Nevada Considering New Web Privacy Protections for COVID Sites

May 19, 2021 by TWN Staff
Nevada Considering New Web Privacy Protections for COVID Sites
Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Dan McCue)

CARSON CITY, Nev. – Nevada lawmakers are fast-tracking emergency legislation to bolster web privacy protections after a nonprofit news organization revealed the state’s COVID-19 vaccine information site contained the most trackers in the country.

The legislation, introduced by Assembly Minority Leader Robin Titus, would broaden the scope of Nevada’s existing privacy law.

Currently the law requires only that commercial website operators explain how they collect information and give consumers a way to opt out of the data collection.

Titus’s proposal would expand to cover any website running a public awareness campaign by or on behalf of government officials.

In March, The Markup, a nonprofit organization based in New York City, founded in 2018 with the goal of focusing on data-driven journalism, published an investigation testing every state vaccination website in the United States for privacy and performance. 

The Nevada site, which is run through a partnership with a nonprofit organization called Immunize Nevada, was an outlier in the test. 

 The news organization found that several states at the time of its reporting did not have any cookies or ad trackers. The site with the second-highest number of cookies, Utah, had 22 — less than half of what was found on Nevada’s site.

Nevada’s website contained 24 ad trackers and 45 third-party cookies. Ranking states by number of cookies, Nevada has more than the lowest 46 states combined.

Officials with the immunization outreach effort told The Markup the nonprofit uses digital advertising to “educate and inform Nevadans about these vaccines, and uses Google Analytics to track the performance of these ads.”

The site also interacts with Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, which increases cookie counts, they said.

A+
a-
  • COVID-19
  • IMmuize Nevada
  • Nevada
  • nonprofit
  • In The News

    Health

    Voting

    Privacy

    December 21, 2023
    by Tom Ramstack
    FTC Proposes Crackdown on Tech Companies for Surveillance of Child Users

    WASHINGTON — The Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday proposed sweeping new regulations to protect children from surveillance techniques used by... Read More

    WASHINGTON — The Federal Trade Commission on Wednesday proposed sweeping new regulations to protect children from surveillance techniques used by internet companies. The proposed rules could change how social media monetizes data they glean from children’s gaming, learning and internet search habits. The Federal Trade Commission... Read More

    July 5, 2023
    by Kennedy Thomason
    Privacy Protections Are Back on Table for Student Records

    WASHINGTON — A new bill, the Protecting Education Privacy Act, could bolster student privacy by restricting third-party access to their college... Read More

    WASHINGTON — A new bill, the Protecting Education Privacy Act, could bolster student privacy by restricting third-party access to their college and university records. The bill was reintroduced just before the current House recess by Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer, R-Mo. Though rights to education records are given to... Read More

    Why Are State Privacy Laws Getting Worse?

    In an alternate universe, the new crop of privacy laws in Iowa, Indiana and Tennessee could have been cause for... Read More

    In an alternate universe, the new crop of privacy laws in Iowa, Indiana and Tennessee could have been cause for celebration, marking a growing number of consumers around the country enjoying strong new protections over their personal data. In reality, instead of cheers and congratulations, there... Read More

    Biden's Efforts to Protect Abortion Access Hit Roadblocks

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is still actively searching for ways to safeguard abortion access for millions of women,... Read More

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is still actively searching for ways to safeguard abortion access for millions of women, even as it bumps up against a complex web of strict new state laws enacted in the months after the Supreme Court stripped the constitutional right. Looking to... Read More

    September 27, 2022
    by Madeline Hughes
    DC Considers Wide-Ranging Anti-Discrimination Data Law

    WASHINGTON — D.C. Councilman Robert White heard nearly seven hours of wide-ranging testimony about the proposed Stop Discrimination by Algorithms... Read More

    WASHINGTON — D.C. Councilman Robert White heard nearly seven hours of wide-ranging testimony about the proposed Stop Discrimination by Algorithms Act last week. The proposed law would prohibit a wide range of businesses across the district from using algorithms to make decisions based on protected personal... Read More

    September 16, 2022
    by Madeline Hughes
    Bipartisan Concern for Border Patrol’s Access to Travelers’ Phones

    WASHINGTON — A letter to Commissioner Chris Magnus of Customs and Border Protection revealed the agency gathers data from Americans’... Read More

    WASHINGTON — A letter to Commissioner Chris Magnus of Customs and Border Protection revealed the agency gathers data from Americans’ phones, laptops and other electronic devices in what they call a “border search,” potentially storing that information for years. “Innocent Americans should not be tricked into... Read More

    News From The Well
    scroll top