Assembly Standing Committee on Privacy and Consumer Protection
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Good afternoon. We will call this hearing of the Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee in order, and we will be doing our bills today in file order. And so I'm going to express immense gratitude to Miss Quirk-Silva, who is here, here on time and ready. So, to all of our colleagues, that's. How you get kudos in this Committee. So, with that, Miss Quirk-Silva, we are going to start as a Subcommitee. Hopefully more Members will join us shortly. But if you want to begin, the floor is yours when you're ready. And this is AB 1788.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. And Members, I first want to say thank you to the Committee staff for diligently working with our office during this busy time of year. And I accept the amendments. Today, I present Assembly Bill 1788, which allows counties to establish mental health multidisciplinary, Disciplinarian teams focused on addressing the mental health needs of justice involved individuals who hold the values of confidentiality. Over the last decade, California's correctional facilities have experienced a massive surge in mental health cases amongst their population.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
The prevalence of addressing mental health needs among justice involved individuals has soared from 20% in 2010 to an outstanding 53% in 2023. To fulfill California's commitment to rehabilitation and reduce recidivism, we need to establish efficient practices to assist individuals dealing with mental health difficulties within the justice system. However, procedural barriers have hampered our efforts, including the lack of authorization and current law to facilitate the sharing of critical information between various entities.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
AB 1788 grants counties the authority to create multidisciplinarian teams to expedite the assessment of mental health services by allowing the appropriate sharing of confidential information. It also includes safeguards to protect confidentiality, ensuring that shared information is used solely to provide services with no implications for enforcement or criminal investigation. By prioritizing mental health wellbeing and improving communication channels, we can create a foundation for targeted care, ensuring effective rehabilitation, adequate mental health treatment, and reducing the likelihood of recidivism within our justice involved community.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
With me today to provide testimony and answer any questions from the Committee and the sponsor of AB 1788 is Mister Jeff Pupkett, assistant sheriff of Orange County Sheriff's Department.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
Good morning, Committee Members. My name is Jeff Puckett and I'm an assistant sheriff with the Orange County Sheriff's Department. I currently oversee our custody operations command and prior to that, oversaw both our behavioral health and homeless teams in the county. I'd like to thank the Committee for Hearing us today regarding AB 1788 and state that we are proud to partner with Assemblywoman Quirk Silva on this Bill.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
As many of you know, 2020 saw the passage of Assembly Bill 210, which allowed for increased information sharing between multidisciplinary teams to assist those experiencing homelessness. Some of the information shared included health information, mental health information, criminal history, and social services information. I think it's important to note that law enforcement was not a recipient of mental or medical health information, which is still carefully protected by HIPAA.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
However, being able to share criminal history information with providers allowed for better shelter placement and a higher level of care. Assembly Bill 210 allowed for three expected outcomes to be achieved, which include number one, a better quality of service delivery, two, increased ability to match better services to the client and three, reduced costs by decreasing duplication of services. It's my opinion that the successful implementation of Assembly Bill 210, coupled with the mdts that we had in place, are what allowed Orange County to decrease homelessness.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
According to the 2020 and 2022.0 in time counts, post COVID correctional facilities have seen an increase in mental health population, with Orange County in particular having jumped from 22% to 45%. For those with an open mental health, these numbers are even more striking considering the average daily population has decreased by 50%. We've also seen a sharp increase in those experiencing substance abuse disorder.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
In Orange County alone, approximately one third or 900 inmates of our average daily population are receiving medically assisted treatment to help them overcome opioid addiction. Like many sheriff's departments, the Orange County Sheriff's Department has taken numerous proactive steps to assist the jail population experiencing both behavioral health issues and substance abuse disorder.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
Some of these steps that we've taken include an increase in behavioral health, housing units, an increase in LP's beds, crisis intervention training for all staff, expansion of the medically assisted treatment program, new reentry programs, and a reduction in late night releases. AB 1788 is the next proactive step to strengthen and allow for broader communication to better serve our jail community.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
As the Legislature has done with the past and with other community concerns, including AB 210, SB 1342, AB 271, and welfare and Institutions Code 18951, which all allowed for increased information sharing between mdts. We know that mdts work, I've seen this firsthand, but we know that they only work if we can communicate. All the pieces of prior legislation allowed for information sharing and communication to better serve the community. I would respectfully ask the Committee Members for an aye vote so that we can continue this as it pertains to behavioral health within the state.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anybody else here in support of AB 1788? Thank you.
- Jeff Puckett
Person
Thank you.
- Clifton Wilson
Person
Clifton Wilson. On behalf of the California Faculty Association and the California Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and support, and then also on behalf of the California State Association of psychiatrists with the position of support and seek amendments. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. The mic is geared to the height of the chair, I think. Anyone here in opposition to this Bill? Yeah, please come on up. We will give you three minutes as well, when you're ready.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Sure. And to clarify, our position is opposed unless amended.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Good afternoon, chair and Members. Tracy Rosenberg from Oakland Privacy. We are a regional coalition that advocates for guardrails and safeguards in the interests of privacy protection, civil rights and community consent. First, we want to thank the Committee and the author for the commitments which address the vast majority of our concerns, which are about sharing confidential medical information about vulnerable people. We just briefly wanted to mention the one or two concerns that remain.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
We would like to see the Bill define the agencies that are authorized to participate in these information sharing terms. Teams, concretely, without a not limited to disclaimer, it's sort of a foundational thing in privacy regulation that the who is sharing information with who needs to be concrete and specific. We think that with three and a half months left of potential commendment time, there should be some way to survey counties to see if any agencies need to be added that are not currently listed in the Bill.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
And we would recommend taking that approach instead of the not limited to a disclaimer. Secondly, we're a little cautious about the role of law enforcement in these task forces when people are no longer incarcerated. Traditionally, departments of parole and probation have operated separately from police departments for a reason. And it's usually pretty destabilizing for people that have been released from carceration to sort of have police continuing to be involved in their cases and their care destabilizing. And we think it can be triggering.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
We have always heard that police don't want to be social workers. We agree, and we suggest that maybe probation and parole, at least when people are no longer incarcerated, would be the more appropriate participants in these task forces. That's all, and thank you for hearing our concerns.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Perfect. Thank you. We're going to establish a quorum before one of my colleagues walks out. Call to roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We have a quorum. Thank you. And with that, any other witnesses in opposition to this Bill seeing none. We will bring it back to the Committee. Any questions or comments? Committee Members seeing none. I will just add, I want to thank you for taking the amendments as well. I think they do go far in protecting privacy, which is obviously the role of this Committee. But I do want to give a huge shout out to Orange County.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Your coordination really has proven to be successful as it relates to your number of unhoused. And so I think, you know, you're bringing some of that ability for us to coordinate better in serving the people who need us most. And as we know, our mental health crisis is very, very real, and the individuals in our community who are suffering need our support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so the ability to do that in a more seamless and better way, which I know our counties are working incredibly hard to do, is really important work. So I want to thank the author for her leadership in that space. And with that, would you like to close?
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
I would. I would just end or close with. The data shows that more and more of those that are entering our county jails are suffering with some type of mental health issue and they're staying longer in the county jails. They used to be somewhat short stays and now they can be 1234 years. And so they are already interfacing with different organizations in order to help get the treatment they need.
- Sharon Quirk-Silva
Legislator
But when they leave, being able to continue that coordinated effort to support them, I think gives them the best chance of moving on into a healthy next step. So with that, I would ask for an aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. With that, do we have a motion on this Bill? Motion and a second. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
That Bill has six votes, so it's out. But we will leave the roll open for absent Members. Thank you, Miss Quirk-Silva.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Members. We have a motion on the consent calendar. We have a motion. We have a second on the consent calendar. Second. So there are two items on the consent calendar. AB 2652 by Semblance Marisucci. The motion is do pass to the Appropriations Committee with a recommendation to consent calendar. Nab 2885. Bauer Cahan with a motion to do pass to the Appropriations Committee with recommendation of the consent calendar. Please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
The consent calendar has six votes, it is out. But we will leave the roll open for absent Members. With that, we will. We have no authors here besides Committee Members, so authors in the ether that are listening. You might want to head over. But we will move on to miss Wicks, because she is here, prepared and ready. So we will take up AB 3211.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Okay, I think I have my witnesses here. I believe my staff is getting them out of the hallway, but I'll begin, and I believe they will arrive. Okay. Greetings, Madam Chair members. I want to thank committee staff for their technical expertise and partnership in reworking AB 3211. And I know we have a chair who's deeply committed to these issues, so thank you for your work, Madam Chair. We gladly accept the committee amendments listed in today's analysis. As all of you have heard me say, I do tech legislation to protect our children, my growing girls. And at issue today is the basis of their reality and safety. Committee staff framed it well.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Image manipulation and video doctoring have existed for nearly as long as photography and recording equipment, but they've historically required great effort and talent. Generative AI, or Gen AI, has changed that. Our ability to understand the fundamentals of our society and ensure basic safety. Undressing apps are rampant. These applications allow a user to create non-consequential, intimate images, also known as deepfake pornography. Creating convincing deepfakes takes less than 20 minutes and costs only a dollar.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Women and girls in particular, are vulnerable to this harm, and it has already been seen in California's high schools and middle schools. Technology is evolving rapidly, and according to investigative work of the New York Times, the models are updated so frequently that a chatbot that struggles with a task one day might mysteriously excel at it the next. Google has been public that their synth ID watermarking technology is in beta testing.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Academics are making strides in metadata and stenography, and companies have made commitments to this Administration at the White House and international standards-making bodies. But we, as policymakers, need to inform the pace of this development and the expectations for public disclosure. This ill is a broad framework to legally require companies to take on the responsibility of protecting our information environment, our children, and our democracy. The issue of generative AI-produced content can be tackled through a three step plan that was outlined in the committee analysis.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
First, all artificial content must be labeled as such. Second, all real content, such as video and audio recordings, must be labeled as such. Third, the large online platforms must be required to prominently display these labels, allowing users to distinguish between artificial and real content. As the committee analysis stated, the bill seeks to enact the plan described above. It would one require the providers of GenAI systems to enable watermarking, detailing content provenance into all Gen AI outputs.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Secondly, digital cameras and other recording devices to offer users the option to embed water markings into outputs. And lastly, social media companies to prominently display the labels that contain the provenance information of real and Gen AI-produced content. I believe I have folks testifying. They should be coming. I do have two people testifying. Maybe we could move on to opposition.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sure.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I know we went a little bit out of order, so. Ken Wang with Legal Counsel as cited, will be here, who's the sponsor of the bill, and David Evan Harris, formerly of Meta and currently of the chancellor's public school. Sorry, Chancellor's Public Scholars at UC Berkeley will be here as well. But we can move on to yeah.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So we can go to opposition. We will come back and give them their time when they're here. So opposition, please join us. We'll go a little out of order since there's two. We'll do two minutes each for both support and opposition when you're ready.
- Khara Boender
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair, members of the committee. My name is Khara Boender, testifying on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association and respectful opposition to AB 3211. CCIA is an international not for profit trade association with about two dozen members from a range of communications and technology firms. While we understand lawmakers interest in mitigating potential harms associated with AI-generated synthetic content. As written, the bill raises several concerns.
- Khara Boender
Person
We are still working through reviewing the recent proposed committee amendments and look forward to providing additional feedback as needed. The bill's prescriptive requirements, particularly because of the current technical limitations for watermarking and digital provenance technologies, is problematic. Many of our members are working to implement tools to better detect and label AI-generated content, but the tools that are currently available are not always reliable or accurate, and while such technology is evolving, so are the means for bad actors to evade such detection.
- Khara Boender
Person
Further, the bill raises questions about how to effectively watermark AI generated text or voice responses. For example, when asked a question and provided a written response, a large language model is unable to watermark AI-generated text, and commonly used voice assistants such as unlocked mobile phones and smart home devices produce AI-generated voice responses, but we cannot watermark those voice responses either. In the ever-changing AI landscape, we suggest that the bill be targeted to high risk cases.
- Khara Boender
Person
For instance, responsible digital services are proactively implementing safeguards to swiftly remove illegal or dangerous content like AI-generated images depicting CSAM. By persistently addressing these well-defined and agreed upon risks, platforms foster an environment conducive to harm mitigation without impeding the innovation ecosystem. Limiting provenance and watermarking requirements to high-risk applications also helps guard against counterproductive unintended consequences. There are risks of notification fatigue or banner blindness.
