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-{"pageProps":{"faqData":{"data":{"title":"Frequently Asked Questions"},"html":"","sections":[{"key":"WhatIsGPC","data":{"title":"What is the Global Privacy Control (GPC)?"},"html":"
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a proposed specification designed to allow\nInternet users to notify businesses of their privacy preferences, such as\nwhether or not they want their personal information to be sold or shared. It\nconsists of a setting or extension in the user’s browser or mobile device and\nacts as a mechanism that websites can use to indicate they support the\nspecification.
\n"},{"key":"WhoIsGPC","data":{"title":"Who is supporting the development of GPC?"},"html":"
GPC is being developed by a broad coalition of stakeholders:\ntechnologists, web publishers, technology companies,\nbrowser vendors, extension developers, academics, and\ncivil rights organizations.
\n"},{"key":"HowToSignal","data":{"title":"I’m a web user. How can I use GPC to signal my privacy preferences to websites?"},"html":"
GPC is available for an increasing number of browsers and browser extensions,\nlisted here. If you want to use\nGPC, you can download and enable it via a participating browser or browser\nextension. More information about downloading GPC is available\nhere.
\n"},{"key":"Publisher","data":{"title":"I’m a publisher, developer, or other service. How can I support GPC?"},"html":"
The GPC spec is easy to implement on a wide variety of websites and other\nservices. The proposed specification and back-end implementation reference\ndocumentation are available here.\nFor additional information, please feel free to reach out on Github or Twitter\n(@globablprivctrl).
\n"},{"key":"Policymaker","data":{"title":"I’m a policymaker. How can I support GPC or learn more about how it could apply in my jurisdiction?"},"html":"
As it is intended to invoke users’ privacy rights, we encourage policymakers\nfrom around the world to engage in the development of this specification. If you\nwould like to learn more about how GPC could work in your jurisdiction, please\ncontact us via email at\ninfo[at]globalprivacycontrol.org.
\n"},{"key":"GetInvolved","data":{"title":"How can I get involved in developing the proposed specification?"},"html":"
GPC was initially introduced at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Privacy\nCommunity Group (Privacy CG) in April 2020. A\nnumber of stakeholders are part of that community. There are ongoing\ndiscussions in the Privacy CG. Interested parties are encouraged to engage with\nthe proposal here.
\n
Additionally, GPC is currently being implemented across the web. A number of\nbrowsers, extensions, and publishers are supporting or implementing GPC (see\nbelow).
\n"},{"key":"Benefit","data":{"title":"How does GPC benefit consumers, publishers, software makers, and advertisers?"},"html":"
The online advertising ecosystem is evolving, and consumer expectations are\nchanging. An increasing number of web users do not want to be tracked by parties\nthey aren’t choosing to interact with, and new laws, technological changes, and\nadvertising business models reflect these preferences.
\n
GPC provides consumers and businesses with clear expectations and guidelines for\nthe sharing and sale of data online. It permits users to easily and clearly\nexercise their privacy rights, facilitates greater trust between businesses and\ntheir customers, and fosters certainty for businesses and advertisers by relying\non an open standard.
GPC is intended to serve as an expression of users’ intent to\ninvoke their online privacy rights. Depending on the jurisdiction\nand applicable laws, a user’s expression through GPC may have\nlegal impact. However, GPC on its own does not create any\nlegally binding obligations.
\n
GPC may impact existing law in several ways: In California, Section 1798.135(c)\nof the California Consumer Privacy Act\n(CCPA)\ngives users the right to opt out of the sale of their personal information.
\n
Furthermore, Section 999.315 of the CCPA\nRegulations requires businesses to honor\nthese opt-out requests. The regulations specify that \"[a] business shall provide\ntwo or more designated methods for submitting requests to opt-out […]\n[including] user-enabled global privacy controls, such as a browser plug-in or\nprivacy setting, device setting, or other mechanism, that communicate or signal\nthe consumer’s choice to opt-out of the sale of their personal information. […]\nUser-enabled global privacy controls, such as a browser plug-in or privacy\nsetting, device setting, or other mechanism, that communicate or signal the\nconsumer’s choice to opt-out of the sale of their personal information shall be\nconsidered a request directly from the consumer, not through an authorized\nagent.\"
\n
On this basis, it is possible that the GPC may become a legally binding opt-out\nsignal in California.
\n
In addition, the European General Data Protection Regulation\n(GDPR) gives users the right to object to their personal\ndata being processed. The GPC signal is intended to convey a general request\nthat data controllers limit the sale or sharing of the user's personal data to\nother data controllers. It is possible that a GPC signal opting out of\nprocessing could create a legally binding obligation for data processors.
\n
In Bermuda, the Privacy Commissioner has\nindicated\nthat he believes the GPC may be used to create a legally binding obligation on\nbusinesses under their laws, which provide users the right to “request an\norganisation to cease, or not begin, using his [or her] personal information\n[…] for the purposes of advertising, marketing or public relations,” or\n“where the use of that personal information is causing or is likely to cause\nsubstantial damage or substantial distress to the individual or to another\nindividual.”
\n"},{"key":"DND","data":{"title":"Why not just use Do Not Track (DNT)?"},"html":"
Do Not Track was an effort preceding GPC to permit users to communicate their\nprivacy preferences to websites they visit. Unfortunately, in the appendices to\ntheir Final Statement of Reasons, the California Attorney General (AG)\ndetermined that the AG could not require businesses to comply with DNT requests\nbecause the requests do not clearly convey users’ intent to opt out of the sale\nof their data. A more detailed discussion of the inadequacies of DNT is\navailable as Appendix E of\nthe AG’s Final Statement of Reasons.
\n
When considering whether DNT was sufficient under the CCPA, the AG specifically\ndetermined that a new type of privacy signal would benefit users and businesses\nand that its regulation is “intended to support innovation for privacy services\nthat facilitate the exercise of consumer rights in furtherance of the CCPA.”
\n
GPC responds to this call for innovation by providing a mechanism for privacy\nsignaling that is applicable to current laws, technologies, and business\npractices. The Attorney General has said that he believes GPC is “a technical\nstandard that would make it easier for consumers to stop the sale of their\npersonal information” and that he is\n“heartened to\nsee a wave of innovation in this space.”
\n"},{"key":"ExistingDNS","data":{"title":"How does GPC interact with companies' existing Do Not Sell links?"},"html":"
The California AG has determined that businesses must honor two methods of\nsubmitting opt-outs. GPC is meant to provide users with an additional option\nfor objecting to the sale of their data, and it functions identically to\nclicking a “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” link provided by a business.
\n"},{"key":"Conflict","data":{"title":"What if there is a conflict between a GPC signal and a user-selected privacy preference?"},"html":"
Some jurisdictions allow businesses to sell user data when there is a conflict\nbetween global and site-specific preferences — for instance, if a user has\nprovided specific permission to a website to sell their data. The CCPA\nRegulations\n§999.315(c)(2) state that when a GPC signal conflicts with the existing privacy\nsettings a consumer has with the business, the business shall respect the GPC\nsignal but may notify the consumer of the conflict and give the consumer an\nopportunity to confirm the business-specific privacy setting or participation in\na financial incentive program.
\n
A conflict between GPC and site-specific privacy preferences may be resolved\ndifferently in other jurisdictions.
\n
Additionally, some implementations of GPC allow users to consent to the sale or\nsharing of their data on an individual basis.
\n"},{"key":"Default","data":{"title":"Can GPC be enabled by default?"},"html":"
The GPC preference expression should accurately reflect the users’ privacy\npreferences. The threshold for obtaining user consent differs between\njurisdictions. GPC strives to honor those differences while still providing\nusers with choice about how businesses use their data. In some jurisdictions,\nthe presence of GPC in a user’s browser may constitute an adequate signal to not\nsell their data, while regulations in another jurisdiction may require the\nuser’s explicit consent in order to send a GPC signal.
