The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and a non -profit privacy group have called on several states to investigate that the “hundreds” of data brokers have not registered with state consumer protection agencies according to local rules.
A analysis in partnership with the Privacy Rights Clearing House (PRC) has shown that many data brokers have failed to enroll in all four states with rules that require that some states prevent users from learning what kind of information they will collect and how to collect information. These results can be explained by variations in the definition of data broker, but they can indicate that some brokers are breaking the law.
Data Brokers are companies that collect and sell personal information about people, including their names, addresses, phone numbers, financial information and more. Consumers have little control over this information, create serious confessional concerns, and efforts to address these concerns at the federal level have mostly failed. Last month, Lexinxis Risk Solutions have revealed data violations that can reveal the name, social security numbers, driver’s license numbers, and contact information for more than 364,000 people.
Four states – California, Texas, Oregon, and Vermont – try to register them with consumer protection agencies and share details about it. For example, users in California can use the online database of various data brokers registered in the state, see contact information, and find data collection methods. Meanwhile, in Texas, data brokers must follow some of the security measures designed to protect users information.
After eliminating data broker registrations in California, Texas, Oregon, and Vermont, the lawyers of the states in the posts, EFF and PRC, say they “exposed the disturbing style”. He found that many data brokers did not regularly register their business in all four states. The number of data brokers which appeared on one registry but not in the other, 524 in Texas, 475 in Oregon, 309 in Vermont, and 291 in California.
As noted by the EFF, differences in how each state explains the data broker can explain some of these contradictions. It is also possible that some brokers do not collect data from people in all these states – though the industry is generally widespread.
On the contrary, the EFF also says that the analysis will not include data brokers who “fail to register in any state and ignore state laws.”
The EFF and PRC suggest that California, Texas, Oregon, and Vermont look at companies that have failed to register in other states, and they write that their searches may “indicate a systematic failure of compliance” in each state. He added that investigations and implementation measures can “send a powerful signal” about a state commitment to privacy.


