Texas Has Been Busy Ramping up Privacy Protections with new Comprehensive Data Privacy Law and Stricter Data Breach Notification Requirements


Texas has joined the growing list of states enacting comprehensive consumer data privacy laws. On June 18, 2023, Governor Abbott (R) signed H.B.4, otherwise known as the Texas Data Privacy and Security Act (“TDPSA”).  The TDPSA is another close cousin of the business-friendly Virginia statute, though Texas takes a different approach with applicability thresholds and gets tougher with regards to high-risk processing activities and consent requirements for using sensitive data. The compliance patchwork continues...

Just a few weeks before the TDPSA became law, the state also tightened the screws on its data breach notification requirements in order to require covered entities to report data breaches to the Texas Attorney General within 30 days (rather than 60 days) of discovering a breach. The amendment to Texas' data breach notification law (Tex. Bus. & Com. Code Ann. §§ 521.002 and 521.053) takes effect on September 1, 2023 and will also require that reporters of breaches use an electronic form available on the AG’s website

As to the TDPSA, the following are some of the key elements:

Applicability Criteria

The TDPSA does away with thresholds based on revenue thresholds or volume of data collected from in-state residents.  Instead, the TDPSA applies to persons that (i) conduct business in Texas or produce products or services that are consumed by Texas residents, (ii) process or engage in the sale of personal data and (iii) do not qualify as a small business as defined by the United States Small Business Administration.

Texas and its lawmakers seem to be saying let’s keep it simple, largely exempt small business, and focus regulation (and presumably enforcement) on those engaged in the sale of personal data.  

Exemptions

There are several exemptions in the TDPSA beyond the qualified carve-out for small businesses as defined by the SBA.  For example, the TDPSA does not apply to a Texas state agency or political subdivision, nonprofits, higher educational institutions, financial ‎institutions or non-public personal information subject to the federal GLBA, or entities, business associates, and protected health information covered by HIPAA. 

The TDPSA also does not apply to personal information collected under a range of sectoral statutes, including information governed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act, Health Care ‎Quality Improvement Act‎, Patient Safety and ‎Quality Improvement Act, Driver's Privacy Protection Act, Family Educational Rights and ‎Privacy Act‎ and the Farm Credit Act. Other categories of data exempted from the TDPSA include:

Consumer Rights

Consumers have the following rights under the TDPSA:

Consumers are entitled to access their rights with respect to a broad range of data because the TDPSA uses a generous definition of personal data: “any information, including pseudonymous data and sensitive data, that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable individual.” Similarly, the statute’s definition of “sale of personal data” is likely to capture many types of commercial activities involving exchanges of personal data. Texas expands the scope of covered activities further than other states like Virginia by going beyond “the exchange of personal data for monetary consideration” and making any “sharing, disclosing or transferring” of personal data for “monetary or other valuable consideration” subject to the definition. This reach may require controllers to take a closer look at certain relationships and contracts with third parties to determine if any ongoing activities may be construed as a sale of personal data under the Texas law.

Business Obligations (including an Opt In!)

For purposes of the TDPSA, “sensitive data” includes (i) personal data revealing racial or ethnic origin, religious beliefs, mental or physical health diagnosis, sexual orientation, or citizenship or immigration status, (ii) genetic or biometric data processed for identification purposes, (iii) personal data collected from a known child under 18, and (iv) precise geolocation data.

Notices and Opt-Outs for Consumers

Other Business Obligations

Impacts on Vendors/Data Processors

Vendors that process data for controllers have direct obligations under the TDPSA, such as adhering to instructions from data controllers and assisting data controllers in meeting or complying with their own compliance obligations and duties. Some of these obligations and duties can include assisting the controller in responding to consumer rights requests, assisting with data protection assessments and assisting the controller with notification of a breach of security.

The TDPSA also contains specific requirements that must be included in data processing agreements between data controllers and data processors. These contractual requirements track closely to the statutory guidelines in other states like Connecticut and Virginia (and states using them as models) so the Texas law should not require novel revisions to existing contracts that have already been calibrated to similar requirements being rolled out across the country (setting aside California where there are some different and more prescriptive requirements for an agreement between a covered business and its contractors). 

Private Right of Action

Like other consumer data privacy laws outside of California, the TDPSA does not provide for a private right of action and instead grants exclusive enforcement and investigative authority to the Texas Attorney General.

Fines and Penalties Under the TDPSA

If a violation is not cured within 30 days (the cure period is a permanent feature of the Texas law, in contrast to a state like Montana that decided to sunset the cure period 18 months after the law takes effect), the violating business could face civil penalties up to $7500 per violation and/or injunctive relief to restrain the violating business from violating the TDPSA. Additionally, the Attorney General may recover reasonable attorney’s fees and other expenses incurred during the investigation and case preparation.

Effective Date for the TDPSA:  March 1, 2024.


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National Law Review, Volume XIII, Number 191