\n
What constitutes a deliberate choice may differ between regional\nregulations. For example, regulations in one jurisdiction may consider the use\nof a privacy-focused browser to imply a GPC preference, such as under the CCPA\nFinal Statement of Reasons - Appendix E\n#73\n(\"The consumer exercises their choice by affirmatively choosing the privacy\ncontrol […] including when utilizing privacy-by-design products or\nservices\"), while regulations in another jurisdiction may require explicit\nconsent from the user to send a GPC signal.
\n"}]},"pressData":{"data":{"title":"Press & Announcements","entries":[{"datePublished":"Mar 23, 2023","contentUrl":"https://www.badcredit.org/news/global-privacy-control-stops-companies-from-selling-online-information/","title":"Global Privacy Control Boosts Online Privacy by Empowering Consumers with Proactive Protection","source":"badcredit.org"},{"datePublished":"Oct. 26, 2021","contentUrl":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/10/26/global-privacy-control-firefox/","title":"Your browser can tell websites how to treat your data. But companies didn’t have to listen — until now","source":"The Washington Post","isFeaturedIndex":2,"img":"/img/press-logos/washpo-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Jan. 28, 2021","contentUrl":"https://globalprivacycontrol.org/press-release/20210128","title":"GPC Privacy Browser Signal Now Used by Millions and Honored By Major Publishers","source":"Global Privacy Control","isFeaturedIndex":1,"img":"/img/press-logos/gpc-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 8th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.theregister.com/2020/10/10/global_privacy_control/","title":"Global Privacy Control emerges as latest attempt to let netizens choose whether they want to be tracked online","source":"The Register"},{"datePublished":"Oct 8th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.fastcompany.com/90561555/global-privacy-control-duckduckgo-eff-mozilla","title":"DuckDuckGo, EFF, and others just launched privacy settings for the whole internet","source":"Fast Company"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://iapp.org/news/a/global-privacy-control-initiative-hopes-to-help-consumers-exercise-ccpa-rights/","title":"Global Privacy Control initiative aims to help consumers exercise privacy rights","source":"IAPP"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/10/coming-to-a-browser-near-you-a-new-way-to-keep-sites-from-selling-your-data/","title":"Now you can enforce your privacy rights with a single browser tick","source":"Ars Technica"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy-effort-could-stop-some-annoying-website-popups-and-online-tracking/","title":"Privacy push could stop some annoying website pop-ups and online tracking","source":"CNET"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://duo.com/decipher/global-privacy-control-protocol-aims-to-pick-up-where-do-not-track-left-off","title":"Global Privacy Control Protocol Aims to Pick Up Where Do Not Track Left Off","source":"Decipher"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://techcrunch.com/2020/10/07/tech-publisher-coalition-backs-new-push-for-browser-level-privacy-controls/","title":"Tech-publisher coalition backs new push for browser-level privacy controls","source":"TechCrunch","isFeaturedIndex":4,"img":"/img/press-logos/techcrunch-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.wired.com/story/global-privacy-control-launches-do-not-track-is-back/","title":"‘Do Not Track’ Is Back, and This Time It Might Work","source":"Wired","isFeaturedIndex":3,"img":"/img/press-logos/wired-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://globalprivacycontrol.org/press-release/20201007","title":"Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Easy for Consumers to Exercise Their Privacy Rights","source":"Global Privacy Control","img":"/img/press-logos/gpc-white.svg"}]},"html":"","sections":[]},"orgsData":{"data":{"title":"Founding Organizations","headerText":"Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/abine.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/abine.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Automattic","url":"https://automattic.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/automattic.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Brave Software","url":"https://brave.com/global-privacy-content/","img":"/img/participating-logos/brave.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/brave.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Check My Ads","url":"https://checkmyads.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/checkmyads.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Complianz","url":"https://complianz.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/complianz.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Consumer Reports","url":"https://advocacy.consumerreports.org/issue/tech-privacy/","img":"/img/participating-logos/cr.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Didomi","url":"https://www.didomi.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/didomi.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/participating-logos/disconnect.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/disconnect.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Digital Content Next","url":"https://digitalcontentnext.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/dcn.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/participating-logos/duckduckgo-vertical.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/DDG.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"EFF","url":"https://www.eff.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/eff.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Financial Times","url":"https://www.ft.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/ft.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Glitch","url":"https://glitch.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/glitch.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/firefox.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/firefox.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"lockr","url":"https://lockrmail.com/","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Meredith Digital","url":"https://www.meredith.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/meredith.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":11},{"name":"Mozilla","url":"https://mozilla.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/mozilla.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"National Science Foundation","url":"https://www.nsf.gov/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nsf.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"New York Times","url":"https://www.nytimes.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nyt.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":9},{"name":"OneTrust","url":"https://www.onetrust.com/solutions/consent-management-platform/","img":"/img/participating-logos/onetrust.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/optmeowt.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/privacybadger.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/privacybadger.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"privacy-tech-lab","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","url":"https://privacytechlab.org/","type":"Business"},{"name":"Raptive","url":"https://raptive.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/raptive.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":12},{"name":"SourcePoint","url":"https://www.sourcepoint.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/sourcepoint.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"TrustArc","url":"https://trustarc.com/resource/global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/trustarc.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Wesleyan University","url":"https://wesleyan.edu/","img":"/img/participating-logos/wesleyan.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Washington Post","url":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/washington-post.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":10},{"name":"WireWheel","url":"https://www.wirewheel.io","img":"/img/participating-logos/wirewheel.svg","type":"Business"}]},"html":"
The following organizations, representing 50 million users and hundreds of thousands of websites, are in support of GPC.
\n","sections":[{"key":"Browsers","data":{"green":"Browsers + Extensions","gray":"/ (Collectively Over ~50million Users)"},"content":""},{"key":"Business","data":{"green":"Organizations","gray":"/ (Browser and extension vendors, publishers, consent management platforms, ...)"},"content":""},{"key":"Partners","data":{"green":"Supporting Partners"},"content":""}]},"downloadsData":{"data":{"title":"Join over 50 million users.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/abine.png"},{"name":"Brave Browser","url":"https://brave.com/web-standards-at-brave/4-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/brave.png"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/download-logos/disconnect.png"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/download-logos/duckduckgo.png"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/firefox.png"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/download-logos/optmeowt.png"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org","img":"/img/download-logos/badger.png"},{"name":"lockrMail by lockr","url":"https://lockrMail.com","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png"}]},"html":"
Download a supported browser or extension and start exercising your privacy rights with GPC.