- Khara Boender
Person
This has been prevalent with website operators' attempts to comply with the EU's website cookie disclosure requirements, which showed that overly broad disclosure disclosure obligations could be highly disruptive while providing limited consumer safety benefits. On behalf of CCIA, I appreciate your consideration of these comments, and thank you for the time.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. We'll finish opposition part. Okay, perfect.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Okay, thank you Madam Chair and members of the committee, my name is Jason Schmelzer with Shaw Yoder Antwih Schmelzer & Lange, and today I will be doing my best Dylan Hoffman impression on behalf of Tech Net. We are respectfully opposed to AB 3211. While we agree that the intent of AB 3211 to create greater trust is a good one, we're concerned about many aspects of the bill. We're still reviewing the amendments, but believe there are still a number of issues that need to be resolved.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
But we look forward to working with the author and potentially providing amendments that help us out in this situation. However, as the bill is in print presents multiple problems that require platforms to comply with the technologically infeasible and impossible standards. First, while we understand that the desire to regulate first, while we understand the desire to regulate an emerging technology, this is an area that would benefit from federal standards and regulation rather than a state by state approach.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Many of our companies and platforms are at the forefront of developing content provenance and watermarking technology, which is still in its early stages. As a general note, content provenance in watermarking is incredibly unreliable and in many cases, easy to break. Researchers at the University of Maryland were able to break all of the currently available watermarking methods. Some can be avoided by simple cropping, resizing, or screenshotting of an image. More concerning, the researchers were able to insert fake watermarks and credentials into images, creating false positives.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Any bill on this topic should account for this unreliability, especially when considering the overly punitive fine structure within the bill. If laws exceed the industry's technological capabilities, consumers might place too much trust and credence in watermarks, making them more susceptible to bad actors attempts to deceive. As it relates to this bill, AB 3211 enacts requirements for technology that is still under development and is rapidly evolving.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
For example, there isn't a system that can break a system that can break a watermark text, making the bill's requirements to do so impossible to comply with. Furthermore, in its standards for large online platforms, AB 3211 should more clearly delineate between first and third-party content. First-party content would be images, videos or audio that is generated using a covered provider's generative AI tools and then is posted for distribution.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Dylan would want me to tell you you're over your time.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Thank you. For these reasons, we're respectfully opposed at this time, but look forward to working with the author in coming days.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Thank you. Okay, we'll move on to support, and then I'll call both support and opposition to the mic. We're just gonna do this all out of order.
- Ken Wang
Person
Good afternoon, chair and members, and apologies for our tardiness. My name is Ken Wang and I'm representing the California Initiative for Technology and Democracy, or CITED for short. We're proud to sponsor AB 3211, which would require watermarking and provenance data for content generated by generative AI systems. CITED which is the newest project of California Common Cause came together to seek state level solutions to the threats that disinformation, artificial intelligence, deepfakes, and other emerging technologies pose to our democracy and our elections.
- Ken Wang
Person
We approach these issues through a cross disciplinary approach advised by leaders from civil rights and civic engagement, law and public policy, industry and tech, and more. To that end, cited is proud to sponsor AB 3211, which would add an important tool to our arsenal to help stem the tide of AI-generated disinformation. The committee analysis details several disturbing examples for how generative AI is currently being used to create non-consensual intimate imagery, perpetuate financial scams, and swing close elections.
- Ken Wang
Person
Given the scale of the challenge before us, various efforts have already been initiated to address the issue. For example, the EU's new AI act is leading the way by requiring companies to develop content authentication and provenance mechanisms to tackle AI-generated disinformation, but domestic work efforts have been far weaker. Federal action has been limited to the Biden administration's Executive order on AI, which tasked the Commerce Department to develop guidance for content authentication, and various tech firms have also committed to voluntary efforts to establish industry standards.
- Ken Wang
Person
CITED believes that California has the opportunity, as the home of Silicon Valley and the heartland of AI innovation, to lead the US's response to these threats. AB 3211 represents the important first step for our state to shape the solution. So lastly, I'd like to thank Assemblymember Wicks for your leadership on this important issue and for the chair and the committee staff for your hard work on the amendments. With that, I'll turn it over to CITED's technical advisor.
- David Harris
Person
Chair, and members of the committee. It's an honor to be able to speak with you today and to convey my strong support of AB 3211. The California provenance, authenticity, and watermarking standards my name is David Harris and I'm here in my capacity as a senior policy advisor to CITED. I am also a chancellor's public scholar at UC Berkeley, a senior advisor for AI and elections to the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU.
- David Harris
Person
I have advised the White House, the European Union, and the United States Congress about AI policy, and I also currently sit on a task force at NATO on AI and disinformation. AI is a powerful tool that can bring benefits to so many people, but it also, if not governed judiciously, has the power to cause great harm.
- David Harris
Person
I previously worked at Facebook and Meta as a research manager on the civic integrity and responsible AI teams, where I carefully studied so many of the harms that AI can bring. You've already heard about the harms of AI generated, non consensual intimate imagery and child sexual abuse material that can be produced by AI. Misinformation campaigns can also be supercharged by AI. We're familiar with these campaigns from the 2016 efforts by Russia to interfere in our elections through social media.
- David Harris
Person
The Department of Homeland Security has already warned us that China, Russia, and Iran are likely to use generative AI to target our elections. Watermarking is the best available tool we have to allow us to identify what content is produced by AI and what content is authentic. AB 3211 requires that AI companies make good on the promises that they have already made to add watermarking to their AI systems.
- David Harris
Person
These promises, promises made by many of the members of TechNet and net choice were made first at the White House. In the White House, voluntary AI commitments from last July and were made again in public at the Munich Security Conference's AI elections accord, again signed by many of the members of TechNet and Net Choice, where a commitment was made this February to implement watermarking features in AI systems.
- David Harris
Person
Given that it's already been nine months since the White House AI voluntary commitments were made and we've seen little progress, I believe that we have no other option than to legally require companies to take on this responsibility and protect our information environment, our children, and our democracy.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you so much. Now, anyone here in support that wants to come up to the mic and weigh in to support first?
- Trent Lange
Person
Trent Lang California Clean Money Campaign and strong support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And for support and opposition, just name organization and position, please. Thank you.
- Daniel Pearl
Person
Daniel Pearl on behalf of the American Federation of State, County Municipal Employees in strong support.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
When to do it is always a question. Tracy Rosenberg Oakland Privacy we are support if amended, and we are checking out the committee's commitments.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. But you generally love our amendments.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Shane Gusman, on behalf of SAG-AFTRA in support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Okay, now anyone in opposition, please join us. Name, organization and position.
- Cameron Demetre
Person
Yeah. Cameron Demetre with Capital Advocacy on behalf of Net Choice, we like to align our comments with CCIA and Tech Net. Thank you.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Hi. Ronak Daylami with CalChamber. Also align our comments with the opposition. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Okay. Seeing no additional witnesses here in the room, I'll bring it back to the committee. Before I do, I want to take a moment of personal privilege and just commend committee staff on the excellent work on all of the bills up today, the analyses, the amendments, all of it, I think was really phenomenal. So with that, Miss Irwin.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you very much. And assemblymember Wicks, I know you have done, you've taken on all the big tasks in protecting our children on the Internet, and it is really critical, especially the previous presentation was on mental health, and we know how they are linked. And I do think that when you talk about deep fakes or AI generated images, there's a threat to democracy and a threat to our elections and, and just that Americans don't.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I mean, a threat to our children, too. But what, what we're hearing, I mean, I absolutely agree that everything should have a watermark, but what we hear from the opposition is that it's very easy to fake watermarks. And it's, you know, that the technology is not quite quite there yet. And so I agree with everything you're saying, but how do we get Americans to trust watermarks if it's so easy to overcome a watermark?
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I would actually, if the chair's okay. Actually, my witnesses to answer because of their technical expertise.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah, please.
- David Harris
Person
David, thank you so much. That's an excellent question. And that's one of the reasons why the approach of AB 3030 to 11 requires watermarks to be inserted not only in synthetic content created by generative AI systems, but also in content that is authentic, that is created by the camera in the Ipad sitting right in front of you, or by your phone, or by any recording device.
- David Harris
Person
It's very important that we attack the problem of AI-generated content that could be used in abusive ways from both sides, both ensuring that we can identify clearly and easily what is real and what is fake. There is no currently perfect solution for AI watermarking that makes it absolutely impossible to circumvent.
- David Harris
Person
But this is a case where we should not let the perfect be the enemy of the good, and we should be very careful in listening to people who say, it's not good enough, so we should do nothing. And the same sense, if we ever found a seatbelt that could prevent every death in every automobile accident, that would be amazing. But that doesn't exist. Does that mean we should eliminate laws requiring seatbelts in cars? I don't think so.
- David Harris
Person
Just because a solution is not a silver bullet to every single problem associated with AI, does not mean that we should throw up our hands and give up entirely.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
No, I don't think we should give up entirely. That's certainly not what I'm saying. And I know that this Bill will continue to move along, but the question is, if initially you have, I don't know, 50% trust that Americans can have, or Californians, 50% trust that something is authentic, that is problematic for later on, they might never believe anything that they see. If, if that's kind of their first introduction to watermarks.
- David Harris
Person
Yeah, that's absolutely a valid concern. The good news is that there are a number of companies that have already developed viable solutions that are marketing and talking about them publicly. One of those solutions is from Google and it's called Synth ID. Google is a member of an association, the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity, that has many of the major companies also that are members of, the groups represented here today. And Google has committed to leading that initiative towards deploying watermarks.
- David Harris
Person
The problem is they and many of these other companies have been now committing to do this for nine plus months. And we have to ask, how long do we wait? There's also a problem with waiting to require it that, that actually benefits the companies that are not taking initiative punishes the companies like Google, like Adobe, like Microsoft, that are moving forward through this coalition for content provenance and authenticity, taking initiative, putting out possible solutions.
- David Harris
Person
But they're getting punished because when the others don't go along, it doesn't work. And that's why the CEOs of these companies are calling for regulation. They are begging for regulation.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
So if you say Google is at the forefront, how. How much can we trust their watermarks?
- David Harris
Person
Yeah, the unfortunate thing is that we don't have a law in place yet that requires a company that deploys watermarks to allow researchers to study them and scrutinize them. That is one of the items in AB 3211 is that it requires companies that do implement watermarks to submit them to red teaming, which is an adversarial method of testing where people from outside try to break their watermarks and see if they can break them. And then they improve the technology.
- David Harris
Person
That's why we've really designed this bill to be something that makes these technologies improve over time and gives them space to flourish.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And I 100% agree that we need to be able to authenticate content. I'm just concerned right now that the technology is, is not there. And so, but obviously we need companies to take responsibility and develop as quickly as possible. So. Yeah, I get that. I guess the one thing, go ahead.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I was just going to say. No, I appreciate that. I mean, we're trying to, I think, in a certain way, create a regulatory framework and get ahead of some of the concerns that we have, right. That we're already seeing.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I mean, you're reading about it right now in the paper of, as mentioned, in middle schools and high schools, the non consensual pornographic imagery that's being created very readily and quickly and easily. So some of this stuff is happening obviously in real time. We also have a long legislative process. Right. And there's time. And I genuinely think from my perspective, having the input of the company is absolutely critical, which is why I shared language with many of them before the bill was even introduced.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I want them to be thought partners. I want to work with opposition to make sure we can do this in a way that's implementable. And if that means looking at implementation dates or other things that give us sort of runway to help kind of think this stuff through, I'm very open to putting all those things on the table. And the last thing I'll say, Miss Irwin, is you're one of the like thought leaders in the tech space. I'd welcome you in that, given your expertise. If you want to help me with that and work on that together.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
No, I appreciate that. And I know you always work with all stakeholders, so this is definitely not criticism of that. It's just kind of this weighing of how do we get get there. So thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Ward, thank you.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you for introducing this bill. I know it's something we've had conversations prior to this year as well, how deeply you've been studying how to get ahead of the negative consequences of what could happen. And I think we share all of those goals as well too.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And I guess aligning with, but maybe also trying to simplify from my mind, some of my colleagues comments, well, so the watermark technology, and while it's not wholly worked out yet, but yet we're trying to define it and regulate it right now. What in your words, is a watermark?
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Sure. I mean, from my perspective, it's a system that can embed invisible information to ensure you can identify what you're actually looking at. And there's multiple methods of water-marking and digital media, both, both the synthetic and the authentic. And it's not a new technology.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Right.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
You know, many watermarking techniques used today are similar to those originally developed for the digital rights management. The system implemented 10 to 20 years ago to stop online piracy of music and other things of that nature. It's just more. It obviously needs to be more advanced now, but it's essentially the way I think about it in its most simplest terms, is creating like breadcrumb trails throughout the process. So we know when we can see if images have been manipulated.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So you know who's who, the origin of it, and you're able to sort of. Okay. And no, if we could ask. There's audio that's looping back here, so we're getting kind of an echo. There is the TV outside.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
The TV outside is very loud.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I know. I feel like I'm in concert.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. Although it's funny, I think you're actually louder in the hallway than in the room.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I know. No one wants me in concert.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And so we're still improving upon what this is and how to define it and therefore how we should responsibly address or regulate. But what. Talk to me about the European Union story. Right, because we're saying that this isn't already happening yet. I guess back to opposition's points, that we're putting the cart before the horse, I guess.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
But we seem to be looking towards some success stories that are modeled on, well that are found on, I think a lot of deep thought that a lot of those policymakers have been able to put into it. And I will be the first to say on this dyess, that, you know, the reason why California is leading on this is because we don't have confidence that we're going to get federal legislation through and we need to be able to set that bar. That is why I think it's so important that she's. That we're working on this. But talk about the EU's maybe.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And Mister Harris actually advised the EU process. And so I think has a pretty intimate of how those regulations were put together. And I would with the chair's permission, defer to him.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes, please.
