain public trust. Many services provided by state government require the collection of personal information. Public agencies have an obligation to handle personal information about Washington residents responsibly, fairly and transparently.
While the foundation for modern privacy principles was formed decades ago, there is not a specific version uniformly recognized as authoritative. As such, OPDP has settled on the following principles:
- Lawful, fair, and responsible use.
- Data minimization.
- Purpose limitation.
- Transparency & accountability.
- Due diligence.
- Individual participation.
- Security.
OPDP is also busy finalizing our legislative and privacy assessment reports. Both documents will be published next month.
Presentations
Please join us this Thursday, Nov. 19, from 10 -11 a.m., for our monthly webinar. This month's topic is the Keep Washington Working Act. We will discuss how to handle immigration status data appropriately.
The law, passed by the Washington State Legislature in 2019, establishes "a statewide policy supporting Washington State's economy and immigrants' role in the workplace."
We are honored to welcome these guest presenters:
- Nick Brown, Special Assistant Attorney General.
- Alejandro Sanchez, Special Assistant to the Governor.
- Yasmin Trudeau, Legislative Director for the state Attorney General's Office.
Please email privacy@ocio.wa.gov for a webinar invitation.
In other privacy news:
- From our former Chief Privacy Officer: When Artificial Intelligence and Big Data Collide - How Data Aggregation and Predictive Machines Threaten our Privacy and Autonomy.
- California voters passed a ballot initiative to significantly modify the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).
- Coverage in WSJ regarding the 2021 Washington Privacy Act. (Note: Article may require paid subscription.)
Stay safe!
Katy Ruckle
State Chief Privacy Officer