\n","sections":[]},"testimonialsData":{"data":{"entries":[{"name":"Xavier Becerra","position":"CA Attorney General","quote":"CA DOJ is encouraged to see the technology community developing a global privacy control in furtherance of the CCPA and consumer privacy rights.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/becerra.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Xavier Becerra","url":"https://twitter.com/AGBecerra/status/1313884873413726208"},{"name":"Roy Wyden","position":"Senate Finance Chairman","quote":"40 million consumers are now using web browsers and other privacy tools that support this global opt out. Major publishers, the New York Times, Washington Post, have already pledged to respect it. California's Attorney General has already said that companies must respect GPC. This is a big step in Americans privacy, a big, big step forward.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/wyden.png","imgAlt":"Picture of Roy Wyden","url":"https://twitter.com/jason_kint/status/1369313187317878788?s=21"},{"name":"Mark R. Warner","position":"VA Senator","quote":"My hope is that Governor Northam and the legislature will improve [the newly passed Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act] in the near future in important ways... making it easier for Virginia citizens to invoke their privacy rights, such as through a global privacy control.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/warner.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Mark R. Warner","url":"https://www.warner.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/pressreleases?id=69CDF4A0-C7E6-4357-A0F1-E9F107FCEF8C"},{"name":"Alexander McD White","position":"Bermuda Privacy Commissioner","quote":"GPC provides a clear and binary indication of an individual's choice... Based on a review of several of the web browsers' intentions regarding GPC, it appears likely to be a prominent, easily understandable, and accessible mechanism in the browser settings.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/white.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Alexander McD White","url":"https://www.privacy.bm/post/global-privacy-control-interoperability-in-action"},{"name":"Ron Wyden","position":"Senate Finance Chairman","quote":"It's past time to give consumers a real and enforceable way to stop companies from tracking and selling their data. My Mind Your Own Business Act would do just that, and this project [Global Privacy Control] shows it’s possible.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/wyden.png","imgAlt":"Picture of Ron Wyden","url":"https://twitter.com/RonWyden/status/1314234870747422720"},{"name":"Xavier Becerra","position":"CA Attorney General","quote":"CCPA requires businesses to treat a user-enabled global privacy control as a legally valid consumer request to opt out of the sale of their data. CCPA opened the door to developing a technical standard, like the GPC, which satisfies this legal requirement & protects privacy.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/becerra.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Xavier Becerra","url":"https://twitter.com/AGBecerra/status/1354850758236102656"}]},"html":"
This is HTML
\n","sections":[]}},"__N_SSG":true}
\ No newline at end of file
+{"pageProps":{"faqData":{"data":{"title":"Frequently Asked Questions"},"html":"","sections":[{"key":"WhatIsGPC","data":{"title":"What is the Global Privacy Control (GPC)?"},"html":"
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a proposed specification designed to allow\nInternet users to notify businesses of their privacy preferences, such as\nwhether or not they want their personal information to be sold or shared. It\nconsists of a setting or extension in the user’s browser or mobile device and\nacts as a mechanism that websites can use to indicate they support the\nspecification.
\n"},{"key":"WhoIsGPC","data":{"title":"Who is supporting the development of GPC?"},"html":"
GPC is being developed by a broad coalition of stakeholders:\ntechnologists, web publishers, technology companies,\nbrowser vendors, extension developers, academics, and\ncivil rights organizations.
\n"},{"key":"HowToSignal","data":{"title":"I’m a web user. How can I use GPC to signal my privacy preferences to websites?"},"html":"
GPC is available for an increasing number of browsers and browser extensions,\nlisted here. If you want to use\nGPC, you can download and enable it via a participating browser or browser\nextension. More information about downloading GPC is available\nhere.
\n"},{"key":"Publisher","data":{"title":"I’m a publisher, developer, or other service. How can I support GPC?"},"html":"
The GPC spec is easy to implement on a wide variety of websites and other\nservices. The proposed specification and back-end implementation reference\ndocumentation are available here.\nFor additional information, please feel free to reach out on Github or Twitter\n(@globablprivctrl).
\n"},{"key":"Policymaker","data":{"title":"I’m a policymaker. How can I support GPC or learn more about how it could apply in my jurisdiction?"},"html":"
As it is intended to invoke users’ privacy rights, we encourage policymakers\nfrom around the world to engage in the development of this specification. If you\nwould like to learn more about how GPC could work in your jurisdiction, please\ncontact us via email at\ninfo[at]globalprivacycontrol.org.
\n"},{"key":"GetInvolved","data":{"title":"How can I get involved in developing the proposed specification?"},"html":"
GPC was initially introduced at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Privacy\nCommunity Group (Privacy CG) in April 2020. A\nnumber of stakeholders are part of that community. There are ongoing\ndiscussions in the Privacy CG. Interested parties are encouraged to engage with\nthe proposal here.
\n
Additionally, GPC is currently being implemented across the web. A number of\nbrowsers, extensions, and publishers are supporting or implementing GPC (see\nbelow).
\n"},{"key":"Benefit","data":{"title":"How does GPC benefit consumers, publishers, software makers, and advertisers?"},"html":"
The online advertising ecosystem is evolving, and consumer expectations are\nchanging. An increasing number of web users do not want to be tracked by parties\nthey aren’t choosing to interact with, and new laws, technological changes, and\nadvertising business models reflect these preferences.
\n
GPC provides consumers and businesses with clear expectations and guidelines for\nthe sharing and sale of data online. It permits users to easily and clearly\nexercise their privacy rights, facilitates greater trust between businesses and\ntheir customers, and fosters certainty for businesses and advertisers by relying\non an open standard.
GPC is intended to serve as an expression of users’ intent to\ninvoke their online privacy rights. Depending on the jurisdiction\nand applicable laws, a user’s expression through GPC may have\nlegal impact. However, GPC on its own does not create any\nlegally binding obligations.
\n
GPC may impact existing law in several ways: In California, Section 1798.135(c)\nof the California Consumer Privacy Act\n(CCPA)\ngives users the right to opt out of the sale of their personal information.
\n
Furthermore, Section 999.315 of the CCPA\nRegulations requires businesses to honor\nthese opt-out requests. The regulations specify that \"[a] business shall provide\ntwo or more designated methods for submitting requests to opt-out […]\n[including] user-enabled global privacy controls, such as a browser plug-in or\nprivacy setting, device setting, or other mechanism, that communicate or signal\nthe consumer’s choice to opt-out of the sale of their personal information. […]\nUser-enabled global privacy controls, such as a browser plug-in or privacy\nsetting, device setting, or other mechanism, that communicate or signal the\nconsumer’s choice to opt-out of the sale of their personal information shall be\nconsidered a request directly from the consumer, not through an authorized\nagent.\"
\n
On this basis, it is possible that the GPC may become a legally binding opt-out\nsignal in California.
\n
In addition, the European General Data Protection Regulation\n(GDPR) gives users the right to object to their personal\ndata being processed. The GPC signal is intended to convey a general request\nthat data controllers limit the sale or sharing of the user's personal data to\nother data controllers. It is possible that a GPC signal opting out of\nprocessing could create a legally binding obligation for data processors.
\n
In Bermuda, the Privacy Commissioner has\nindicated\nthat he believes the GPC may be used to create a legally binding obligation on\nbusinesses under their laws, which provide users the right to “request an\norganisation to cease, or not begin, using his [or her] personal information\n[…] for the purposes of advertising, marketing or public relations,” or\n“where the use of that personal information is causing or is likely to cause\nsubstantial damage or substantial distress to the individual or to another\nindividual.”
\n"},{"key":"DND","data":{"title":"Why not just use Do Not Track (DNT)?"},"html":"
Do Not Track was an effort preceding GPC to permit users to communicate their\nprivacy preferences to websites they visit. Unfortunately, in the appendices to\ntheir Final Statement of Reasons, the California Attorney General (AG)\ndetermined that the AG could not require businesses to comply with DNT requests\nbecause the requests do not clearly convey users’ intent to opt out of the sale\nof their data. A more detailed discussion of the inadequacies of DNT is\navailable as Appendix E of\nthe AG’s Final Statement of Reasons.
\n
When considering whether DNT was sufficient under the CCPA, the AG specifically\ndetermined that a new type of privacy signal would benefit users and businesses\nand that its regulation is “intended to support innovation for privacy services\nthat facilitate the exercise of consumer rights in furtherance of the CCPA.”
\n
GPC responds to this call for innovation by providing a mechanism for privacy\nsignaling that is applicable to current laws, technologies, and business\npractices. The Attorney General has said that he believes GPC is “a technical\nstandard that would make it easier for consumers to stop the sale of their\npersonal information” and that he is\n“heartened to\nsee a wave of innovation in this space.”
\n"},{"key":"ExistingDNS","data":{"title":"How does GPC interact with companies' existing Do Not Sell links?"},"html":"
The California AG has determined that businesses must honor two methods of\nsubmitting opt-outs. GPC is meant to provide users with an additional option\nfor objecting to the sale of their data, and it functions identically to\nclicking a “Do Not Sell My Personal Information” link provided by a business.