- David Harris
Person
Thank you. These are wonderful questions and I want to give some context. I've visited Brussels twice in the last eight months to speak with the people involved in the drafting and implementation of the EU's AI act. That act is in the very, very final stages of being approved. The act does require watermarking of AI-generated content.
- David Harris
Person
The way the European Union works is that there is an implementation phase that will take place during the one year following the final approval by the European Union's Council of Ministers, which is expected to happen in the coming weeks.
- David Harris
Person
During that one year period, there will be a process that is referred to as co-regulation, where groups of companies will actually be convened alongside a European standards body called CEN-CENELEC that will eventually own a standard that is used to create the presumption of compliance with the EU AI act. And we've actually been, as the sponsor of this bill CITED, has been in communication with that team and had conversations to really understand the direction they're going.
- David Harris
Person
What would happen if this bill passes is that we would have two parallel processes of implementation that would be roughly alongside each other between California and the European Union, where up until the moment when they are required for full implementation. And I think there would be great opportunities to collaborate and learn from what they've already learned by passing the requirement ahead of us. But in some ways, California would have the ability to jump ahead by passing this bill, depending on the final timeline passing.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Jumping ahead, but also sort of meeting European counterparts as well, which I would also argue for content that's created for information that is shared on a world wide web that, you know, we could probably be on parity to protect our, our users here in this state.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, and with the chair's permission. You got the gavel, Joe? Great. Mister Patterson's got the gavel. I think the other thing that's really important is that we do have conformity. I think, you know, when we have various states considering different things, Federal Government, European Union, there's a lot out there. And as much conformity as we can give around definitions and standards, I think it's better for the consumer, I think it's better for the companies, I think it's better for implementation.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And so that is really important to me as we work through this process and making sure that we're working and mindful of all the other regulatory entities that are out there.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And on one hand, like I'm, I'm sympathetic to the concerns that we don't have that definition yet, or we're still working on things. So it's very difficult to get ahead of that and predict that. But it's also happening over here in this space. And if we're just trying to conform to that, is this something that hopefully, as the year moves forward that definitions and application can be worked out. Do you have concerns with where this is going global, globally?
- Khara Boender
Person
I'm happy to chime in a little bit on this, and I have to say as the fact that I work in the state capacity, I do have counterparts at CCIA who are based in Brussels and have been working with the European Commission there. So I'd be happy to follow up with more of the specific concerns that they have with regard to what's going on across the pond, so to say.
- Khara Boender
Person
But I do know that in speaking with some of my other counterparts that, you know, there is some sentiment that because to the other witnesses point that this is not something that's already being implemented, it's kind of too soon to say what the other broader impacts of this are going to be yet. So by potentially going down that same route, there's still a lot of unknowns, especially given the technical feasibility limitations.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Fair. Thank you. The last observation that I want to thread into all of this is that are we trying to create a law that is going after, you know, the image itself, the actual content, or are we going over the. Trying to do something to prevent a negative action. Right. Is it the thing or is it the action? And for me it's about more.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
We want to be able to make sure that there's no, there's no actions that are out there that are harming or going against any of our societal values or as to the moniker that the deep faking. Right. And so that's something I'm gonna be looking forward as this bill does kind of move forward because maybe 99% of the content that's out there for entertainment or for other purposes is completely fine and is obvious. Right. But it's.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And that action also could take the form of somebody that's getting around the technology of watermarking or having a fake watermark attached to it. And so what do we, what do we do about that when they meet the, meet the test of your bill by applying a watermark, but are still creating the harm.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Right. So there's a lot to think through on this, which is super interesting and I want to see it continue. But thank you for helping to tease out some of these issues.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, I appreciate that. It's, you know, it's a newer technology. You know, I think the manipulation that exists within these types of imaging really corrode our trust in the system. I think trust is really important. I actually see a lot of exciting value in AI and I'm genuinely excited that it's here. And I think it's going to mean a lot of economic growth and solving problems we haven't even figured out yet. But we have to have trust with that process, too.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I think that's why we're trying to figure out a sort of surgical regulation here on a very specific piece of AI that's narrowly tailored. Because when you do have that manipulated content, I mean, ask the young girls who've had these non consensual imagery shared amongst all their classmates or elected officials who have deepfakes saying things that they don't believe in. I think you're right.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
99% of the content out there is probably fine, but there's that 1% that that's what we're trying to really guard against here. And again, I genuinely welcome opposition on this because I'm not, you know, I'm not a tech, I'm a politician, right. I need the technical expertise from the companies, from the in house folks at the companies to help us think through how do you actually create a bill that can be implemented in an effective way.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Mister Vice Chair. And then we'll go to miss Dixon.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Great, thank you. Just a comment. In terms of the type of deep fakes out there or, you know, content that could be created, I'm, you know, much more concerned right now about it being used for sexual content of minors or just, you know, sextortion or something like that. Obviously, democracy is very important, but oftentimes people can kind of figure that out at some point. But I wanted to make a, a comment and then ask a question to the author.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But the comments more to the witness you mentioned that, you know, if it's, you know, just because it's not a perfect solution, you know, doesn't mean we shouldn't move forward.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But I think the concern here is that, is that the false sense of security, you know, if I buy a car and I, you know, comes with seat belts, and they tell me the seat belts are going to, you know, close when there's an accident, whether or not that actually saves my life or not, you know, there's a level of assurances and a lot of regulation around knowing that that is going to happen.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I'm not, I don't know if I have entire level of confidence that if there's an image out there that other technology, you know, foreign actors or something like that aren't going to be able to create some kind of watermark that makes it also seem like it's a, you know, safe product. And so I don't know if you want to respond to that, but I'm very concerned about the false sense of security.
- David Harris
Person
May I have permission please? Yeah. Thank you. I think that's a very appropriate question to be asking. And I think that as this bill, were it to pass and become law, is implemented, you'll see different phases. And one of the phases is the phase in. Before people have updated their phones. Now software updates on phones are actually a very interesting part of this. I assume you sometimes download and install updates on your phone.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
It's automatic.
- David Harris
Person
It's automatic, perfect. That's because computer security is not a solvable problem. This is something that's discussed a lot in the security community. It's not something that you just finish, you never do. And that's why we have to keep installing these updates and keep improving the software. And that's why the language of this bill is intended in many ways to be what we refer to as self-updating. We use terms like state of the art to require that the companies use the best available standards.
- David Harris
Person
And we also have built this, excuse me, this bill to facilitate and require the type of adversarial testing that mimics the state actors that you're discussing, that looks for get the smartest people in the room together, try to break the watermarks and try to make them as robust and indelible and difficult to remove as possible. And the problem is that we are not getting over the hump to doing anything to implementing this without the shove. We need the shove to get the companies to do this now.
- David Harris
Person
They promised last summer to year do it. They promised this spring and it needs to happen. And without getting them over the hump, we don't have that opportunity. I spoke today with a company that's in the watermarking business that said if the companies were ready, they could deploy this in a matter of months. It could be deployed as a software update to your phone. So it's not impossible. It should be out there, it should be robustly tested, people should be attempting to break it.
- David Harris
Person
And once we get into that phase where by default all real pictures you take, all real videos you take, all audio recordings you take, also have that signature of authenticity, then we get to a much better place where we have marking of authentic and synthetic content. And the lack of a watermark that proves the provenance of a piece of content itself becomes a symbol that that is not trustworthy. So a bad actor taking away a watermark is not as much of a thing threat.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah. Okay, did you guys have a thought on that, or.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
You know, this is, it's been mentioned a few times when we need to shove or it's sort of been asserted that the perfect is the enemy of the good or that we'd rather do nothing. And I just want to correct that notion. The witness himself has observed several things. One, that several tech CEO's have made commitments around this area. That these same tech CEO's have created an association to develop this technology and deploy it.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
I do want to point out none of that technology has been deployed from my understanding. But we're also coming into committee today saying that we're working on amendments. So I do want to just correct the notion that a shove is needed to get us there or some other thing. But the penalty here is 5% of global revenues. So the discomfort is rational that we've sort of established that it's a nascent technology, that it's imperfect.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
And while there is a very complex scheme here that's been developed, again, noncompliance for our Members is 5% of global revenue. So that leaves us obviously very uncomfortable. The last thing is NCII and CCM have been brought up. I would just point out that there are other bills that are very specific to those issues that are in the legislature right now. The Tech Net for one is supporting so.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Well, thanks. You actually kind of went into what I was next going to get to sometimes is being in the minority party. You kind of read the tea leaves that bills are going to get out of committee and so you want to see if there are ways that you can maybe work with the author to get it out despite the fact that bet you gets out.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I always welcome working.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yes, I really appreciate that about you is that you do always check in with me to see where I'm at on bills and you know, it means a lot because you don't necessarily need my vote, you know, and. But, so I wanted to ask. I am very concerned about the penalty and if that's something you might be willing to work on. I could get to a support position today.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, I'm willing to work on that with you.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Okay.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And I also want to acknowledge the comments here. I mean, I do think I've been impressed with the not response because that's the wrong word. The proactive nature of the tech CEO's in this space. And a lot of what we're looking at is modeled off of their commitments. So I genuinely welcome them again in this conversation and welcome the companies in the conversation for sure, because we can't do it without them. Right. So I appreciate your comments and would love to work with you Mister Patterson.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Okay. I remember I used to be a staffer a while ago and the penalties and bills used to be like $10,000 per violation. Now I've seen $1.0 million. So you know, inflation's. We do have inflation, but it's the cost of living. Yeah, exactly. So I love to work with prices as well. With that commitment, I'll support this bill today. And I appreciate that.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you very much chair. This has been an excellent conversation because we're dealing with something that we don't know how it's going to be fully formed. A couple questions. Have you, you talk to the tech people all the time, the tech executives and the key people. Have you had a sense you could come to a statement of principles as we go forward with Providence and watermarking? Is everyone aligned on this and approaching it similarly or in different ways? I mean, certainly they're mindful of what's going on in the EU. So are we coming to a standard. A uniform standard, an industry standard so to speak?
- David Harris
Person
Yeah. Thank you Miss Dixon for the question. So most of the major companies in the space have joined something called the coalition for content Provenance and authenticity. Adobe is one of the leaders of that, but it's so many companies. Microsoft, Intel, Google joined more recently. Meta is not a Member, but does support the standard that they are putting out. And also the camera manufacturers, notably Sony, Nikon, Leica, Canon, have also joined this association.
- David Harris
Person
The association currently has only deployed something that does not meet the standard defined in this bill because it's a marking, a digital marking, that is so easy to remove that you can take it off within seconds simply by taking a screenshot of that marking. But what my understanding from speaking to people who work at the companies that are members of this coalition is that the coalition has active working groups that are also developing standards that would meet the definitions of this bill.
- David Harris
Person
And just to move back, to correct something from one of our other witnesses, Google has deployed a product called Synth ID that comes from Google DeepMind, their AI branch in the UK. And Synth ID, they clearly state on their website, is a tool for watermarking of AI-generated images and audio that even if you manipulate the image or the audio you take a picture of the picture, you re-record the audio that watermark persists, is robust and is to the greatest extent possible, indelible.
- David Harris
Person
And the good news is that actually at the Munich Security Conference in February, when the AI elections accord was signed by 20 of these major companies, most of whom I've mentioned already, they specifically called out C2PA and synth ID as examples of the types of watermarks and the direction that they're going with the technology. So the associations are there. The problem is there's a first mover disadvantage here. Google's invested clearly a lot in this. Adobe has as well.
- David Harris
Person
But then there are companies that are stragglers, notably Bytedance, last I checked, was not a member the owner of TikTok. We don't see Samsung participating in a meaningful way, and also we don't see Apple, which is surprising. But I do believe that if a bill like this re enacted, there would be in all likelihood a coalescing around the C2PA group and the standards that they have put forth and are developing, and they would advance much more quickly.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Okay, well, I hope you're correct. I mean, as I'm listening to you explain that all these different companies, I'm old enough to remember when it was DOS versus Apple versus IBM, and it was confusing for, I mean, just from a capital investment standpoint, and how do you. Whom do you trust and which is the better technology? It would seem to me this is so fundamentally important. I have a question also similarly with my colleague about the violation fine.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I think that's to be determined, but it would be magnificent. I mean, I know, Selma, women, you like California to lead the way. Okay. California will lead the way in whatever solution we craft here in this legislative process. It would be really not just fantastic, but it will be really important to 90% of the world's population who uses technology that we all can have confidence that all the players are aligned with a common platform, technology dealing with provenance, or watermark.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Apple may come out and call it something different, and it just would be. It would be more than helpful. It's almost essential that the world aligned the technology companies, the leaders in the technology, not adobe here and not somebody over here, because this is so fundamental. And I applaud you for doing this and creating this standard. I just wonder also, could we get those companies, every single Tech Net member, whomever, to agree to a statement of principles of what we're trying to align forward?
