Rhode Island Data Transparency and Privacy Protection Act

What you need to know about the RIDTPPA:

Does the RIDTPPA Apply To You?

RIDTPPA applies to for-profit entities that:

  1. Conduct business in Rhode Island or produce products or services targeted to residents of Rhode Island (consumers), and 
  2. Annually (during a calendar year) control or process the PI of either:
    1. 35,000 or more consumers, excluding personal information used solely for completing payment transactions; or
    2. 10,000 or more consumers and derives over 20% of gross revenue from the sale of personal information.
When Does RIDTPPA NOT Apply?

Exempt Entities: Rhode Island offers limited entity-level exemptions, including:

  • State government entities or contractor for a state agency;
  • Institute of higher education;
  • Non-profits;
  • National securities associates registered under the SEC Act;
  • GLBA covered entities; or
  • HIPAA covered entities

Exempt Data: Rhode Island also offers limited data-level exemptions, including (but limited too):

  • PHI covered under HIPAA and processed by a covered entity or business associate;
  • GLBA-covered data;
  • Various federally and internationally protected health and patient information, including that protected by the Common Rule, human subject data, and more;
  • Various forms of credit data regulated by the Fair Credit Reporting Act; and
  • Data covered by a wide variety of other federal laws including Family Educational Rights, Farm Credit Act, and Privacy Act, and Driver’s Privacy Protection Act.

Exempt Use Cases: RIDTPPA is not applicable in some circumstances, such as:

  • Processing PI in an employment or commercial (B2B) context;
  • Processing PI for emergency contact purposes; and
  • Processing PI of another individual in relation to the provision of benefits.

In addition, RIDTPPA specifies that its law should not be construed to restrict a business’s collection, use, or retention of PI for:

  • Conducting internal research for development, improvement, and repair of products, services, and technology (R&D);
  • Product recalls;
  • Identifying and repairing technical errors that impair existing or intended functionality; and
  • Performing internal operations.

It also doesn’t restrict the dissemination or sale of product sales summaries or statistical information or aggregate customer data which may include personally identifiable information (which should be noted is not a defined term and may be distinct from personal data/personal information).

 

Key Components of RI’s Data Privacy Law

What Constitutes Personal Information Under RIDTPPA?

The RIDTPPA covers “personal data,” also called personal information or PI, which is defined as “any information that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable person.”

The definition exempts de-identified and information made publicly available.

What Constitutes Sensitive PI Under RIDTPPA?

Rhode Island’s definition of sensitive PI consists of:

  • Racial or ethnic origin;
  • Religious beliefs;
  • Mental or physical condition, treatment, or diagnosis;
  • Sex life or sexual orientation;
  • Citizenship or immigration status;
  • PI collected from a known child;
  • Precise geolocation data; or
  • Genetic or biometric data processed for identification purposes.
Any Other Categories of Data I Should Think About?

Where a controller processes de-identified data, Rhode Island requires it to take reasonable measures to ensure the data cannot be associated with an individual, publicly commit to maintaining such data without an attempt to re-identify it, and contractually obligate any recipients of the data to comply with the RIDTPPA.

Rhode Island also exempts pseudonymous data from privacy rights requests where the controller can show it keeps information that would allow the data to be re-identified separate and subject to technical and organizational controls that prevent its use for re-identification.

Is Consent Needed to Process Sensitive Data?

In a word: YES!

Is Consent Needed for Any Other Processing?

Parental consent is required to collect and process PI about a known child (under 13), which reflects COPPA in its age limit, but COPPA applies to PI collected from a child under 13.

Notably for Rhode Island, there is no requirement for consent to be received for the secondary use of information that is not necessary or compatible with the purpose for collection and hasn’t been noticed to the consumer.

Whenever consent is revoked a controller has 15 days to effectuate revocation.

What Needs to Be Included in the Privacy Notice?

The entire section on privacy notices presents some challenges for compliance, as the law neither defines “personally identifiable information,” nor does it seem to regulate it in any other way. This issue, among others in the privacy notice section of the law, suggest either a drafting error or leftover language from an earlier version of the bill. The applicability and intention of this entire section are somewhat unclear.

Nonetheless, the section on privacy notices only applies to commercial websites or internet service providers that collect, store, and sell customers’ personally identifiable information. The notice must be conspicuous and posted on the homepage of the company’s website (where applicable) using the hyperlinked term “Privacy.” It also allows for the required notice information to exist in in a “customer agreement or incorporated addendum.”

A privacy notice must include:

  • Categories of PI collected through a website or online service;
  • A list of all third parties to whom the controller has sold or may sell personally identifiable information (again, not a defined term);
  • An active email or other online mechanism to contact the controller;
  • That they sell PI or use it for targeted advertising (where applicable); and
  • A list of privacy rights and methods to exercise them as well as how to appeal a rights decision.

Notably, unlike other privacy laws, there is no requirement to disclose the purpose for processing. Note also that the disclosure of the categories of PI is limited to what is collected online — the obligation does not apply to PI collected offline.

What Constitutes “Sale” of PI?

Rhode Island defines “sale” to include exchange for monetary or other valuable consideration.

There are limits on the definition of “sale” to ensure that certain business functions are not unintentionally impeded by this law. Examples of activities deemed not to be a sale include: the disclosure of PI to provide a product or service requested by the consumer, disclosure of PI intentionally made public, and the disclosure of PI as part of a merger.

How Will the RIDTPPA Be Enforced?

The RI Attorney General has sole enforcement authority, and the law does not include a right to cure.  Violations of the act are subject to enforcement under the state’s deceptive trade practice laws. Penalties for violations range from $100 – 500, and there is a provision prohibiting organizations from setting up international shell companies to bypass the act.

Data Privacy is Just Good Business