\n"},{"key":"Conflict","data":{"title":"What if there is a conflict between a GPC signal and a user-selected privacy preference?"},"html":"
Some jurisdictions allow businesses to sell user data when there is a conflict\nbetween global and site-specific preferences — for instance, if a user has\nprovided specific permission to a website to sell their data. The CCPA\nRegulations\n§999.315(c)(2) state that when a GPC signal conflicts with the existing privacy\nsettings a consumer has with the business, the business shall respect the GPC\nsignal but may notify the consumer of the conflict and give the consumer an\nopportunity to confirm the business-specific privacy setting or participation in\na financial incentive program.
\n
A conflict between GPC and site-specific privacy preferences may be resolved\ndifferently in other jurisdictions.
\n
Additionally, some implementations of GPC allow users to consent to the sale or\nsharing of their data on an individual basis.
\n"},{"key":"Default","data":{"title":"Can GPC be enabled by default?"},"html":"
The GPC preference expression should accurately reflect the users’ privacy\npreferences. The threshold for obtaining user consent differs between\njurisdictions. GPC strives to honor those differences while still providing\nusers with choice about how businesses use their data. In some jurisdictions,\nthe presence of GPC in a user’s browser may constitute an adequate signal to not\nsell their data, while regulations in another jurisdiction may require the\nuser’s explicit consent in order to send a GPC signal.
\n
What constitutes a deliberate choice may differ between regional\nregulations. For example, regulations in one jurisdiction may consider the use\nof a privacy-focused browser to imply a GPC preference, such as under the CCPA\nFinal Statement of Reasons - Appendix E\n#73\n(\"The consumer exercises their choice by affirmatively choosing the privacy\ncontrol […] including when utilizing privacy-by-design products or\nservices\"), while regulations in another jurisdiction may require explicit\nconsent from the user to send a GPC signal.
\n"}]},"pressData":{"data":{"title":"Press & Announcements","entries":[{"datePublished":"Mar 23, 2023","contentUrl":"https://www.badcredit.org/news/global-privacy-control-stops-companies-from-selling-online-information/","title":"Global Privacy Control Boosts Online Privacy by Empowering Consumers with Proactive Protection","source":"badcredit.org"},{"datePublished":"Oct. 26, 2021","contentUrl":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/10/26/global-privacy-control-firefox/","title":"Your browser can tell websites how to treat your data. But companies didn’t have to listen — until now","source":"The Washington Post","isFeaturedIndex":2,"img":"/img/press-logos/washpo-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Jan. 28, 2021","contentUrl":"https://globalprivacycontrol.org/press-release/20210128","title":"GPC Privacy Browser Signal Now Used by Millions and Honored By Major Publishers","source":"Global Privacy Control","isFeaturedIndex":1,"img":"/img/press-logos/gpc-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 8th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.theregister.com/2020/10/10/global_privacy_control/","title":"Global Privacy Control emerges as latest attempt to let netizens choose whether they want to be tracked online","source":"The Register"},{"datePublished":"Oct 8th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.fastcompany.com/90561555/global-privacy-control-duckduckgo-eff-mozilla","title":"DuckDuckGo, EFF, and others just launched privacy settings for the whole internet","source":"Fast Company"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://iapp.org/news/a/global-privacy-control-initiative-hopes-to-help-consumers-exercise-ccpa-rights/","title":"Global Privacy Control initiative aims to help consumers exercise privacy rights","source":"IAPP"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2020/10/coming-to-a-browser-near-you-a-new-way-to-keep-sites-from-selling-your-data/","title":"Now you can enforce your privacy rights with a single browser tick","source":"Ars Technica"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.cnet.com/news/privacy-effort-could-stop-some-annoying-website-popups-and-online-tracking/","title":"Privacy push could stop some annoying website pop-ups and online tracking","source":"CNET"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://duo.com/decipher/global-privacy-control-protocol-aims-to-pick-up-where-do-not-track-left-off","title":"Global Privacy Control Protocol Aims to Pick Up Where Do Not Track Left Off","source":"Decipher"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://techcrunch.com/2020/10/07/tech-publisher-coalition-backs-new-push-for-browser-level-privacy-controls/","title":"Tech-publisher coalition backs new push for browser-level privacy controls","source":"TechCrunch","isFeaturedIndex":4,"img":"/img/press-logos/techcrunch-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://www.wired.com/story/global-privacy-control-launches-do-not-track-is-back/","title":"‘Do Not Track’ Is Back, and This Time It Might Work","source":"Wired","isFeaturedIndex":3,"img":"/img/press-logos/wired-white.svg"},{"datePublished":"Oct 7th, 2020","contentUrl":"https://globalprivacycontrol.org/press-release/20201007","title":"Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Easy for Consumers to Exercise Their Privacy Rights","source":"Global Privacy Control","img":"/img/press-logos/gpc-white.svg"}]},"html":"","sections":[]},"orgsData":{"data":{"title":"Founding Organizations","headerText":"Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/abine.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/abine.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Automattic","url":"https://automattic.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/automattic.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Brave Software","url":"https://brave.com/global-privacy-content/","img":"/img/participating-logos/brave.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/brave.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Check My Ads","url":"https://checkmyads.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/checkmyads.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Complianz","url":"https://complianz.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/complianz.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Consumer Reports","url":"https://advocacy.consumerreports.org/issue/tech-privacy/","img":"/img/participating-logos/cr.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Didomi","url":"https://www.didomi.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/didomi.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/participating-logos/disconnect.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/disconnect.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Digital Content Next","url":"https://digitalcontentnext.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/dcn.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/participating-logos/duckduckgo-vertical.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/DDG.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"EFF","url":"https://www.eff.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/eff.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Financial Times","url":"https://www.ft.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/ft.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Glitch","url":"https://glitch.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/glitch.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/firefox.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/firefox.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"lockr","url":"https://lockrmail.com/","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Meredith Digital","url":"https://www.meredith.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/meredith.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":11},{"name":"Mozilla","url":"https://mozilla.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/mozilla.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"National Science Foundation","url":"https://www.nsf.gov/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nsf.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"New York Times","url":"https://www.nytimes.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nyt.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":9},{"name":"OneTrust","url":"https://www.onetrust.com/solutions/consent-management-platform/","img":"/img/participating-logos/onetrust.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Optery","url":"https://www.optery.com/the-optery-global-privacy-control-gpc-extension/","img":"/img/participating-logos/optery.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/optmeowt.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/privacybadger.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/privacybadger.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"privacy-tech-lab","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","url":"https://privacytechlab.org/","type":"Business"},{"name":"Raptive","url":"https://raptive.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/raptive.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":12},{"name":"SourcePoint","url":"https://www.sourcepoint.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/sourcepoint.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"TrustArc","url":"https://trustarc.com/resource/global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/trustarc.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Wesleyan University","url":"https://wesleyan.edu/","img":"/img/participating-logos/wesleyan.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Washington Post","url":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/washington-post.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":10},{"name":"WireWheel","url":"https://www.wirewheel.io","img":"/img/participating-logos/wirewheel.svg","type":"Business"}]},"html":"
The following organizations, representing 50 million users and hundreds of thousands of websites, are in support of GPC.
\n","sections":[{"key":"Browsers","data":{"green":"Browsers + Extensions","gray":"/ (Collectively Over ~50million Users)"},"content":""},{"key":"Business","data":{"green":"Organizations","gray":"/ (Browser and extension vendors, publishers, consent management platforms, ...)"},"content":""},{"key":"Partners","data":{"green":"Supporting Partners"},"content":""}]},"downloadsData":{"data":{"title":"Join over 50 million users.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/abine.png"},{"name":"Brave Browser","url":"https://brave.com/web-standards-at-brave/4-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/brave.png"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/download-logos/disconnect.png"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo Privacy Browser","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/download-logos/duckduckgo.png"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/download-logos/firefox.png"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/download-logos/optmeowt.png"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org","img":"/img/download-logos/badger.png"},{"name":"lockrMail by lockr","url":"https://lockrMail.com","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png"}]},"html":"
Download a supported browser or extension and start exercising your privacy rights with GPC.