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
So when this comes to the floor of the legislature, both houses, you can say you have brought the industry together on something so fundamentally important that will protect our children and all users so we can have confidence in the system.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I think it's a great idea. I'm definitely happy to try. Miss Dixon, as I mentioned, you know, I shared the language with a couple of the major companies before it was public. I really wanted their input and their take and have done, have had numerous conversations, but with the trade association associations and with the companies themselves.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And, you know, I don't want to reveal any of those conversations because some of those are not public, but have gotten some good feedback from the companies, too, you know, and I think they are genuinely trying. I do actually believe that. But it's also ensuring that we have conformity across the system for them, I think is also really important.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Well, I agree, and I commend you for doing this. And it's a lot of, it's hurting rabbits here, but it's really essential. So thank you. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay. Seeing no other members wanting to ask questions or provide feedback, I want to thank the author for her work on this. I think this was a very popular topic in the legislature. It continues to be, and I think it's a really important one. At the same time, what's been said here is true. Right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
This is a very young technology. One of the amendments here today sort of changed away from what Miss Dixon was saying to allow for changes in technology in the future, too, which I think is one of the important things as we make policy is none of this is going to be static. And so how do we create policy that allows for innovation and change that will hopefully make it more trustworthy and stronger protections for consumers?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
But I think the author has mentioned many times today non consensual pornographic photographs. We've talked about the effects on our democracy in the recent elections throughout the country. We saw this kind of material propagating, and it is so critically important to the safety and security of this country and frankly, this world that people know what is fact and what is fiction. And I think that is what you are trying to achieve here today.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so I want to thank the opposition for being a partner in moving us to that State of affairs. And I think that one of the things I really like about this bill, because I think it hits on a lot of what was said here today, is that it both requires the watermarking technology, but it puts some of the onus on the distribution channels, which is so, so critical, because that is where each of us will access this information.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so making sure that they are a partner in ensuring that what we access is, we're aware of what's real and what's not. And so I want to commend you. I want to thank Committee staff for their extensive work on this Bill. I know they did a lot to get it to where it is today. And I know it will continue to change. And so with that, I respectfully ask.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay, did we have a motion? No, we need a motion. Do we have a motion on the bill? So move. Okay, motion on a second. Let's call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number nine AB 3211 by assemblymember Wicks. The motion is do pass as amended to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
The bill is 5-0, so it will go on hold while we grab some members. Go and call. I see Miss Pellerin is next. Although Mister Albany said eat her here. So we will take up AB 2050. By Miss Pellerin, when you are ready. Welcome.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and Members. In a state where everyone is mailed a ballot, the accuracy of our voter records is of paramount importance. The Electronic Registration Information center, known as ERIC, is a powerful tool elections officials can use to ensure that they have the most recent data possible to maintain the accuracy of their roles.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
ERIC is a nonpartisan nonprofit governed by its Member states, which mutually agree to share data such as voter registration and vehicle licensee data, in order to maintain the accuracy of their voter rolls and identify eligible but unregistered citizens. When a voter moves, they often re register to vote in their new jurisdiction, but do not notify the prior county elections official that they have moved.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Due to the highly mobile nature of California's population, it is likely that there are millions of voter registration records which are now out of date due to a recent move. AB 2050 authorizes the Secretary of State to join ERIC on behalf of California. ERIC would provide the state with data on voters who have moved in state, moved out of state, or died. ERIC would also help identify Californians who are eligible to vote but are unregistered.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
This would allow for more targeted outreach to be conducted by the Secretary of State and our local elections officials. ERIC security practices require that all sensitive data elements be subjected to a one way hash before they are transmitted to ERIC, while my technical witness can answer any more specific questions, in essence, a one way hash takes an input of any length and converts it to a fixed length output.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
This process is specifically designed to be one way. ERIC Members do not have access to other Members data or reports stored on ERIC's servers. State voter registration systems are never connected to ERIC. ERIC is designed to work within the framework of the National Voter Registration act, under which states cannot remove voters from the rolls just because ERIC reports they have moved.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Under the NVRA, no registrant can be removed based on a change of residence unless that registrant either confirms their move in writing or fails to respond to a notice and fails to vote in the period between the notice and the second federal General election.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
As a result, if a California voter was flagged as having moved in advance of the 2018 elections, for example, their voter registration could not be canceled unless they did not respond to the notice, did not vote in the 2018 elections, or did not vote in the 2019 elections, and did not vote in the 2020 elections. However, they would be moved to the inactive file if they failed to respond to the notice. After they were on the inactive file for two federal General election cycles, the voter could be removed from the rolls.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Should the voter wish to vote at any time, they could avail themselves of California's same day or provisional voting options. Additionally, AB 2050 specifically prohibits the sending of AB 60 license data in order to ensure that no one who is ineligible to vote is included in the data set. As some of you know, Colorado mistakenly mailed registration notices to non citizens. This was due to a human error in the Administration of Colorado's data set by Colorado's elections officials.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Not a flaw in the ERIC system. And as you may all know, nine states have left ERIC in the last couple of years. I won't sugarcoat it. The states who have pulled out of ERIC have given in to conspiracy theorists, couch and data security concerns California's efforts to increase the accessibility of our voter registration system has been a great success. By the Secretary of State's estimates, we have almost 5 million eligible but unregistered voters.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Becoming an ERIC Member is a natural next step in California's mission to improve the accessibility and ease of voting. Furthermore, better data on which citizens are unregistered allows for more targeted outreach, maximizing what little funding we do have. There are some, including a former President, who oppose ERIC. With regards to some of the privacy concerns raised, we believe that California Consumer Privacy act already indicates a legislative differentiation between encrypted and unencrypted, dated under the CCPA, disclosures related to a security breach are not required if the personal information is encrypted.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
The CCPA defines personal information as an individual's first name or first initial and last name when either the name or the data elements are not encrypted in combination with a Social Security number or driver's license number. As California would only be sending encrypted personal information to ERIC, so an encrypted Social Security number, date of birth, driver's license. We believe that under CCPA, this data can be shared in its hashed form.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
AB 2050 is sponsored by the California Association of Clerks and Elections Officials, and with me to testify in support is Shane Hamlin, our Executive Director of ERIC, and Dave Mulligan, a cybersecurity expert.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay. Two minutes each, when you're ready.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, chair Bauer-Kahan and Members of the Committee. My name is Shane Hamlin. I'm the Executive Director of ERIC or the Electronic Registration Information Center. I appreciate the opportunity to speak today in favor of AB 2050. ERIC is a 501 nonprofit. We are a Member led, Member funded organization. As you heard, our Members submit photo registration and motor vehicle Department data on a routine basis.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
We are also certified to receive and use death data from the Social Security Administration, and we are a subscriber to national change of address from the United States Postal Service. Utilizing only these four data sets, we provide our Members with reports that identify out of date voter records, deceased voters, individuals who appear to be eligible but are not registered, as well as potential illegal votes. Members must use these reports in strict compliance with federal and state laws. ERIC has always taken data privacy and security seriously.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
These principles are baked into our governing documents. We are generally aware of data privacy standards globally and here in the US, and we are watching as states adopt strong privacy protections modeled after California's excellent example, the ERIC Bylaws and membership agreement include extensive data privacy and protection provisions, and our technical infrastructure includes multiple layers of security to protect protect these data. Let me share a few specific examples.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
The most sensitive data, as you heard, is hashed- driver's license, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers, and these data elements are essential for high quality, accurate list maintenance. They are hashed by our Members before they submit them to ERIC, and then, inside the secure environment, our staff hash them a second time. Additionally, Members encrypt the entire data file before transmitting it to Eric, and data at rest in the data center are encrypted. We follow internationally accepted cybersecurity standards.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
We recently completed a type one SoC two audit, and we will do a SoC two type two audit later this year, and we have worked with state technology departments to provide assurances that our data handling practices are acceptable. Finally, I'll summarize four key provisions from the membership agreement. ERIC and our Members are bound by federal data protection laws that apply to the datasets we use. Members are prohibited from using the data or reports for anything other than the Administration of elections, with some lawful exceptions.
- Shane Hamlin
Person
ERIC is prohibited from using data or reports for anything other than providing services to our Members, and any unauthorized use of the data or breach of the data must be disclosed to the Members or to ERIC, as applicable. I believe the current Bill draft addresses privacy concerns that were recently raised, and I also believe the letter you have from Professor Morris at the Carey School of Law at the University of Pennsylvania addresses very well recently expressed concerns about the use of ERIC data for list maintenance. With that, I'd be happy to answer any questions you may have. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dave Mulligan
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair, Members of the Committee. My name is Dave Mulligan. I currently work in the cybersecurity division of Fiserv, Inc. A major, excuse me, a major financial technology company. I've worked in this field for over 20 years, and in that time, I have helped dozens of companies to secure their most sensitive data and have analyzed many applications for security purposes. I should say, though, that today I'm here in my personal capacity, not speaking for Fiserv officially.
- Dave Mulligan
Person
When I read the analysis prepared for this Committee, I was struck that in multiple places, no distinction was drawn between sending the plaintext value of a data element to ERIC and sending a hash of that value to ERIC. A hash function is a particular type of operation on data that by design is irreversible. The recipient of hashed data cannot reverse the process to obtain the original data, and there are no current known attacks on the SHA two family of hashing algorithms used by ERIC.
- Dave Mulligan
Person
Using a hash in place of the value itself is a completely industry standard mechanism for comparing data values without actually needing the actual value. If, say, the same date of birth is hashed independently by two different states and sent to ERIC, ERIC can then compare those two hashed values, which will be identical, and know that the original values were the same without having any ability to know what that original value actually was.
- Dave Mulligan
Person
The PCI DSS standards, which govern how companies have to handle credit card data, list one way hashing using strong cryptography as one of only three acceptable methods for protecting credit card numbers before storing them. And that's pretty much the gold standard. So, in summary, it's my professional opinion that the data handling procedures used by ERIC follow the industry best practices and don't cause any privacy issues, since sending a hash of a sensitive data element is not the same as sending that sensitive data element.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else here in the room in support of this Bill? AB 2050.
- Andrea Liebenbaum
Person
Hello. Andy Liebenbaum on behalf of the County of Los Angeles and strong support. And I've also been asked to present the support of the California Association of Clerks and Election Officials who couldn't be here, but they also strongly support the Bill. Thank you.
- Tanisha Boatner
Person
Good afternoon, chair Members. Tanisha Boatner, on behalf of the California State Association of Counties, in support of AB 2050. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone here in opposition of the Bill? Okay.
- Ethan Naegler
Person
Ethan Naegler. On behalf of the City Clerks Association of, California, in support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay.
- Colleen Britain
Person
My name is Colleen Britain. I'm with the election Integrity Project, California.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Did you. I'm sorry, just clarification. Did you submit a letter?
- Colleen Britain
Person
Yes, we did.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay. I just don't have it. That's why I stopped you.
- Colleen Britain
Person
Oh, you should have it.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, no, I do have it. I do. I apologize. Okay, my bad. Please go ahead. Two minutes.
- Colleen Britain
Person
Okay. Accuracy accurately maintained voter rolls are essential to restore the faith in our electoral system and preserve our republic. ERIC is not the answer. It facilitates exploitation of vulnerable populations, especially non citizens. It prohibits the transmission of any data regarding voter eligibility based on citizen status. Yet ERIC maintains that states contact 95% of those on the eligible but unregistered list in an attempt to get them registered.
- Colleen Britain
Person
Unfortunately, the state has no way of knowing or determining which of those on the ERIC provided eligible list is actually eligible by law. As a result, ERIC could easily facilitate adding more ineligible individuals to the roles, the exact opposite of its stated purpose. ERIC puts the state at risk of violating three major federal laws.
- Colleen Britain
Person
First, the Help America Vote act, which says that state election officials shall implement a statewide voter registration list maintained and administered at the state level, and those same state officials shall perform list maintenance on the regular basis. There's no provision in that statute that authorizes any state to outsource these obligations to a third party. Second, the National Voter Registration act states that states shall maintain and make available for public inspection all records concerning activities conducted for the purpose of accurately maintaining voter lists.
- Colleen Britain
Person
In contrast, ERIC states that if a Member receives a request to disclose ERIC data and determines that it's legally obligated to comply, it shall not make that disclosure without first obtaining a court order compelling it to do so. Third, ERIC clearly violates the driver's Privacy Protection act, which states the fact that an applicant has declined to register will remain confidential. Last year's ERIC Bill died due to its cost. Cost is the reason enough to kill this unnecessary and unwise Bill again.
- Colleen Britain
Person
Lastly, there is no requirement in ERIC's bylaws that Member states must actually remove ineligible voters from their registration rolls. EIPCA strongly urges a no vote on AB 2050. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. And I apologize for the mix up. Appreciate you being here and testifying. Yes, it is. I was looking at the wrong piece of paper.
- Colleen Britain
Person
It's a lot more detail than I could.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes, that's why we always make sure that people submit the letters cause it's helpful information. So, yes, no, I apologize for that. I was looking at the wrong thing, but I appreciate you being here testimony. Thank you. Anybody else in opposition to this Bill?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Come on up. You can give us your name. Hold on so you don't get hit by the door. So, name, organization or location and position. Thank you.
