Navigate the US Privacy Patchwork
Learning Objectives
After completing this unit, you’ll be able to:
- Explain the “sectoral” and “patchwork” approaches to US privacy.
- List key federal privacy laws and the industries they regulate.
- Identify the main enforcers of US privacy laws.
- Describe the growing state-level privacy movement and its business impact.
The US Privacy Landscape
Unlike the unified approach of the EU’s GDPR, the United States takes a sectoral and state-driven path. Hoping for one single, giant law that covers all privacy in the US, we have some news: it doesn’t exist yet. Think of it as a quilt made up of individual squares, each state and each industry stitches its own piece. The result: a patchwork of laws that vary depending on who holds personal data and where they operate.
At the federal level, personal data is protected based on industry and data type. But many other areas—like retail, marketing, and technology—are governed mainly by state legislation. Understanding both layers is key to navigating privacy compliance in the US. Here are some cornerstone statutes shaping this sectoral framework:
Law |
Year |
Industry/Focus |
Key Protections |
|---|---|---|---|
Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) |
1970 |
Credit reporting |
Regulates the collection and use of consumer credit information; ensures fairness and accuracy. |
Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) |
1974 |
Education |
Protects the privacy of student education records and gives parents and eligible students rights to access and correct them. |
Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) |
1986 |
Communications |
Restricts unauthorized interception or access to electronic communications, such as emails and stored data. |
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) |
1996 |
Healthcare |
Sets national standards for safeguarding Protected Health Information (PHI). Requires patient consent and secure handling of sensitive data from Covered Entities (doctors, hospitals, insurance plans) and their Business Associates. |
Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) |
1998 |
Online services for children |
Protects the privacy of children under 13 by requiring verifiable parental consent before collecting or sharing a child’s information. |
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA) |
1999 |
Financial services |
Requires financial institutions to explain how they collect, share, and protect consumer financial data, and to limit disclosure without consent. |
Together, these laws show the federal emphasis on protecting sensitive data within specific contexts, rather than a single, all-encompassing framework.
The Rise of State-Level Laws
Because federal laws leave many gaps, states have stepped in to fill them. These are evolving at a rapid rate.
The movement began with California’s Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) in 2018. This was later strengthened by the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA), which created the first dedicated privacy regulator: the California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA).
Since then, nearly 20 states have passed comprehensive privacy laws, including Colorado, Connecticut, Utah, Virginia, Texas, Oregon, Delaware, New Jersey, and Montana, with additional states actively considering legislation.

Despite differences, most of these laws share a common framework for handling personal data:
Common Consumer Rights
- The right to know what an organization collects and why.
- The right to access and correct.
- The right to delete.
- The right to opt out of “sales” or targeted advertising.
- In many states, the right to limit the use of sensitive data.
Common Controller (Business) Obligations
- Provide transparent privacy notices clearly explaining data practices.
- Collect and use only the data necessary for stated purposes (data minimization and purpose limitation).
- Conduct data protection assessments for high-risk processing activities.
- Maintain contracts with processors (service providers) that restrict secondary uses of data.
- Implement reasonable security measures to prevent breaches.
- Provide breach notification to individuals and regulators when certain types of personal data are involved in a security incident. Importantly, a “breach” isn’t limited to malicious attacks; accidental disclosures—such as emailing customer data to the wrong recipient—may also qualify. Each state has its own criteria for what counts as a notifiable breach, which means a single incident can trigger multiple, differing requirements.
But the details matter:
- Terms like personal data, sale, and targeted advertising are defined differently across states.
Even the term consumer doesn’t mean the same thing everywhere. Some states, like California, include employee data, in addition to residents acting in a household or personal context, while other states may exclude employees or B2B contacts entirely.
- Some states, like Colorado and Oregon, require opt-in consent for processing sensitive data, while California primarily uses an opt-out (Limit Use of Sensitive PI) model.
- Applicability thresholds also vary by state. Most laws apply only to organizations that exceed certain revenue levels, process personal data about a minimum number of consumers, or meet other defined criteria. This means not every organization is covered by every state law—a key characteristic of the US system.
There is also a common misconception that nonprofits are automatically exempt from privacy regulations. Laws in Colorado, Delaware, Oregon, and New Jersey specifically include nonprofits within their scope, so checking state-specific exemptions is critical for nonprofit organizations.
Business Impact Example
Let’s look at how this may play out for a real organization. Imagine a cloud-software company operating nationwide:
- In California, it must provide a “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link for users to opt out of data sharing.
- In Colorado, it also must gain opt-in consent before processing sensitive data, like geolocation or biometrics.
- In Texas, specific disclosure and notice requirements must be met such as capitalized ‘NOTICE' language in your privacy statement if you sell sensitive or biometric data.
- In Minnesota, data protection assessments must include a summary of your internal policies.
This means one company could face a different compliance checklist for each state in which it has customers. This is a key challenge motivating calls for a national privacy law.
Who Enforces US Privacy Laws?
Because the US system is so fragmented, enforcement happens through multiple agencies:
Enforcer |
Scope |
Role |
|---|---|---|
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) |
Broad consumer protection authority |
The de facto federal privacy enforcer. Because there’s no single federal privacy law, the FTC often acts as the primary privacy enforcer in the US using its authority over unfair or deceptive business practices. |
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) |
Health sector |
Oversees HIPAA compliance and investigates breaches of medical data |
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) |
Financial services |
Enforces privacy and fairness under FCRA and GLBA |
State Attorneys General (AGs) |
State-specific |
Enforce state privacy laws and pursue violations affecting residents |
California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) |
California |
The first independent state privacy regulator, with rule-making and enforcement powers |
Most comprehensive state laws leave enforcement to Attorneys General, and don’t offer individuals the right to sue (private right of action). However, exceptions exist—primarily for data breaches (in California) or biometric violations (in Illinois), which have driven significant class-action litigation.
What’s Next? The Push for a Federal Law
With dozens of state laws now in effect or on the horizon, many organizations and policymakers are urging Congress to create a comprehensive federal privacy law that would:
- Establish a single national standard
- Simplify compliance across states
- Strengthen consumer rights uniformly
Proposals such as the American Data Privacy and Protection Act (ADPPA) have sparked debate about federal preemption (whether a federal law would override state laws like California’s). For now, there’s no consensus, but the discussion reflects a growing recognition that privacy has become a national priority, not just a patchwork of local rules.
Looking Ahead
In the next unit, we’ll explore emerging privacy trends — from biometric data and Advertising Technologies (AdTech) to Artificial Intelligence (AI)— and how these evolving technologies challenge existing laws and principles.
Resources
- External Website: Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA)
- External Link: Salesforce FERPA and COPPA FAQ
- External Website: HIPAA for Professionals
- External Link: Salesforce HIPAA and HITECH Act FAQ
- External Link: Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
- Website: Salesforce’s Privacy for Industries
- External Website: California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)
- Trailhead: California Consumer Privacy Act Basics