\n","sections":[]},"testimonialsData":{"data":{"entries":[{"name":"Xavier Becerra","position":"CA Attorney General","quote":"CA DOJ is encouraged to see the technology community developing a global privacy control in furtherance of the CCPA and consumer privacy rights.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/becerra.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Xavier Becerra","url":"https://twitter.com/AGBecerra/status/1313884873413726208"},{"name":"Roy Wyden","position":"Senate Finance Chairman","quote":"40 million consumers are now using web browsers and other privacy tools that support this global opt out. Major publishers, the New York Times, Washington Post, have already pledged to respect it. California's Attorney General has already said that companies must respect GPC. This is a big step in Americans privacy, a big, big step forward.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/wyden.png","imgAlt":"Picture of Roy Wyden","url":"https://twitter.com/jason_kint/status/1369313187317878788?s=21"},{"name":"Mark R. Warner","position":"VA Senator","quote":"My hope is that Governor Northam and the legislature will improve [the newly passed Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act] in the near future in important ways... making it easier for Virginia citizens to invoke their privacy rights, such as through a global privacy control.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/warner.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Mark R. Warner","url":"https://www.warner.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/pressreleases?id=69CDF4A0-C7E6-4357-A0F1-E9F107FCEF8C"},{"name":"Alexander McD White","position":"Bermuda Privacy Commissioner","quote":"GPC provides a clear and binary indication of an individual's choice... Based on a review of several of the web browsers' intentions regarding GPC, it appears likely to be a prominent, easily understandable, and accessible mechanism in the browser settings.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/white.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Alexander McD White","url":"https://www.privacy.bm/post/global-privacy-control-interoperability-in-action"},{"name":"Ron Wyden","position":"Senate Finance Chairman","quote":"It's past time to give consumers a real and enforceable way to stop companies from tracking and selling their data. My Mind Your Own Business Act would do just that, and this project [Global Privacy Control] shows it’s possible.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/wyden.png","imgAlt":"Picture of Ron Wyden","url":"https://twitter.com/RonWyden/status/1314234870747422720"},{"name":"Xavier Becerra","position":"CA Attorney General","quote":"CCPA requires businesses to treat a user-enabled global privacy control as a legally valid consumer request to opt out of the sale of their data. CCPA opened the door to developing a technical standard, like the GPC, which satisfies this legal requirement & protects privacy.","img":"/img/testimonial-imgs/becerra.jpg","imgAlt":"Picture of Xavier Becerra","url":"https://twitter.com/AGBecerra/status/1354850758236102656"}]},"html":"
This is HTML
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+++ b/_next/data/PUraIvVI5yUHDXrGh0pX_/orgs.json
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-{"pageProps":{"data":{"title":"Founding Organizations","headerText":"Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/abine.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/abine.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Automattic","url":"https://automattic.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/automattic.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Brave Software","url":"https://brave.com/global-privacy-content/","img":"/img/participating-logos/brave.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/brave.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Check My Ads","url":"https://checkmyads.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/checkmyads.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Complianz","url":"https://complianz.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/complianz.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Consumer Reports","url":"https://advocacy.consumerreports.org/issue/tech-privacy/","img":"/img/participating-logos/cr.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Didomi","url":"https://www.didomi.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/didomi.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/participating-logos/disconnect.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/disconnect.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Digital Content Next","url":"https://digitalcontentnext.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/dcn.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/participating-logos/duckduckgo-vertical.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/DDG.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"EFF","url":"https://www.eff.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/eff.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Financial Times","url":"https://www.ft.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/ft.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Glitch","url":"https://glitch.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/glitch.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/firefox.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/firefox.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"lockr","url":"https://lockrmail.com/","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Meredith Digital","url":"https://www.meredith.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/meredith.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":11},{"name":"Mozilla","url":"https://mozilla.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/mozilla.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"National Science Foundation","url":"https://www.nsf.gov/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nsf.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"New York Times","url":"https://www.nytimes.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nyt.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":9},{"name":"OneTrust","url":"https://www.onetrust.com/solutions/consent-management-platform/","img":"/img/participating-logos/onetrust.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/optmeowt.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/privacybadger.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/privacybadger.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"privacy-tech-lab","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","url":"https://privacytechlab.org/","type":"Business"},{"name":"Raptive","url":"https://raptive.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/raptive.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":12},{"name":"SourcePoint","url":"https://www.sourcepoint.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/sourcepoint.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"TrustArc","url":"https://trustarc.com/resource/global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/trustarc.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Wesleyan University","url":"https://wesleyan.edu/","img":"/img/participating-logos/wesleyan.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Washington Post","url":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/washington-post.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":10},{"name":"WireWheel","url":"https://www.wirewheel.io","img":"/img/participating-logos/wirewheel.svg","type":"Business"}]},"html":"
The following organizations, representing 50 million users and hundreds of thousands of websites, are in support of GPC.
\n","sections":[{"key":"Browsers","data":{"green":"Browsers + Extensions","gray":"/ (Collectively Over ~50million Users)"},"content":""},{"key":"Business","data":{"green":"Organizations","gray":"/ (Browser and extension vendors, publishers, consent management platforms, ...)"},"content":""},{"key":"Partners","data":{"green":"Supporting Partners"},"content":""}]},"__N_SSG":true}
\ No newline at end of file
+{"pageProps":{"data":{"title":"Founding Organizations","headerText":"Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.","entries":[{"name":"Abine DeleteMe","url":"https://joindeleteme.com/blog/how-to-enable-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/abine.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/abine.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Automattic","url":"https://automattic.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/automattic.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Brave Software","url":"https://brave.com/global-privacy-content/","img":"/img/participating-logos/brave.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/brave.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Check My Ads","url":"https://checkmyads.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/checkmyads.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Complianz","url":"https://complianz.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/complianz.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Consumer Reports","url":"https://advocacy.consumerreports.org/issue/tech-privacy/","img":"/img/participating-logos/cr.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Didomi","url":"https://www.didomi.io/","img":"/img/participating-logos/didomi.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Disconnect","url":"https://disconnect.me/","img":"/img/participating-logos/disconnect.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/disconnect.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"Digital Content Next","url":"https://digitalcontentnext.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/dcn.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"DuckDuckGo","url":"https://spreadprivacy.com/global-privacy-control-enabled-by-default/","img":"/img/participating-logos/duckduckgo-vertical.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/DDG.svg","type":"Downloadable","isFeaturedIndex":1,"inOrganizations":true},{"name":"EFF","url":"https://www.eff.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/eff.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"Financial Times","url":"https://www.ft.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/ft.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Glitch","url":"https://glitch.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/glitch.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Firefox","url":"https://blog.mozilla.org/netpolicy/2021/10/28/implementing-global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/firefox.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/firefox.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"lockr","url":"https://lockrmail.com/","img":"/img/download-logos/lockr.png","type":"Business"},{"name":"Meredith Digital","url":"https://www.meredith.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/meredith.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":11},{"name":"Mozilla","url":"https://mozilla.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/mozilla.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":1},{"name":"National Science Foundation","url":"https://www.nsf.gov/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nsf.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"New York Times","url":"https://www.nytimes.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/nyt.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":9},{"name":"OneTrust","url":"https://www.onetrust.com/solutions/consent-management-platform/","img":"/img/participating-logos/onetrust.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Optery","url":"https://www.optery.com/the-optery-global-privacy-control-gpc-extension/","img":"/img/participating-logos/optery.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"OptMeowt by privacy-tech-lab","url":"https://github.com/privacy-tech-lab/gpc-optmeowt","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/optmeowt.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"Privacy Badger by EFF","url":"https://privacybadger.org/","img":"/img/participating-logos/privacybadger.svg","browser_img":"/img/browser-logos/privacybadger.svg","type":"Downloadable"},{"name":"privacy-tech-lab","img":"/img/participating-logos/optmeowt.svg","url":"https://privacytechlab.org/","type":"Business"},{"name":"Raptive","url":"https://raptive.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/raptive.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":12},{"name":"SourcePoint","url":"https://www.sourcepoint.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/sourcepoint.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"TrustArc","url":"https://trustarc.com/resource/global-privacy-control/","img":"/img/participating-logos/trustarc.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Wesleyan University","url":"https://wesleyan.edu/","img":"/img/participating-logos/wesleyan.svg","type":"Business"},{"name":"Washington Post","url":"https://www.washingtonpost.com/","img":"/img/participating-logos/washington-post.svg","type":"Business","isFeaturedIndex":10},{"name":"WireWheel","url":"https://www.wirewheel.io","img":"/img/participating-logos/wirewheel.svg","type":"Business"}]},"html":"
The following organizations, representing 50 million users and hundreds of thousands of websites, are in support of GPC.