- Eunice Malley
Person
Hello, my name is Eunice Malley. I'm with the election integrity Project, California, and I strongly oppose AB 2050. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Come on up.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I can't do this. I'm Judy Friendo, I'm in Solano county and I'm also with the election integrity California, and I very strongly oppose and ask you to really consider this. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thanks for being here. Come on. Hello, my name is Nancy Stilts and I'm with Solano County. I work with the election Integrity Project California, and I strongly oppose AB 2050. Thank you. Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Good afternoon. Lee Mante Berry, coordinator for election Integrity Project California out of Placer County. I strongly oppose AB 2050. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
My name is Joel Berrio, I'm just a retired person, but I strongly oppose AB 2050. just a retired person. Thank you. My name is Rita Pizziali, I'm a resident of Placer County and I strongly oppose this Bill. Thank you. Careful of that door, yo. Yeah, yeah. Rochelle Connor. I am a registered voter in Solano County in opposition to 2050. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
NotThank you. Not seeing anybody else? I'll bring it back to the Committee. Any questions or comments? Yeah. Mister Bryan,
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
This Bill enjoys the co- Authorship of three Assembly elections chairs. I know you've been working on this since the day that you came into this body. Happy to make a motion to move this Bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. I'll second the motion. Thank you. Miss Dixon. You good? No, you good? Okay, awesome. Just want to make sure. So thank you. I also want to reiterate my gratitude for your leadership in this space.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I know you are one of the people in the body who has the biggest depth of experience in elections and ensuring that our elections are safe, open and fair to all. The integrity of that is so critically important to you. So I really appreciate you leading and helping us figure out the best path forward in that. And with that, would you like to close?
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Well, I respectfully ask for your I vote. Maintaining accurate voter files is the utmost importance to maintaining our democracy.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And this is definitely an excellent tool for elections officials. So thank you. Great. Thank you, Miss Pellerin. Let's call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
That has three votes, so we will leave it on call for absent Members. More people will come back. So thank you.
- Gail Pellerin
Legislator
Thank you very much.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Mister Maienschein, AB 287. When you are ready.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
How are you? Thank you very much, Madam Chair and Members, I want to begin by accepting the amendments as proposed in the analysis, California is facing a staggering number of overdose deaths. The impact of fentanyl alone has been felt in every one of our districts. AB 2871 creates a new tool to help combat this crisis and prevent future deaths. The Bill allows counties to create overdose fatality review teams composed of public health professionals, law enforcement, drug treatment providers, and local nonprofit organizations.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The review teams will examine the circumstances surrounding individual overdose deaths to identify commonalities or other actionable items that can lead to informed efforts to prevent future overdoses. The Bill allows members of the review team to share relevant information regarding a decedent within the scope of the review team. In order to protect privacy, the Bill makes all communications by or within the review team confidential.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
The Bill is modeled off of existing review teams such as the child death review teams, domestic violence death review teams, and elder and dependent adult death review teams. With me to testify in support is Doctor Steven Campman, the San Diego County Chief Medical Examiner.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Steve Campman
Person
Good afternoon. Chair Bauer-Kahan, sorry, and Vice Chair Patterson and Members of the Committee. Again, I'm Doctor Steve Campman, the Chief Medical Examiner for San Diego County, and it's an honor to testify before you today, and San Diego County is proud to be the sponsor of this legislation that will give counties an additional tool to address the drug and opioid crisis locally. According to the data from the State's Health Department, opioid related deaths increased by 121% between 2019 and 2021.
- Steve Campman
Person
The alarming trend is true across other counties in the state, including our county, San Diego County. In 2021, 1,309 people died in our county because of drug overdoses, 896 of those due to opioids, and among those over 800 due to fentanyl alone. AB 2871 would allow counties to create overdose fatality review teams to engage in system wide team review and information sharing across county agencies, local stakeholders and experts when there is a drug fatality with the sole purpose of preventing future opioid overdose deaths.
- Steve Campman
Person
Currently, information about those that have died is largely siloed between different agencies, despite evidence that the other committees that were mentioned for children, domestic violence and elder abuse have had success. Overdose fatality review teams would improve systemic issues by streamlining the ability to share information about cases to help identify opportunities for improvement at both the system-wide and the individual levels. By allowing stakeholders that may have had contact with the deceased to work together to identify gaps, especially in delivery of service.
- Steve Campman
Person
AB 2871 would allow for information sharing while still protecting the information shared for these purposes in accordance with confidentiality standards. To kind of better explain the information sharing in the context of this kind of committee, the members sign confidentiality forms and then the members choose a topic, perhaps, you know, school-aged kids or fentanyl, people that have died with fentanyl, to focus on for a meeting. And then those present bring the information that they have about that person to the meeting and verbally share.
- Steve Campman
Person
So we're not. It wouldn't be duplicating people's medical records and sharing them about the Committee. The Bill would help us create a database of de-identified cases to assess health outcomes more comprehensively and strategically invest resources towards prevention. AB 2871 would ensure continued compliance with confidentiality standards, still allowing the overdose fatality teams to identify trends and systemic barriers to prevent overdoses in the future. I respectfully request your support of the Bill and thank you for your time and attention.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else here in support of this Bill?
- Elizabeth Espinosa
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. I'm Elizabeth Espinosa, today expressing the support of the Urban Counties of California, as well as the County Health Executives Association of California. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Clifton Wilson
Person
Clifton Wilson on behalf of the Fresno County Board of Supervisors with the position of support if amended. Thank you. And thank you for raising the mic.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Clifton, it was still too low for you, but we're trying. Anyone here in opposition to this measure?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Seeing none. I will bring it back to the Committee. Any questions or comments? Seeing none. I just want to thank the author. I know the most important job in your life is father. And that you are someone who really takes seriously protecting our communities. And this is a huge step in the right direction, because the overdose epidemic, especially amongst our young people, is something we need to throw everything we've got at. So I want to thank you for this.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And with that, would you like to close?
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Well, thank you very much, Madam Chair. I would use that as my close. This is something that's going to be an ability for us as lawmakers, both at the state level and the local level, to craft better policies that prevent this from happening. So with that, I respect the request an aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Great. Do we have a motion on this measure? Great. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number four, AB 2871 by Assembly Member Maienschein. The motion is do pass, as amended, to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
That Bill has five, so it's on call. We'll leave it open for absent Members.
- Brian Maienschein
Person
Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Mister Alanis, you are up with AB 3080.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you. Hi, guys. Well, thank you, Madam Chair and members; let me start off by saying that I, indeed, am accepting committee amendments today if need be. Thank you, Josh. And I'm grateful to your committee staff for the time and thoughtfulness they put in for making this bill better and narrower. As we begin the discussion on this very complex and sensitive topic, it has not lost on me the very real concerns that the opposition has.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I have read their letters, and I fully intend to continue to discuss and work through these very important issues. But what also weighs in on me is my times, the crimes against children's detective with the Santos County Sheriff's Office, and where I saw what I believed to be an unspoken and often hidden but scientifically supported impact on pornography. While I don't claim to have all the answers, and I'm certainly not an expert on age verification technology, that's what these guys are here for.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
This bill, along with the amendments I'm accepting today, is measured. Well, let's just say that it's going to make sure then, and I hope everybody's happy with this bill. And with that, I'm going to bring up those that were testifying. Heidi Olson, pediatric nurse, and examiner specializing in sexual assault cases. Iain Corby, Executive Director for Age Verification Providers Association, and Joseph kohm, the Policy Director for the - I'm sorry. Need water. Policy Director for a Family Policy Alliance.Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. So we've given prior permission to do two minutes each, but just for clarity, the opposition will have the same. So when you're ready. All right.
- Heidi Olson
Person
Good afternoon, Chair Members. I'm Heidi Olson. I'm a pediatric sexual assault nurse examiner, and over the last few years, I have performed or reviewed over 1500 forensic exams of kids who have been sexually assaulted. A really disturbing trend that we're seeing at our hospital, and that's being seen around the United States, is that the age range most likely to commit sexual assaults right now are 11 to 15-year-old males.
- Heidi Olson
Person
Now, while problematic sexual behavior is a multifaceted issue, no doubt there's a clear connection between repeated exposure to pornography and child-on-child sexual assault. There are over 100 research studies showing there's a correlation and causational relationship between pornography and violence. Kids don't have fully developed brains. They're really susceptible to what they see in pornography. This is problematic because mainstream porn today is very violent and degrading, and it's the number one sex educator of our kids today.
- Heidi Olson
Person
A recent study estimated that two-thirds of adolescents are currently addicted to online porn. Kids are accessing violent porn at mind-blowing rates. I just talked to a rural high school that monitored their 140 students school-issued devices, and in one month, there were 13,000 hits to Pornhub. We are seeing numerous negative effects on tweens and teens, from erectile dysfunction to glorifying sexual violence to increased child sexual exploitation and the fundamental misunderstanding of consent, as pornography does not value intimacy or mutuality. The porn industry has a goal of making money. How do you do that? You create lifelong users. Research shows that the earlier a child is exposed to pornography, the more likely they will be lifelong users. So, for those reasons, I strongly support this bill. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. When you're ready.
- Iain Corby
Person
Thank you. Madam Chair and members, I'm Iain Corby. I'm the Executive Director of the Age Verification Providers Association. We represent 30 companies around the world that provide online age-verification technology, and our mission is to make the Internet age-aware, not identity-aware. So online age verification can be done, and is already being done at great scale. It can be done anonymously, effectively, inclusively, conveniently and cheaply.
- Iain Corby
Person
So, if American technology can put a man on the moon, we can certainly allow you to prove your age online without disclosing your identity, and that's the essence of age verification. If we wanted to do identity, we'd leave that to the much bigger identity industry. So the basic way this is accomplished is by proving your age to an independent third party, and then that independent third party simply says yes or no to an adult site as to whether you're over 18.
- Iain Corby
Person
We believe age verification providers should be independently audited against approved international standards, which not only check that they're getting the results right but also that personal data is being processed securely and is not retained after the check is completed, as this bill, as rewritten by the Committee, explicitly requires. There's an ever-growing number of ways to prove your age. You might use a piece of government documentation or a reusable digital identity, which we compare to a live image to make sure that it's you.
- Iain Corby
Person
You might get data from your cell phone network or utility provider, or your bank, and recently, we have developed a way of estimating your age based on just what you look like within a year and a half of your actual age. And the Federal National Institute of Standards and Technology has just completed some, some very rigorous testing of that, which was, and they've published some promising results.
- Iain Corby
Person
It takes just a few seconds, and we're cooperating as an industry to create interoperable, reusable age checks through a project funded by the European Commission, originally called EU Consent; this innovation is driving down the cost. The UK government estimates about 12 cents per check, and we agree with them that that price will only go down. So, thank you very much for the opportunity to speak to you today.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. We have this conversation a lot, and that was helpful to the last witness.
- Joseph Kohm
Person
Good afternoon. Chair and members of the committee, my name is Joseph Kohm. I'm an attorney and the Policy Director for Family Policy Alliance, which is a nonprofit organization that focuses on advancing family values through legislation around the country, and we're proud to strongly support AB 3080. So, with the rise of technology, children have nearly unlimited access to adult websites containing age-inappropriate pornographic material. Research shows that by the age of 17, about 75%, three-quarters of adolescents have been exposed to pornography.
- Joseph Kohm
Person
Research also proves that pornography harms children. Studies show that over 88% of pornographic videos depict some kind of sexual violence, while over 48% of these same videos include some kind of verbal abuse. Studies also show that 53% of male adolescents and 39% of female adolescents actually believe the lie that pornography is an accurate representation of sex. So this means that adolescents are learning about sex from a perspective which portrays sex as physical abuse.
- Joseph Kohm
Person
Now, additionally, research also reveals that out of those individuals who have been exposed to pornography, 58% access the material unintentionally. So what this means is that adolescents are becoming addicted to pornography through accidental interaction with certain websites that age verification and parental involvement could have prevented. Now, I want you to know that California is not the first state to propose a bill like this. Last year, seven states of varying persuasions passed similar legislation, and another eight have passed them through their legislatures.
- Joseph Kohm
Person
This year, most of these bills have been bipartisan efforts, including somewhere the legislative houses voted unanimously to pass the bill. And most of these bills have withstood judicial scrutiny. Most recently, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld one of these bills. In a landmark decision, the court made clear that states have a compelling interest in protecting children from Internet pornography and that bills like AB 30, which is substantially similar to the bill at issue in that case, do not violate the First Amendment.
- Joseph Kohm
Person
So right now, Chair and members, the average age of early of exposure, first exposure to pornography is between seven and 13. So AB 3080 is critical legislation necessary to protecting children and empowering parents. We strongly urge you to support, and I'm here for any questions. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. That was an impressive, exact six minutes, team. So I'm gonna.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
We've been timing it.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Kudos to the support on this bill. Anyone else in the room in support of this bill. Welcome to come up, register your support, name, affiliation, and position.
