Ccpa

CCPA
Regulatory Landscape in 2026: Workplace Safety, CE, FCC, and Data Privacy for Humanoids

Regulatory Landscape in 2026: Workplace Safety, CE, FCC, and Data Privacy for Humanoids

In the EU, robots are treated as “machines” under law. New robots must meet the EU Machinery Directive (currently 2006/42/EC) and carry the CE mark...

May 31, 2026

Ccpa

The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is a state law that gives people in California more control over their personal information held by businesses. It lets consumers learn what data companies collect about them, request copies of that data, and ask companies to delete it. The law also gives consumers the right to opt out when a business sells their personal information to others. CCPA requires companies to be transparent by posting privacy notices that explain what data they collect and how they use it. Covered businesses are generally those that meet certain size or data thresholds, or that earn money by selling personal information, so not every company is included. For companies that must follow the law, compliance often means mapping the data they hold, updating contracts with service providers, and creating processes for handling consumer requests. Regulators can fine businesses for violations, so failing to follow the rules can be costly and damage trust with customers. The rules have been expanded and clarified over time, which has added new consumer rights and more detailed obligations for companies. For people, the law matters because it gives practical ways to limit unwanted use of their data and to understand how companies use personal details. For businesses, it matters because it affects how they collect, store, and share information and can change customer relationships, products, and workflows.

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