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a proposed specification designed to allow
Internet users to notify businesses of their privacy preferences, such as
whether or not they want their personal information to be sold or shared. It
consists of a setting or extension in the user’s browser or mobile device and
@@ -148,4 +148,4 @@
control […] including when utilizing privacy-by-design products or
services"), while regulations in another jurisdiction may require explicit
consent from the user to send a GPC signal.
-
Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about supporting GPC in your browser, app, or website.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/img/participating-logos/optery.svg b/img/participating-logos/optery.svg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e9157e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/img/participating-logos/optery.svg
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
+
diff --git a/implementation.html b/implementation.html
index 596abcc..c3e1f3d 100644
--- a/implementation.html
+++ b/implementation.html
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-How to Implement Global Privacy Control (GPC) for Publishers
How to Implement Global Privacy Control (GPC) for Publishers
“Opting out of the sale of personal information should be easy for consumers, and the GPC is one option for consumers who want to submit requests to opt-out of the sale of personal information via a user-enabled global privacy control. Under law, it must be honored by covered businesses as a valid consumer request to stop the sale of personal information.” (emphasis added)
This means that when a site must comply with CCPA, it must also parse and respect the GPC signal as another way users can opt out of the use of their personal data for a sale. Colorado and Connecticut have also passed legislation mandating compliance with global privacy signals, though those laws have not yet gone into effect.
“Opting out of the sale of personal information should be easy for consumers, and the GPC is one option for consumers who want to submit requests to opt-out of the sale of personal information via a user-enabled global privacy control. Under law, it must be honored by covered businesses as a valid consumer request to stop the sale of personal information.” (emphasis added)
This means that when a site must comply with CCPA, it must also parse and respect the GPC signal as another way users can opt out of the use of their personal data for a sale. Colorado and Connecticut have also passed legislation mandating compliance with global privacy signals, though those laws have not yet gone into effect.
GPC is a way users can universally express, to all sites, their preference not
to be tracked on the web. It is a browser-level signal, maintained either by a
browser or browser extension, that a user or privacy-focused technology can set.
The easiest way to think of GPC is as a robot that selects the Do Not Sell
@@ -124,4 +124,4 @@
Because of its presence at the level of the browser and its immediate availability,
requests with GPC where CCPA has to be followed have a significantly lower time to
first ad load.
-
This whitepaper is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/index.html b/index.html
index 8ee1e87..732c8e6 100644
--- a/index.html
+++ b/index.html
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-Global Privacy Control — Take Control Of Your Privacy
Take control of your privacy.
Online privacy should be accessible to everyone. It starts with a simpler way to exercise your rights.
Enable Global Privacy Control to communicate your privacy preference.
Send the Signal
Your browser will send the GPC signal to websites you visit.
Exercise Your Rights
Participating websites can respect your privacy rights accordingly.
You may have noticed “Do Not Sell” and “Object To Processing” links around the web from companies complying with privacy regulations. To opt out of websites selling or sharing your personal information, you need to click these links for every site you visit.
Now you can exercise your legal privacy rights in one step via Global Privacy Control (GPC), required under the California Consumer Protection Act (CCPA).
Together, over a dozen organizations are developing the GPC specification. Get Involved
GPC lets users signal their desired privacy, just by browsing.
GPC is available as part of several major browsers, extensions, and websites.
The GPC signal will be intended to communicate a Do Not Sell request from a global privacy control, as per CCPA-REGULATIONS §999.315 for that browser or device, or, if known, the consumer. Under the GDPR, the intent of the GPC signal is to convey a general request that data controllers limit the sale or sharing of the user’s personal data to other data controllers (GDPR Articles 7 & 21). Over time, the GPC signal may be intended to communicate rights in other jurisdictions.
Join over 50 million users.
Download a supported browser or extension and start exercising your privacy rights with GPC.
+Global Privacy Control — Take Control Of Your Privacy
Take control of your privacy.
Online privacy should be accessible to everyone. It starts with a simpler way to exercise your rights.
Enable Global Privacy Control to communicate your privacy preference.
Send the Signal
Your browser will send the GPC signal to websites you visit.
Exercise Your Rights
Participating websites can respect your privacy rights accordingly.
You may have noticed “Do Not Sell” and “Object To Processing” links around the web from companies complying with privacy regulations. To opt out of websites selling or sharing your personal information, you need to click these links for every site you visit.
Now you can exercise your legal privacy rights in one step via Global Privacy Control (GPC), required under the California Consumer Protection Act (CCPA).
Together, over a dozen organizations are developing the GPC specification. Get Involved
GPC lets users signal their desired privacy, just by browsing.
GPC is available as part of several major browsers, extensions, and websites.
The GPC signal will be intended to communicate a Do Not Sell request from a global privacy control, as per CCPA-REGULATIONS §999.315 for that browser or device, or, if known, the consumer. Under the GDPR, the intent of the GPC signal is to convey a general request that data controllers limit the sale or sharing of the user’s personal data to other data controllers (GDPR Articles 7 & 21). Over time, the GPC signal may be intended to communicate rights in other jurisdictions.
Join over 50 million users.
Download a supported browser or extension and start exercising your privacy rights with GPC.
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a proposed specification designed to allow
Internet users to notify businesses of their privacy preferences, such as
@@ -49,4 +49,4 @@
Additionally, GPC is currently being implemented across the web. A number of
browsers, extensions, and publishers are supporting or implementing GPC (see
below).
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/orgs.html b/orgs.html
index 61dea1f..7c66697 100644
--- a/orgs.html
+++ b/orgs.html
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Founding Organizations | Global Privacy Control
Founding Organizations
Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.
Browsers + Extensions / (Collectively Over ~50million Users)
\ No newline at end of file
+Founding Organizations | Global Privacy Control
Founding Organizations
Global Privacy Control has broad industry support. Below, you’ll find browsers and extensions which send the GPC signal, businesses that honor GPC and other supporting partners involved in creating the specification.
Browsers + Extensions / (Collectively Over ~50million Users)
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/press-release/20201007.html b/press-release/20201007.html
index c5122e7..c33c072 100644
--- a/press-release/20201007.html
+++ b/press-release/20201007.html
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Press Release | Global Privacy Control
Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Easy for Consumers to Exercise Their Privacy Rights
Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Possible for Consumers to Easily Exercise Their “Do Not Sell” Rights Under CCPA
With the introduction of privacy regulations such as the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) , consumers have more rights to limit the sale and sharing of their personal data than ever before. CCPA in particular gives California residents a legal right to opt out of the sale of their data and requires businesses to respect user preferences through a signal from their web browser communicating the consumer’s request to opt out.