- Rochelle Connor
Person
Rochelle Connor, on behalf of Concerned Women for America, and strong support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mary Lentz
Person
Hi, my name is Mary Lentz. I'm an associate producer for Disney and Hulu. I'm strongly supporting this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jewell Baraka
Person
Hi, my name is Jewell Baraka. I'm a survivor who was trafficked in porn at 14, and the author of the recent book Coming of Age on a Porn Set, and I am strongly in support of this bill.
- Helen Taylor
Person
My name's Helen Taylor, Vice President for the anti-trafficking organization Exodus Cry, in full support of this bill. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jenna McKaye
Person
Jenna Mckaye, a human trafficking survivor, and with Exodus Cry, and I support this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Watch that door. It keeps opening behind you guys. But please join us.
- Ashley Faison
Person
Ashley Faison, I'm the founder of an anti-trafficking organization, Diamond Collective, and also a survivor in support of this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Meziah Maddox
Person
Hello, I'm Meziah Maddox, and I'm a parent, and I support this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Peggy Delgado Fava
Person
Hello. My name is Peggy Delgado Fava. I'm the Executive Director for Bridge Network, and we work with marginalized, at-risk youth. Support of this bill. Thank you.
- Brandon Campbell
Person
Pastor Brandon Campbell, Northern California Director for California Baptist for Biblical Values, and support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Christine Campbell
Person
Christine Campbell, just a concerned parent and support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Not just a concerned parent.
- Greg Burt
Person
Greg Burt, Vice President of the California Family Council, in support. Thanks.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Brock Campbell
Person
Brock Campbell, on behalf of Lighthouse Baptist Church in Santa Maria, in support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Emily Campbell
Person
I'm Emily Campbell from Santa Maria Lighthouse Baptist Church and I'm in support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Doug Bennett
Person
Hello, Dr. Doug Bennett, founding Executive Director on behalf of Magdalene Hope, Restoration Ranch Women's Shelter, Rescue Grounds Coffee Company, and people for the Abolishment of Trafficking Humans. I'm a former porn addict and sex buyer, and passing this Bill might help a young man go down the same road that I went down. So I urge you for an aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, sir. Do we have principal opposition in the room that wants to come up and testify? Oh, okay. Oh, there we go. No, we have someone. She's coming. Join us. Okay.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Just a quickie. Samantha Corbin, on behalf of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, in opposition to the measure. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
I'm happy.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Please, there's six minutes for the opposition. That's equal time around here. That's part of our democratic process.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
Thank you, Chair Bauer-Kahan. My name is Alison Boden, and I'm personally from Sonoma county.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Can I stop you 1 second? Because I think Oakland Privacy might want part of the time. Do you want to share time? Okay, so if you guys want to share time, I just want to make sure we coordinate. Is that okay with you? Yeah. So three minutes each. Does that work? Sure. Perfect.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
So, my name is Alison Boden. I am the Executive Director of the Free Speech Coalition, which represents people and organizations engaged in constitutionally protected sexual expression. We have hundreds of Members throughout California, places like Lafayette, Oakland, San Diego, Long Beach, and, of course, Los Angeles. I am here to oppose AB 3080 because it's severely flawed, both legally and technologically. Legally, the Supreme Court's already ruled that requiring age verification to access protected expression online is unconstitutional.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
This is why my organization is challenging similar laws in other states and why it's important to note that the Fifth Circuit decision is being appealed to the Supreme Court as we speak. Technologically, the zone entertainment industry actually supports efforts to keep minors away from our content. But unfortunately, this Bill is ineffective and has an ulterior motive.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
As I'm sure Members of this Committee are well aware, restrictions like this are easily evaded by VPN, which is a simple technology that's already used by nearly half of minors to change their location when they're browsing the Internet, like Netflix. But the fact is, AB 3080 has nothing to do with protecting children. It's about restricting the kind of content that Californians of all ages can access.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
The language of this Bill vastly expands the definition of obscenity, flying in the face of Supreme Court precedent in Miller versus California. Instead of protecting children, this bill will subject all manner of people, businesses, organizations, libraries, to ruinous civil liability for allowing access to indecent material. If they can't afford to implement costly age verification technology and giving them no ability to defend themselves, should they be sued because they can't retain proof that they identified any particular person?
- Alisonn Boden
Person
This bill has gone into effect, or one like it in other states. And what we've learned is that people don't comply. Upwards of 80% of people, when presented with the option to age verify, leave a website and go out and find one that doesn't comply with laws. This isn't the same as flashing your ID to buy beer. It's transmitting highly sensitive and valuable information over the Internet, exposing it to all types of danger.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
The Supreme Court ruled in Reno v. Ashcroft that, no, it's Reno versus ACLU, that the government can't require age verification where less restrictive means of presenting miners from accessing inappropriate content existing. They did then, and they do now. This precedent has been affirmed again and again in courts all over the country. And just last week, Arizona's democratic Governor vetoed a similar bill because it violated the First Amendment.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
We want minors off our sights just as much as you do, and we're happy to work with this Committee to come up with an effective constitutional solution. Thank you very much, Chairwoman and Members and staff.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Oh, hi again. Tracy Rosenberg from Oakland Privacy. I'll be brief. We just sort of want to highlight the fact that we don't need to guess what this would look like if we were going to go forward and adopt it, because it's already happened in seven states. And what has happened in those seven states, most of which are states, a lot of whose laws we don't actually unlike so much. Is that how to say this?
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
The most legitimate and safe pornography options for both adults and youth, have vacated the state they've left. Pornhub is gone. That means that anyone searching for porn in those states is essentially getting pushed to sites that are shadier, less safe, worse cyber security, much more snuff, much more non consent porn, much more dangerous stuff. I mean, I am not an advocate for Pornhub, God forbid, but they have made progress over the years in getting some of the worst of the worst off their site.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
So what is the incentive in pushing people that are looking for pornography away from sites that are safer to sites that are far, far, far less safe? Are we really accomplishing what we want to accomplish here? And moreover, porn is not like a small, teeny, tiny segment of the Internet. We tend to kind of think that, but actually, 25% of all Internet searches are for porn. And that makes me sad because it's a really high number. Yeah. Like all the people in this room.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Like one out of four, you know, but those are the numbers. So it's a huge amount of Internet traffic and it's going to go somewhere. And so I think that we have to be realistic about. I mean, yes, we absolutely don't want kids to see porn. We don't want kids to see dangerous porn. Absolutely. But we have to be a little realistic about what we're choosing to do is act, you know, what the impact is going to be on the ground.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
If we're encouraging people to do that, it's not good. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else here in opposition to the Bill?
- Cameron Demetre
Person
Good afternoon. Cameron Demetre with capital advocacy on behalf of net choice. We have just two concerns real briefly, first amendment concerns with obscene and indecent the definitions. And to the case that was referenced in ACLU are Reno versus ACLU, and also data minimization concerns. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no other witnesses in the room. Bringing you back to the Committee. Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Learning so much today. Question, just for the author, what did you think of the opposition's points?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Well, I think just one, talking about 25% of the usage, I mean, makes me even want to do this even more if it's that high. I didn't know it was that high. If you mind, if you want any of my experts to speak on it as well. We could do that.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Just wondering if there's more to discuss with the opposition after if this Bill were to move through Committee hearing, if that would be something you'd be open to.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
If I may note one thing, it sounds like there wasn't a chance, and I understand this, to review some of the amendments on the definitions around indecent materials that hopefully may address some of the concerns. So hopefully the opposition can review the amendments and see if it addresses some, maybe not all of their answers.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
And there's still more to come. Thank you.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you, sir.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So the Bill now doesn't talk about indecency at all. It uses the term sexually explicit content, which is much narrower. So hopefully that addresses some of what we heard today. And I want to thank Committee staff because they went a long way in working on the First Amendment concerns, and hopefully, and if it moves out of Committee today, it will go to judiciary, which obviously, First Amendment is a huge part of what they will be looking at. Miss Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Chair. Technical question, the identification, the verification process, how would that work?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Thank you. Jumping around a little. That's a great. There are a number of different ways of doing it. The traditional way would be to use a government issued ID. The technology is such now that we can do that on your device so we don't actually have to transmit that information away from the phone. Likewise with the facial age estimation, that also can be processed entirely on device. And then we use what's known as privacy enhancing technologies, PETS.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So that when you are giving the confirmation to the adult website that the user is over 18, they see absolutely no information about that user. And as this Bill requires, after being edited by the Committee staff, we're not allowed to retain any of that data and would be subject to heavy fines if we did.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
So. Thank you. So who receives that transmittal of the license or the identification? Who does, who gets it, what machine?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So I'm saying it is possible at the moment to do that locally on your own device, so it never leaves. Until recently, that has traditionally gone to an age verification provider. So we have an IEEE standard, a British standard, and there's an ISO, an international standard against which all our providers are audited. And part of that is confirming that they look after your data while they're doing that process, just as well as your healthcare provider or your bank.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
That's true. Well, I think that's a vital part of this to make it. It's the first time I've ever heard any possible practical, technical solution in order to check identification, other than algorithms and everything else that change every year, where the age would change every year, whereas this could be a definitive privacy protected identification transmittal process.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
If I might just add, the European data protection authorities have been intensely interested in our industry, and the French, Kinneil and the Spanish AEPD, have both produced very extensive new requirements, which we are conforming to now in order to meet the very high standards that they expect on privacy.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
So you're saying that these are already. This is in place?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes. So we have a. Through the interoperable solution, which is a tokenized solution, which essentially means once you've proven your age, once you can reuse that same age, check in an entirely zero knowledge proof so that other websites will know that you're over 18 without you having to repeat the age verification process.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I see. Okay. Thank you very much.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Yeah, Mister Vice Chair.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Thanks. You gotta be careful what you Google when trying to figure stuff out on this. This is a government issued computer here. If an individual goes in. I missed most of the testimony, and I apologize for that, because I'm on four committees at the same exact time, so. But when you go into a grocery store and. Well, not you or, you know, maybe somebody, you know, purchases porn magazine, if that still happens. I don't know if that happens anymore. But back in the day, did you have to show ID like to buy?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Sometimes?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The answer is yes. And in fact, one of the cases that the Fifth Circuit relied on, in fact, the primary case was a case called Ginsburg. That's the short name for it. It was based on a very similar law, actually, from all the way back in the fifties that required the same thing. Basically, if you go into a bookstore that sells back then, what they called girly magazines or girly books, the all just had to flash their identification to let them know they were of age.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
So what the court ruled is that what this bill and what the bill at issue in that case required is basically the online electronic version of the same thing, which is why it's not a substantial burden on adult speech. Adults can watch as much porn as they want to. Once one of these bills goes into effect, all this does is protects children from coming into contact with it.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I mean, if it's okay at the Chair, I'd love to hear from you.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
So Ginsburg actually dealt with a magazine salesman who wanted to sell porn to minors. This is not what this Bill deals with and it is actually a very different thing to flasher ID to someone who isn't memorizing it as it would be to maybe pass it around to every single person that now they see your ID. You know, that is much more akin to what an online age verification system does. These bytes are transmitted over the Internet. That's inherently unsafe.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
And despite what my colleagues may have or my colleague at AVPA may have said, the French government has not approved any age verification technology because none of them meet their privacy standards.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
When you. I mean, I've been known to go to a place that sells alcohol in my life, and they. Some places, you know, especially late at night, they scan your ID and device that's connected to something on the world Wide Web, I would imagine. And I assume you're opposed to those devices as well, or there's a slight.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
Difference in that alcohol consumption isn't protected First Amendment activity. And so someone who got access to somehow that you had scanned your ID to buy an alcoholic beverage.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Consuming a legal product is not a First Amendment activity.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
It's not? No.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Or going to a.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
Technically, legally no, it isn't. It's a little bit different.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
We had an amendment to the constitution.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
But also, depending on what you drink, I don't know. But it also may not reveal preferences you wouldn't want someone else knowing about. Maybe something that could be used against you in a divorce petition. Maybe something that could be used against you at your job, whereas your activity online might be a little more sensitive.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah, I understand the, you know, the data concerns about IDs and things like that. I literally was just in another Committee testifying on a Bill about senior fraud, and I proposed this Bill, and unfortunately, and there are people out there. I don't know where, I don't go to these dark web websites. I don't even know what that is, but I'm told it's out there. And people have. They're able to accumulate all this information on people, Social Security numbers, things like that.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And so I don't necessarily want to make that problem worse, but presumably there is access to that information for a lot of the fraudsters already. And so I don't really like that, personally, the First Amendment argument, because it's not the. For my not being a lawyer, I'm a policymaker and definitely not a lawyer, but, you know, my children, and not saying that you are, they don't have a First Amendment right, you know, to do anything in my house, much less look at pornography.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But so, so there's protection there. I want to protect the data, and I think I would imagine the author, and correct me if I'm wrong, you would be open to taking some kind or continuing the conversation, at least that if there's methods to protect the data, you would be open to that.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
As stated earlier, yes, I will.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Okay, great. Well, I wasn't here.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Oh, that's right. You weren't here.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So. All right. Because I have. I've. I've witnessed these new technologies. They're coming up all over the place. I just happened to travel to Europe, where they. Various things, they wanted you to scan your ID, and not necessarily just for travel, but they're processing the data locally, and I don't know how that works. That's way above my pay grade. And so I think there could be some level of trust, some kind of certification of the technologists that your information isn't going to end up out there.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I don't know exactly if that technology exists but I think the premise of the bill to me is a supportable one, which is you should have to verify that you're over 18 to look at pornography and you can look as much when I say you. Sorry, I don't, but anybody can look as much pornography as they choose to.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I'm very interested in the data protection and I would be willing to join in on conversations with the author on, on how we maybe firm that up a little bit, but because I'm concerned about that, but the policy itself I support. And so how do we make a better product? Let's do it, you know.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you Mr. Vice Chair. Miss Ortega.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
I just want to, I mean I want to thank the author for bringing this forward, but also being open to the conversation. I too had a lot of concerns and appreciate the fact that you, we're willing to take the amendments today. You know, as was mentioned, you know, throughout today, this is a very technical, difficult conversation that we're having in all of these bills. The technology is moving a lot faster than we can all catch up with.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
But as a mother of a daughter, you know, I wish we had done a lot more when it comes to cell phone use and what we're seeing today and the harm that it's causing our children. Had we thought about some of these things ahead of time, we wouldn't be seeing that today.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
And so while I respect and understand the concerns the opposition has, I also appreciate the fact that you're willing to continue working with us as I will be supporting today, but look forward to continuing this dialogue. It is a difficult one to have, but we need to protect our children. And I think ultimately that's what you're trying to do here today.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
I agree. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you Miss Ortega. Mister Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you, You know, the opposition brought up something about an alternative policy. I just wanted to ask like what is, what would be an alternative to this policy?
