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- Fact Sheet: Draft Automated Decisionmaking Technology Regulations
The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) directs the Agency to make rules about access and opt-out rights relating to businesses’ use of automated decisionmaking technology (ADMT)
- California Finalizes CCPA Regulations for Automated Decision-Making . . .
What’s new: Regulations under the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) are finalized, establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework for businesses using California consumers’ information, including those employing automated decision-making technology (ADMT) for “significant decisions ”
- Clarifying CCPA Requirements for the Use of Automated Decisionmaking . . .
If a business uses the technology’s output to make a decision without satisfying the above criteria, the decision is made without human involvement and such use substantially replaces human decisionmaking – the technology is ADMT
- Automated Decision-Making Under the Microscope: CPPA Finalizes New CCPA . . .
ADMT is defined as “any technology that processes personal information and uses computation to replace human decision making or substantially replace human decision making ” If a business relies on the output of a tool without human involvement, the CCPA treats the tool as ADMT
- The CCPA and Automated Decision-Making Technologies (ADMT)
Among its various provisions, the CCPA now specifically addresses automated decision-making technologies (ADMT), attempting to bring transparency and consumer rights to, among other things,
- The CCPA and Automated Decision-Making Technologies (ADMT)
Among its various provisions, the CCPA now specifically addresses automated decision-making technologies (ADMT), attempting to bring transparency and consumer rights to, among other things, push back on algorithms making significant decisions about them
- CPPA Proposed Rulemaking Package Part 2—Automated Decision-Making . . .
The Draft Regulations’ definition of ADMT distinguishes a list of technologies, including firewalls, calculators, or spreadsheets, which are presumptively not considered ADMT, provided they do not execute a decision, replace human decisionmaking, or substantially facilitate decision making
- What you need to know about the CCPA draft rules on AI and automated . . .
What you need to know about the CCPA draft rules on AI and automated decision-making technology | IBM
- The CCPA’s automated decisionmaking tool rules: New consumer rights and . . .
The rules aim to increase transparency and accountability in the use of algorithms and automated systems if they are used to make certain significant decisions affecting consumers, which in CCPA land includes workers (both employees and independent contractors) and applicants
- Appendix_Risk Assessments - fpf. org
The final CCPA regulations define “automated decisionmaking technology” (ADMT) as technology that processes personal information and uses computation to “replace” or “substantially replace” human decisionmaking (§ 7001, subsec (e) )
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