While this is great progress, it doesn’t amount to much if it is hard for people to take advantage of their new rights. Today, there is no defined or accepted technical standard for how such a web browser signal would work. Without that, users don’t have an easy way to express their preferences.
One provision of our regulations intended to facilitate the submission of a request to opt-out of sale by requiring businesses to comply when a consumer has enabled a global privacy control at the device or browser level, which should be less time-consuming and burdensome. I urge the technology community to develop consumer-friendly controls to make exercise of the right to opt out of the sale of information meaningful and frictionless.
In the initial experimental phase, individuals can download browsers and extensions from Abine, Brave, Disconnect, DuckDuckGo , and EFF in order to communicate their “do not sell or share” preference to participating publishers. Additionally, we are committed to developing GPC into an open standard that many other organizations will support and are in the process of identifying the best venue for this proposal.
We look forward to working with AG Becerra to make GPC legally binding under CCPA. At the same time, we are exploring GPC’s applicability and functionality with regard to other similar laws worldwide, such as the GDPR. We are excited about the prospect of empowering people with an easy-to-use tool to exercise their privacy rights.
Quotes from Participating Orgs
We believe consumers rights to online privacy must be expanded. And it is equally importantly to make online privacy easier for people. The combination of legislation and enforcement, protocols like the Global Privacy Control, as well as simple auditable privacy tools for consumers and the organizations they interact with, all play critical parts in realizing Privacy 2.0. Abine’s Blur and DeleteMe products and services will actively support initiatives like the GPC and other experiments to strengthen and clarify approaches that can deliver results.
Brave is about putting users in charge of their online experience and building products that incorporate privacy by default, so we’re excited to launch GPC alongside our partners to give users the control they deserve. The Web needs such standards to continue being what it was meant to be, and we look forward to the wide dissemination of GPC across publisher sites and consumer tech to strengthen the global rise of the privacy wave.
Consumer Reports is committed to finding novel and practical solutions to safeguard our privacy. While the CCPA offers Californians important new rights, it’s just not practical to opt out of data sales on a site-by-site basis. We are proud to work on this project to offer universal controls to make data rights more manageable for consumers.
As new privacy laws around the globe catch up to public expectations, we’re proud to work with such an esteemed group of privacy-forward leaders to experiment with technical solutions which reduce friction and increase trust between a user and the sites they choose to interact. The GPC is intended to be a simple, easy-to-use solution with immediate utility in California as now required by law.
Exercising our privacy rights under the CCPA should be easy. The GPC signal has the potential to empower people to automatically opt out of the sale of their data globally, rather than manually researching complicated opt out processes and sending requests to one site or service at a time.
Getting privacy online should be simple and accessible to everyone, period. Global Privacy Control (GPC) takes us one step closer to making this vision a reality by creating a simple universal setting for users to express their preference for privacy. DuckDuckGo is proud to be a founding member of this effort and starting today, the GPC will be launching in our mobile browser and desktop browser extensions, making the setting available to over ten million consumers.
EFF is excited to deploy GPC as part of Privacy Badger. It is critical for people to have easy-to-use and easy-to-understand technical tools to exercise their privacy rights. GPC is both, and can work alongside existing privacy-protective tools.
Glitch is all about making things easy for developers; we can’t wait to make it easy for devs to build apps that lead the way in respecting user privacy. Consumers have the right to limit how their data is accessed and used. Developers and technologists should design experiences so that exercising those rights is easy and universal. The GPC is hopefully the first of many steps we’ll take as an industry to promote greater privacy on the web.
Mozilla is pleased to support the Global Privacy Control initiative. People’s data rights must be recognized and respected, and this is a step in the right direction. We look forward to working with the rest of the web standards community to bring these protections to everyone.
Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about supporting GPC in your browser, app, or website.
\ No newline at end of file
+Press Release | Global Privacy Control
Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Easy for Consumers to Exercise Their Privacy Rights
Announcing Global Privacy Control: Making it Possible for Consumers to Easily Exercise Their “Do Not Sell” Rights Under CCPA
With the introduction of privacy regulations such as the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) , consumers have more rights to limit the sale and sharing of their personal data than ever before. CCPA in particular gives California residents a legal right to opt out of the sale of their data and requires businesses to respect user preferences through a signal from their web browser communicating the consumer’s request to opt out.
While this is great progress, it doesn’t amount to much if it is hard for people to take advantage of their new rights. Today, there is no defined or accepted technical standard for how such a web browser signal would work. Without that, users don’t have an easy way to express their preferences.
One provision of our regulations intended to facilitate the submission of a request to opt-out of sale by requiring businesses to comply when a consumer has enabled a global privacy control at the device or browser level, which should be less time-consuming and burdensome. I urge the technology community to develop consumer-friendly controls to make exercise of the right to opt out of the sale of information meaningful and frictionless.
In the initial experimental phase, individuals can download browsers and extensions from Abine, Brave, Disconnect, DuckDuckGo , and EFF in order to communicate their “do not sell or share” preference to participating publishers. Additionally, we are committed to developing GPC into an open standard that many other organizations will support and are in the process of identifying the best venue for this proposal.
We look forward to working with AG Becerra to make GPC legally binding under CCPA. At the same time, we are exploring GPC’s applicability and functionality with regard to other similar laws worldwide, such as the GDPR. We are excited about the prospect of empowering people with an easy-to-use tool to exercise their privacy rights.
Quotes from Participating Orgs
We believe consumers rights to online privacy must be expanded. And it is equally importantly to make online privacy easier for people. The combination of legislation and enforcement, protocols like the Global Privacy Control, as well as simple auditable privacy tools for consumers and the organizations they interact with, all play critical parts in realizing Privacy 2.0. Abine’s Blur and DeleteMe products and services will actively support initiatives like the GPC and other experiments to strengthen and clarify approaches that can deliver results.
Brave is about putting users in charge of their online experience and building products that incorporate privacy by default, so we’re excited to launch GPC alongside our partners to give users the control they deserve. The Web needs such standards to continue being what it was meant to be, and we look forward to the wide dissemination of GPC across publisher sites and consumer tech to strengthen the global rise of the privacy wave.
Consumer Reports is committed to finding novel and practical solutions to safeguard our privacy. While the CCPA offers Californians important new rights, it’s just not practical to opt out of data sales on a site-by-site basis. We are proud to work on this project to offer universal controls to make data rights more manageable for consumers.
As new privacy laws around the globe catch up to public expectations, we’re proud to work with such an esteemed group of privacy-forward leaders to experiment with technical solutions which reduce friction and increase trust between a user and the sites they choose to interact. The GPC is intended to be a simple, easy-to-use solution with immediate utility in California as now required by law.
Exercising our privacy rights under the CCPA should be easy. The GPC signal has the potential to empower people to automatically opt out of the sale of their data globally, rather than manually researching complicated opt out processes and sending requests to one site or service at a time.
Getting privacy online should be simple and accessible to everyone, period. Global Privacy Control (GPC) takes us one step closer to making this vision a reality by creating a simple universal setting for users to express their preference for privacy. DuckDuckGo is proud to be a founding member of this effort and starting today, the GPC will be launching in our mobile browser and desktop browser extensions, making the setting available to over ten million consumers.
EFF is excited to deploy GPC as part of Privacy Badger. It is critical for people to have easy-to-use and easy-to-understand technical tools to exercise their privacy rights. GPC is both, and can work alongside existing privacy-protective tools.
Glitch is all about making things easy for developers; we can’t wait to make it easy for devs to build apps that lead the way in respecting user privacy. Consumers have the right to limit how their data is accessed and used. Developers and technologists should design experiences so that exercising those rights is easy and universal. The GPC is hopefully the first of many steps we’ll take as an industry to promote greater privacy on the web.