- Alisonn Boden
Person
So if we're going just by what the Supreme Court said, it should be focused on parental filters, which have actually become incredibly effective. There are some issues with being over inclusive and so our organization has worked on model legislation that would help sites that essentially understand that they don't want children on them to get rid of them by using the filters. It's called a mature content tag.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
It is very easy to add to any website and it would say if this user is under 18, they're blocked. I believe META actually came out with a framework that could work for apps and websites wherein your cell phone knows how old you are and it knows how old a child is if it's owned by a child and being able to not necessarily share a date of birth because that's sensitive, but at least have a flag that says this is a minor. Our websites would have no problem rejecting that traffic.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
So you're saying essentially using the hardware.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
Correct.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
As the method of.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
For software on the hardware, but essentially.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Kind of, you know, essentially like your device knows your private information versus.
- Alisonn Boden
Person
I would imagine it's more like turning away a person at a bar at the door.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Yeah, I appreciate that. Look, I really appreciate the conversation. I think I actually had a similar bill last year. I do think that to my colleagues comments, I think that as a parent, this is just too important of an issue. But I do look forward to continuing conversations on privacy, specifically because I do think protecting people's privacy is important. But we'll be supporting the bill today. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, go ahead.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Dixon and I have one more question over to Miss Wilson.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you to the author. I definitely understand the intent in terms of protecting our children underage against things they shouldn't be allowed to view, things that would harm them. I mean, think the actual language in the bill, things that are harmful to minors. And I think we, not only as parents shoulder that responsibility, but we as a community. I think this is one area where the government has interest in protecting children because, you know, not to be cliche, they are our future.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so if we don't protect them when they're young, we can't be surprised at the kind of future we have in the future. Some of my concerns do relate to the First Amendment, like balancing that part, because the government interest also has interest in protecting our rights and very much strongly. There's a First Amendment right here. And so some of my questions are to your witnesses in following up.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
There was an example given in terms of it's similar to going to a store and prior to purchasing goods that are above the age of 18 or 21 or whatever, showing an ID, which is definitely not the same, as was noted from the opposition, as retaining an ID. And there was conversation about tokens that you can have that I guess are on the computer or device that would be allowable for other sites, but that feels like a retention of sorts. So can you explain. Explain that to me.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes. So the tokenized solution would, which is something that the Spanish Data Protection Authority is very keen on, is having an application on your phone and you prove to the application, perhaps using a digital identity or using a piece of ID, that you are over 18. And then all that application does is send, effectively, a signed certificate that you are over 18 to any website that.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Is age restricted, so your data isn't sent to that person, just a green light, so to speak.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
It's a green light which has been signed by a trustworthy authority so that the adult website can trust that when it sees that green light, it knows the only people who could have done that were people who have properly proven their age and are actually the person using that device. So it's not a month later where it may have been handed down to somebody's kid when they upgraded their phone. And the issues we have with that sort of secondhand phone problem, and one.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Of the things you noted, and I believe it was brought up in part of the other conversation I had it for here, was talking about France. Right. And they. It says in the analysis that it found that no method has the following three important elephant elements, sufficiently reliable verification, complete coverage of the population, and respect for the protection of individuals, data privacy and their security.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes. So what the Kinneil did, which is the data protection authority, and the l in Kinneil is for liberty. So they are very keen on freedoms. And the protection of privacy is. While they criticized existing methods a couple of years ago, they didn't just criticise, they came up with a better way of doing it. And what they come up with is something called a double blind solution. And that allows, again, through this concept of signed certificates, the Kinneil themselves have invented a solution.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
They are satisfied, meets all of those requirements. So what I would say to this Committee, and as we go through the process of discussing the detail of this Bill, you can set the bar as high as you like for privacy protection as the CNIL have done, and the industry will step up. So there are now at least five providers in France who have developed solutions that meet these very new, very high requirements from the CNIL.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so are you saying that the analysis noted that comment from 2022, but it's 2024, so since 2022, and that comment was made that there are. There's a gold standard now that satisfy those three and that that is an outdated comment.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, the CNIL themselves are the ones who've invented the solution to their problem. So they have. They didn't just say, we don't like the way you're doing it. They said, we don't like the way you're doing it. We've got a better way. We would like your industry to try and do it this way.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
And we announced last week at a big conference in Manchester and England that we were, as an industry, moving to this double blind approach where it's impossible for the website to know the identity of the user, and it's impossible for the age verification provider to know which websites the user is going to. You know, I have a lot of sympathy.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I half understand what you said. I just want to confirm in the Committee analysis that we're reading, there's a statement from 2022 that had three components, that there was nothing existing at that time, that had those three components sufficiently reliable verification, complete coverage of the population and respect for the protection of individuals data and privacy and their security. And although that came out of France, I would say that that is a standard that we have in the United States.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Okay, so we've established that they've made that statement. It's put in our Committee analysis. And so what I'm asking is, and you were talking a lot about CNIL. That's the CNIL, the France for people in the room, National Commission on Information Liberty. You were saying. You were saying that they made that statement in 2022. However, today on what is it, the year of our lord? April 16, 2024 they have now met a standard of those three.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Indeed. They went and worked with a Professor, Professor Blasey, a French Professor in cryptography, and he worked with them to come up with this new solution. What we've been subsequently trying to do is figure out how we commercialize that because.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Okay, so a new solution exists. It is yet not deployed.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Well, I mentioned that five French providers have stepped up to provide that. And the official regulator, Arcom, which is in charge of Internet safety, works with CNIL. And they've just launched their consultation on the detailed rules that require at least one method for any adult site to meet these requirements of double blind that the CNIL have said. So what we're seeing around the world is regulators raising the bar to, you know.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
To meet the three. We're going to meet the three standards. But it is not a. It's not something that's active. And I do get in technology, things are exponential. Something cannot be active today. And literally a month later, it's all over the globe and it's completely active.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yeah. So one of those five suppliers is a member of my trade association, and they currently offer that as a product in the market today. People are actually using that double blind approach.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
In the market today.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
in Europe, but not, but not in the US yet.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
In the market today.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
No. I mean, obviously there's no law here requiring it, but.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Right, right. But it is being actively. It's deployed. Someone is using it.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Yes.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Right. And part of the association. And I do recognize that you are testifying with the hat of the association. And so, of course, there's been a, not to say there's no, the author has this motive. In some ways, it benefits because you are part of the association that provides this basic service that we would then be putting into law. And so recognizing that, at the same time, recognizing that.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so I don't mean that in a disrespect to the author in the same level, we need to protect our kids. So how do we do that? I'm very much concerned about the privacy aspect of individuals, especially as it relates to this particular topic, because it can be weaponized against the person.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
If there is some type of, and I'm not talking about minors, I don't want any child looking at these sites in particular, as it's laid out in the bill and the definitions that Madam Chair has given. But I also recognize that we live in a society where people weaponize us all the time for every little thing we sit in privacy.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
You know, I'm sure after this committee today, there's going to be tweets about various decisions, and you must like this, or, you know, whatever we are, and then just imagine if that's, someone was able to get that data that, because of that type of verification system, because our, this, the language in this Bill doesn't require the type that's used.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
It just requires an age verification system or some type of system, system that, that could be used against someone in a nefarious way if it's hacked or whatever. And so we live in that world.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So I think, as you know, if there's support for this to move forward, I think you have to take, because we're in privacy, right, and consumer protections, you have to take that into consideration because there is a role, I think, for the parent, there's a role for devices, as my colleague has noted, you know, putting things on, or I think opposition noted in that conversation, that you can do things locally to be able to prevent that, not necessarily on the burden of the site where you're giving third party information.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I think that's, you know, like I said, just balancing the needs of everybody else who has an absolute right to be able to exercise their free sheets, to produce content, and exercise their right to be able to take part in it by viewing it. And so we want to make sure we're balancing those needs. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Wilson. Miss Dixon, did you have another question?
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chair, just a few follow up questions. So I just kind of wanted to distill everything down. I think at least I, this is where I'm coming from. It's not a good thing to have children, youth under 18, accessing pornography. We're trying to find a way in this hyper technology world to find a way to make sure we protect everybody's rights, or at least, I guess, the children's rights. I don't know.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I don't like my colleague here saying I didn't know that children under 18 had rights to access pornography in a free speech context. Anyway, this seems to be an obstacle to me. I think the larger issue is how we, the technology changes so quickly, and just these protections that we've just heard are satisfactory to me.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And technology is moving so fast that if we don't try to put a stop to this kind of material being accessed by children on the Internet, and we've heard earlier in the testimony of, of the 25% of the world is accessing this information, we can't do anything about adults, and the US Supreme Court has dealt with that decades ago.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
But as far as children, I think we err on the side of doing whatever it is to protect our children and move forward with that concept that these technologies can protect the identities of people, people, children, whoever submits there through that process. I mean, we've all used those kinds of things. I mean, even with your health plan and medical plans, you submit copies of your driver's license. That happens, and then it disappears anyway. I'm in strong support because it's time we do something.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
We could debate this to infinity and beyond, but we have to protect our children, and that's very simple to me. In my opinion, I will be enthusiastically supporting this. Thank you.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Dixon. Anyone else seeing? No other Members with questions? I want to thank you, Assembly Member, for your partnership on this. I know that the original bill is introduced, probably, as evidenced from the Committee amendments we had concerns about, but I shared your goal here.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
There was an article in the New York Times just this weekend talking about the alarming number of college age girls that are reporting being choked while engaging in sexual activities without their consent and the dire physical ramifications of that on their brain and the oxygen that is deprived to their brain. If I recall correctly, it was 40% of college aged girls.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And the studies cited discussed exactly what your witness talked about, which was that this was most likely a result of very young kids being exposed to very violent pornography, which I know is not something that the opposition wants either. But it is something that is happening, and it's happening in a lot of cases, as was noted by the proponents of this Bill, accidentally at first. And I know that as a mom, you know, it's then sought out.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm not saying it's not also sought out by youth, but I know as a mom whose kid has written reports and while researching for those reports, has definitely accidentally encountered websites I don't want my child on. It happens to all of us parents. There's no question about that. And we use all the parental protections that are available to us.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so, you know, I do think that there is no question in my mind that making it more difficult for our youth to access these sites is in the best interest of everybody, whether it be the person viewing it or the person who they will engage with in sexual activity later in life. And so I think this is a really important policy.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And I think that we have done a lot in this Committee, and huge kudos to the staff for their work on this, to really narrow it to what is constitutionally reasonable, to make sure that it passes constitutional muster, which is always in the best interest of the State of California so we don't have to spend a lot of money on litigation. And also to protect privacy, as was noted by the proponents. We did say, you can't keep this private information. That was something that we added.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I also think, though, there is, if we can match the Europeans in any way as it relates to privacy, we are winning. The Europeans privacy laws will eclipse anything here in the United States any day of the week. And so to the extent that the Europeans have created better standards for age verification that are more privacy protecting, I think that is something we could look at.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We do a lot of legislation in this body that mimics what has happened in Europe, and it's something that we should consider if they do have a way of doing it that is more privacy protecting than is what is currently in the language. But I just want to thank you, because I do think we have a serious problem here, and I think you have been open to really addressing it in a surgical way, but also doing what is in the best interest of our kids.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And I said this in a Committee hearing earlier today, but I'll say it again, I truly believe that as the elected Members of the State of California, our number one obligation sitting in these seats is to protect our kids. And so, you know, I think that this is a step in the right direction. I thank you again for taking the amendments and working with us. And I know you will continue to do that, because you've already proven that you will. So with that, would you like to close?
