IAPP CIPP/US Practice Exam

Category - Professional

When not covered by federal statute, states often have the authority to set their privacy laws and regulations. State provisions can be generally broken into:
  1. Business/organizational obligations and consumer/citizen rights
  2. Citizen rights and state authority
  3. Enforcement agency obligations and business/organizational obligations
  4. Consumer rights and jurisdictional authority
Explanation
Answer: A - State privacy law provisions can be generally broken into business/organizational obligations and consumer/citizen rights. Like federal laws, state agencies or departments are often provided with the authority to seek enforcement actions for violations. In addition, some state privacy laws incorporate consumer/citizen’s rights to a private action for violations of privacy law.
Was this helpful? Upvote!
Login to contribute your own answer or details

Top questions

Related questions

Most popular on PracticeQuiz