Mozilla is pleased to support the Global Privacy Control initiative. People’s data rights must be recognized and respected, and this is a step in the right direction. We look forward to working with the rest of the web standards community to bring these protections to everyone.
Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about supporting GPC in your browser, app, or website.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/press-release/20210128.html b/press-release/20210128.html
index 09239b5..7b3f6bc 100644
--- a/press-release/20210128.html
+++ b/press-release/20210128.html
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Press Release | Global Privacy Control
GPC Privacy Browser Signal Now Used by Millions and Honored By Major Publishers
In conjunction with Data Privacy Day, we are excited to announce a major milestone on the path to making the Global Privacy Control (GPC) legally binding under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA): Millions of users have adopted GPC-enabled technologies, and major publishers--alongside hundreds of thousands of smaller websites--support GPC as a valid means for California consumers to opt out of the sale of their personal information.
The introduction of privacy regulations such as the CCPA and the newly passed California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) give consumers the legal right to opt out of the sale of their data, including via automated means such as a browser-based Global Privacy Control. Two months ago, we announced the initial experimental phase of GPC and are excited to see its growing adoption in the marketplace.
With millions of people exercising their rights and a common implementation across multiple technology providers, we believe GPC answers California Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s call for frictionless privacy controls and can ultimately be legally binding under CCPA and CPRA.
We invite other browsers, publishers, and online businesses to meet the growing demand for online privacy by respecting their customers’ preferences and supporting GPC.
Quotes from Participating Orgs
The trust of our readers is essential, and privacy is about trust. Supporting Global Privacy Control on nytimes.com is a powerful way for us to meet more of our readers’ expectations of privacy in relevant jurisdictions by providing them with a simple, easy-to-use way to convey their preference once across all sites.
We take the privacy of our readers seriously and are committed to providing the best reading experience. With further adoption of GPC, it will allow us to continue to bring utility and value to our readers
Meredith Digital is committed to providing consumers choice and respecting their privacy in order to maintain and strengthen their trusted relationships with our brands. We have already provided CCPA rights nationally to consumers and are extremely supportive of GPC, which is part of our evolving efforts to our digital audience of 150 million consumers.
CafeMedia already enables CCPA Do Not Sell preferences for more than 3,000 independent publishers, reaching more than 170 million monthly active users. We will begin supporting GPC as a way to enable people to opt out of the sale of their personal information, as required by CCPA. We’re excited to build on our efforts to accurately reflect people’s preferences on how their personal information is used.
DuckDuckGo delivers all-in-one privacy protection in our mobile browser and desktop browser extension. Today, we are thrilled to be enabling GPC by default so that DuckDuckGo users can easily exercise their legal privacy rights on the hundreds of thousands of websites soon to be respecting GPC. Since we don’t track our users, we are also respecting the GPC signal ourselves on our website and private search engine at duckduckgo.com.
Privacy-by-default tools are necessary for a sustainable, trusted, user-focused Web, and this is why Brave implemented Global Privacy Control in our desktop and Android browsers last October, alongside our existing privacy protections. Today, we’re proud to say that GPC has been added to our iOS app as well, and is being rolled out across our websites, ensuring that all our users get the ultimate tracking protection they deserve.
Consumer’s expect privacy. As privacy professionals it is our responsibility to respect those choices, while also providing a consistent experience across the internet. OneTrust is honored to partner with GPC to expand individual privacy controls and support organizations in achieving compliance through the use of the Privacy Browser Signal.
Improving experience for users who want to exercise their data rights should be an imperative for all organizations. Sourcepoint is pleased to support the GPC initiative and drive continued innovation in consumer privacy experience.
WireWheel was founded on the principle of enabling companies to be the best stewards of their customer’s information, so we are excited to support GPC efforts to more easily and automatically exercise their privacy rights. As new privacy laws are enacted around the world, initiatives such as GPC will be critical to simplifying the process for consumers to communicate privacy preferences.
Complianz allows 200.000 websites around the globe to respect GPC as it is likely to become the next standard for consumers to exercise their rights under international privacy legislation.
Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about supporting GPC in your browser, app, or website.
\ No newline at end of file
+Press Release | Global Privacy Control
GPC Privacy Browser Signal Now Used by Millions and Honored By Major Publishers
In conjunction with Data Privacy Day, we are excited to announce a major milestone on the path to making the Global Privacy Control (GPC) legally binding under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA): Millions of users have adopted GPC-enabled technologies, and major publishers--alongside hundreds of thousands of smaller websites--support GPC as a valid means for California consumers to opt out of the sale of their personal information.
The introduction of privacy regulations such as the CCPA and the newly passed California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA) give consumers the legal right to opt out of the sale of their data, including via automated means such as a browser-based Global Privacy Control. Two months ago, we announced the initial experimental phase of GPC and are excited to see its growing adoption in the marketplace.
With millions of people exercising their rights and a common implementation across multiple technology providers, we believe GPC answers California Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s call for frictionless privacy controls and can ultimately be legally binding under CCPA and CPRA.
We invite other browsers, publishers, and online businesses to meet the growing demand for online privacy by respecting their customers’ preferences and supporting GPC.
Quotes from Participating Orgs
The trust of our readers is essential, and privacy is about trust. Supporting Global Privacy Control on nytimes.com is a powerful way for us to meet more of our readers’ expectations of privacy in relevant jurisdictions by providing them with a simple, easy-to-use way to convey their preference once across all sites.
We take the privacy of our readers seriously and are committed to providing the best reading experience. With further adoption of GPC, it will allow us to continue to bring utility and value to our readers
Meredith Digital is committed to providing consumers choice and respecting their privacy in order to maintain and strengthen their trusted relationships with our brands. We have already provided CCPA rights nationally to consumers and are extremely supportive of GPC, which is part of our evolving efforts to our digital audience of 150 million consumers.
CafeMedia already enables CCPA Do Not Sell preferences for more than 3,000 independent publishers, reaching more than 170 million monthly active users. We will begin supporting GPC as a way to enable people to opt out of the sale of their personal information, as required by CCPA. We’re excited to build on our efforts to accurately reflect people’s preferences on how their personal information is used.
DuckDuckGo delivers all-in-one privacy protection in our mobile browser and desktop browser extension. Today, we are thrilled to be enabling GPC by default so that DuckDuckGo users can easily exercise their legal privacy rights on the hundreds of thousands of websites soon to be respecting GPC. Since we don’t track our users, we are also respecting the GPC signal ourselves on our website and private search engine at duckduckgo.com.
Privacy-by-default tools are necessary for a sustainable, trusted, user-focused Web, and this is why Brave implemented Global Privacy Control in our desktop and Android browsers last October, alongside our existing privacy protections. Today, we’re proud to say that GPC has been added to our iOS app as well, and is being rolled out across our websites, ensuring that all our users get the ultimate tracking protection they deserve.
Consumer’s expect privacy. As privacy professionals it is our responsibility to respect those choices, while also providing a consistent experience across the internet. OneTrust is honored to partner with GPC to expand individual privacy controls and support organizations in achieving compliance through the use of the Privacy Browser Signal.
Improving experience for users who want to exercise their data rights should be an imperative for all organizations. Sourcepoint is pleased to support the GPC initiative and drive continued innovation in consumer privacy experience.
WireWheel was founded on the principle of enabling companies to be the best stewards of their customer’s information, so we are excited to support GPC efforts to more easily and automatically exercise their privacy rights. As new privacy laws are enacted around the world, initiatives such as GPC will be critical to simplifying the process for consumers to communicate privacy preferences.
Complianz allows 200.000 websites around the globe to respect GPC as it is likely to become the next standard for consumers to exercise their rights under international privacy legislation.
Get Involved
Contact us to learn more about supporting GPC in your browser, app, or website.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/press.html b/press.html
index e204583..8be6667 100644
--- a/press.html
+++ b/press.html
@@ -1 +1 @@
-Press & Announcements | Global Privacy Control