Guides implementation of Colorado Privacy Act (CPA) compliance: universal opt-out mechanism since July 2024, profiling opt-outs, sensitive data consents, AG rulemaking at 4 CCR 904-3, consumer rights.
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The Colorado Privacy Act (CPA), codified as C.R.S. §6-1-1301 through §6-1-1313, was signed into law on July 7, 2021 (SB 21-190), and became effective July 1, 2023. Colorado was the third state to enact comprehensive consumer privacy legislation. The CPA is notable for its robust rulemaking by the Colorado Attorney General, resulting in detailed implementing regulations at 4 CCR 904-3, and for b...
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The Colorado Privacy Act (CPA), codified as C.R.S. §6-1-1301 through §6-1-1313, was signed into law on July 7, 2021 (SB 21-190), and became effective July 1, 2023. Colorado was the third state to enact comprehensive consumer privacy legislation. The CPA is notable for its robust rulemaking by the Colorado Attorney General, resulting in detailed implementing regulations at 4 CCR 904-3, and for being the first state (alongside Connecticut) to require recognition of universal opt-out mechanisms.
The Colorado AG published final rules effective March 1, 2024, with the universal opt-out mechanism requirement taking effect July 1, 2024.
The CPA applies to controllers that conduct business in Colorado or produce products or services intentionally targeted to Colorado residents AND:
Note: Threshold (2) does not require a specific revenue percentage (unlike Virginia's 50% threshold).
Exemptions (§6-1-1304(2)):
Liberty Commerce Inc. Assessment: Liberty Commerce Inc. processes data of approximately 98,000 Colorado consumers and derives advertising revenue from data-related activities. It meets threshold (2) and is subject to the CPA.
Confirm whether a controller is processing their personal data and access such data.
Correct inaccuracies in personal data, taking into account the nature of the data and the purposes of processing.
Delete personal data provided by or obtained about the consumer.
Obtain personal data in a portable and, to the extent technically feasible, readily usable format.
Opt out of processing for purposes of:
Liberty Commerce Inc. Implementation: All five rights are exercisable through the privacy portal at privacy.libertycommerce.com/colorado. Opt-out rights are also accessible via universal opt-out mechanism (GPC) and a dedicated "Your Privacy Choices" link with the Colorado-approved opt-out icon.
The CPA is the first state law (alongside Connecticut) to mandate that controllers recognize universal opt-out mechanisms. The requirement became effective July 1, 2024.
Controllers must:
The AG rules specify that a universal opt-out mechanism must:
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is recognized as a compliant universal opt-out mechanism.
Liberty Commerce Inc. Implementation:
Liberty Commerce Inc. detects GPC via the Sec-GPC: 1 HTTP header and navigator.globalPrivacyControl JavaScript API. Upon detection:
Processing of sensitive data requires the consumer's opt-in consent. Consent must be:
Consumers may opt out of profiling in furtherance of decisions that produce legal or similarly significant effects. This is broader than most state laws and includes:
Liberty Commerce Inc. Implementation: Liberty Commerce Inc. conducts profiling for its buy-now-pay-later feature (credit scoring). Colorado consumers are provided a specific opt-out mechanism for this profiling activity, with disclosure of the logic involved, significance of the decision, and anticipated consequences.
Must include:
Collection must be adequate, relevant, and limited to what is reasonably necessary in relation to the specified purposes.
Processing may not exceed what is reasonably necessary to and compatible with the specified purposes.
Reasonable administrative, technical, and physical security practices appropriate to the volume, scope, and nature of the data.
May not process personal data in violation of state and federal antidiscrimination laws.
Controllers must conduct DPIAs for:
DPIAs must be made available to the AG upon request.
The Colorado AG published comprehensive regulations addressing: