Enough of the Patchwork: Tech Industry Group Calls for a National Privacy Framework


The Internet Association (IA), a group of 40 major internet and technology firms, called for the establishment of a national privacy framework anchored by six privacy principles on Wednesday. In its press release announcing the principles, the IA indicated its support for the American approach to federal privacy legislation that is “consistent nationwide, proportional, flexible, and encourages companies to act as good stewards of the personal information provided to them by individuals.”

In describing the context for the principles the IA noted that its members comply with the range of strong federal privacy, data security, consumer protection, and anti-discrimination laws. Coupled with following state laws, and self-regulatory principles that govern how they do business, this “patchwork” leads to inconsistent experiences for individuals. Accordingly, a new, comprehensive national framework would create more “consistent privacy protections that bolster consumers’ privacy and ease compliance for companies.”

The IA’s six principles include:

Further, the IA identified key components of a National Privacy Framework to include:

The IA’s principles could be a response to the recently imposed compliance obligations imposed by the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation, as well as the recently enacted California Consumer Privacy Protection Act that will become effective in 2020. At the same time, NIST has announced plans to collaborate with industry to develop a voluntary, enterprise-level Privacy Framework, much like its popular Cybersecurity Framework. A recently released survey from the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) noted that privacy and security online continues to be a major issue for many Americans. The NTIA survey noted that nearly three-quarters of Internet-using households had significant concerns about online privacy and security risks. One third said such worries caused them to hold back from some online activities.

Finally, the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, & Transportation will hold a hearing examining consumer privacy protection on September 26, 2018. Currently, the witnesses listed to testify include senior executives from internet and technology companies:


© 2025 Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP. All Rights Reserved.
National Law Review, Volume VIII, Number 260