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Well, thank you, Madam Chair, for those words. And yes, rest assure, obviously the sponsors and myself, we're here to bring policies that will protect our children. And I think with the Committee's help in narrowing and making sure that this is within the laws that have been set forth, we'll make sure that this happens. As far as opposition, please come to my office. I'm sure we'll get some cards for you guys as well. I'd like to hear from you as well as we've already heard from others.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
With that, I would respectfully ask for your aye vote. Thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number five AB 3080 by assemblymember Alanis. The motion is do pass as amended, to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Bill has nine. It is out, but we will leave it open for absent Members. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Great. Do we have a motion? I don't think we're gonna moved. Move. 2nd 2nd Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Juan Alanis
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I believe Ms. Irwin is now presenting for Dr. Weber. Is that right? Are you? So then, Ms. Wilson, if you want to go next, you're up next. Okay. Is that okay? This is AB 3138. Ms. Wilson, when you're ready.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you. Madam Chair, Members, good afternoon. I am thankful for the opportunity to present AB 3138 in front of the Committee here today. I would like to begin by accepting all of the Committee amendments listed on page 8 and 9 of the analysis and thanking Committee staff for their work on this measure. Members, building upon a successful pilot program launched all the way back in 2013, AB 3138 will provide consumers with the option of choosing to purchase a GPS enabled digital license plate.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Under current law, when purchasing a vehicle, consumers are typically given a metal plate. However, if a consumer wants to choose to purchase a digital license plate that is approved by the DMV, they currently have that option. AB 3138 would provide consumers with the option of choosing to purchase a digital license plate that is equipped with GPS. These digital license plates typically cost around $500 and require a subscription.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
This bill also puts in place privacy standards for the GPS plate that far exceed protections in current law for other comparable GPS equipped devices. AB 3138 requires the following protections for all GPS enabled plates sold in California. First, the GPS shall be capable of being permanently disabled by means of a non-reversible method that ceases all functionality and traffic, sorry, tracking information capabilities. The GPS shall be capable of being manually disabled and enabled by a driver of the vehicle while that driver is inside the vehicle.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
The method of manually disabling and enabling the GPS shall be prominently located and easy to disable and enable without requiring access to a remote online application. The method of manually disabling and enabling the GPS shall not require a password or any login information. And finally, once the vehicle location technology is manually disabled from inside the car, the only method of re-enabling the technology shall be manual from inside the car.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
The registered owner of the license plate, the manufacturer, the DMV, or any other entity shall not have the capability to re-engage the GPS through any remote means. These protections far exceed protections in statute for other GPS enabled devices such as the cars themselves, apps used inside the cars, our cell phones, and countless other legal products available to consumers at much cheaper prices.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
While GPS, like other technologies, has the ability to be abused by bad actors, the appropriate policy response is to put guard rails and protections in place like we've stated earlier, not to simply ban the technology in one small product while allowing it to exist without recourse in virtually every other comparable product. With me to... Excuse me. With me today to present in support, I have Neville Boston, the co-founder of Reviver.
- Neville Boston
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and Members. My name is Neville Boston. I'm the founder and Chief Strategy Officer for Reviver. AB 3138 builds upon legislation that has been voted on by the Legislature previously, AB 984 and SB 806, which was the original pilot that was passed back in 2013. We've been working with the DMV and CHP over the last eight years, and the company's been around since 2009. So we've been testing this technology for the last 15 years.
- Neville Boston
Person
This bill clarifies that digital plate must comply with all provisions that to ensure privacy of the consumer is not compromised, while continuing to strengthen the benefits provided to businesses. To be clear, we offer two plates. The plate that I have here is a battery operated plate, which is about 95% of all the plates that are on the road. It has no GPS at all within this plate. Again, this is the majority of the plates, and they're opt in.
- Neville Boston
Person
We have a wired version that has GPS that is normally used for fleets, but we believe it should be available as an opt in. You know, not an opt, you have to opt in to it. It's not provided to you for consumers as well. Reviver looks at the services that we've built into the plate to help protect and to make it easier for them to do different DMV services.
- Neville Boston
Person
The language of the bill clearly states if an alternative device fails to meet the requirements, vehicle location technology shall not be included in that device. As AB 984 moved through the legislative process in 2022, the amendments that were taken were a result of conversations in regards to having a kill switch that was built into the plate. We have done that. Digital plates and geolocation technology is beneficial for fleets.
- Neville Boston
Person
We have several fleet customers both local and in and around the state because we're legal in not only California but Arizona, Michigan, Illinois, Georgia, Colorado, and Texas for commercial fleets. So we've been working hand in glove with them kind of across the board. In addition, we have a law enforcement liaison that's been able to train about 35,000 law enforcement professionals across the country.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else here in support of this bill?
- Margaret Lie
Person
Margie Lie, Samson Advisors, on behalf of the California New Car Dealers Association in strong support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Dominic Di Mare
Person
Dominic Di Mare here on behalf of the California Police Chiefs Association, also in support. And find the kill switch addition a good feature for personal safety.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone here in opposition to this bill? Come on up, please.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
We didn't coordinate beforehand.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
You're too nice to each other.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
We're working it out.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
No conspiracy. You can see.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
I know we should have compared talking points. All right. Hi, Madam Chair and Members. Samantha Corbin with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, respectfully in opposition to AB 3138, which would turn a vehicle registration product into a surveillance tracker that records everywhere the vehicle goes. This is bad news for Californians everywhere, but it's especially concerning for domestic violence survivors, the LGBTQ community, immigrants, people seeking reproductive health care, rural communities, and communities of color more broadly. Numerous domestic violence, LGBTQ, reproductive justice, youth, and privacy organizations raised serious concerns with AB 984 in 2022.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
That bill also proposed allowing GPS tracking devices in passenger vehicle digital license plates. AB 3138 would remove the language in that measure that was negotiated to address these concerns, though all of the concerns raised by those groups about the harmful impacts of GPS trackers and passenger vehicle digital license plates remains true today. Creating these tracking devices would jeopardize confidentiality and increase the risk of stalking. That's why numerous domestic violence organization joined privacy advocates to oppose AB 984 until it was amended to prohibit their inclusion.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
People who abuse have no incentive to let their partner know that their car has become a tracking device. And even if an individual is suffering abuse and is aware of a GPS tracking device in their vehicle, they may have no choice but to allow for it, or they may not know how to disable the tracker. Regardless, it can put them at risk of further violence. For example, a woman was recently killed in Antioch after being located through a GPS tracker installed on her vehicle.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Domestic violence survivors are not the only people put at risk by this measure. It could jeopardize the safety of someone traveling through the state from another state that criminalizes abortions who is not aware that their vehicle or ride share is recording their GPS. This data could be used against them. ICE could also use GPS surveillance technology to track and locate immigrants, as it has done with other location tracking devices.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Unsupportive parents of queer youth could use GPS loaded plates to monitor whether teens are going to local LGBTQ centers. Finally, there are security concerns. Shortly after AB 984 was signed into law, researchers uncovered that Reviver, the proponents of the measure, had an alarming security vulnerability in their systems that made it possible for infiltrators to track GPS in real time and even change what was displayed on the plates.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
If a company producing these digital plates for passenger vehicles cannot secure the location or the data, promises that it can protect sensitive location information for vulnerable people ring hollow. While acknowledging that continuing to prohibit trackers and license plates does not fix every problem with vehicle tracking, we do not believe that their inclusion helps the situation.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Rather than remove the language that allowed all groups in opposition to AB 984 to go neutral, AB 3138 could instead address additional problems with the code sections that our groups have outlined in position letters previously. Thank you for the opportunity to speak to you today.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Yes. Oakland Privacy in respectful opposition. As my colleague mentioned, mere months after digital drivers licenses were made available for sale in California, hackers did penetrate Reviver's server. We want to be clear, they were able to label themselves as super administrators within the server, and they could remotely update, track, and delete any digital license plate. Let's be clear, if DMV had been hacked in this way, all heck would have broken loose in the state. Heads would have rolled. Sending people to unsafe products is bad.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
But adding on sensitive location data to a product that has already demonstrated some level of lack of safety is, in our opinion, kind of crazy. The bill's premise is that this is a question of consumer choice. We just want to be clear. There is no other GPS enabled license plate available for sale in California. The company that is here is the sole provider. It's a monopoly.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
And it's a question here of sort of, you know, to give some people a choice, are we taking choices away from other people? Gay teenagers told not to go to an LGBT center, 16 year old girls trying to get contraception, a battered wife trying to visit a supportive sibling. If you are in a situation where there's only one car in the household, where there's not so much public transit, and when there is a level of coercive control in the household, it's not necessarily a choice.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
So I just want us to think about whose choices we're sort of prioritizing here. And in those kinds of situations, you turn off the GPS, you're going to get a beating when you get home. I mean, that's how it works. So it's not just a question of choice. It's not as simple as that. So we don't think there's any need for California to sponsor this dangerous product. There's no market competition to keep the prices affordable, which, by the way, they aren't. It's, I think, $699 plus 250 a year indefinitely. There's only one supplier, and there's no clear demand for the project, and it just, it does not make sense. So we ask you not to support AB 3138.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Anyone else here in opposition to this bill?
- Robert Herrell
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and Members. Robert Herrell with the Consumer Federation of California. We don't have an official position on this bill at this time. I want to make that clear. But we were part of the coalition that worked with the Assembly Member in 2022 in what we thought was a reasonable negotiation. So we're concerned at part of that direction that this bill is going. It's still early in the process, and it seems to me there would be some time to figure this out over the next few months. But we do have some concerns here. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no additional comments in the room, we'll bring it back to the Committee. Mr. Vice Chair.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Thank you. Some questions for the opposition, Ms. Corbin. Actually, first, you know, I was recently, I keep talking about podcasts, but I was listening to a podcast about domestic violence victims being tracked by some cars, frankly, and that being put in. Yes. It was also the New York Times, sorry, everybody knows my running playlist now, but that was shocking to me. Now, we've seen some legislation, I think, in this building on that particular issue. Oh, the next bill we're going to hear. Good.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But I have obviously a ton of concern about, in that particular situation, the spouse couldn't turn off, with the car manufacturer, couldn't turn off the reporting of the data to data brokers, essentially. But in some of the instances that you were discussing, like the tracker on the car and things like that, those are all not done in those cases without, with the consent, somebody put a GPS device on a car, for example. In this case with the license plate, an individual is going to know they have a license plate on their car that's a digital license plate. I concede that. There's a chance they might not know that there's GPS in there. I concede that.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But there are slightly different situations there where, where one, you knew about it, one, you didn't know about it. You knew you have a product, you didn't know you had a product. So is there any circumstance, because I have sympathy towards those points in particular. I definitely understand them. I don't want people being tracked. But is there some way we can get to a point where we can have this product out there and your clients would feel comfortable?
- Samantha Corbin
Person
I appreciate that question, Assembly Member. I think that's a pretty significant challenge for a variety of reasons. One, we find with tech products, as they sort of proliferate the market, oftentimes they become not opt in because they're everywhere. Right.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
The traditional alternative evaporates, and you no longer can get something that doesn't track you. So those type of things are very concerning if this becomes the status quo on every car, for example. But also, I think Ms. Rosenberg brought up a great point, sort of building off on that domestic argument. If you are in a single car household, perhaps you are not the person who made the car purchase or consented. You might be a spouse that's disempowered. You might be a child in an abusive relationship.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
And so your option is to ride in the vehicle or to drive the vehicle and have someone have access to where you are. And so there are a variety of situations where there may be a choice, but it, in fact, is really not a choice. It's not as clear cut as being able to toggle off your location from an abusive partner. And those type of scenarios, we believe, at least at this time, so significantly outweigh the benefits of this product that I don't see a series of amendments that allow for this use in personal residential cars that would remove our opposition.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah. And I want to be very clear, not dismissing these concerns at all. I just think of the number of products out there that track individuals, whether it's your phone or your car, already, that are tracking you or devices, you know, the, you know, the airtags or whatever you can put anywhere.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So it's just kind of interesting to me because I think what I'm hearing a little bit is, hey, we can't have this product with GPS in license plates when there are all these other products out there that are doing that, that are actually more difficult, I think, to have the kill switch.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And so if you don't mind, I'd like to transition to the sponsor, which I will say is, in my district. I never met or we didn't ever discuss this issue until right before this Committee hearing. And so I appreciate the opportunity to talk to you, but I had expressed to you my concerns with that and what would happen. And I think there's language in the bill for this and maybe even your terms of service to prevent that. But really, when we think about policy, we have to think about there will someday, despite you being maybe the only entrant into this field, this law potentially will open up other competitors of yours.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And just to note that it already has. So he's not a single. There already is.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
They're starting.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yes. There's a process. You have to go through. He is the only person that has completed the process. Let me say it that way.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Okay, great. So in law, we want to make sure that this kill switch applies to everybody, not just maybe the good work that you're doing, but can you explain the process if maybe an abuse, abused wife or spouse calls you and says, hey, look, I'm really concerned that I'm being tracked with this license plate, and maybe the car is in the husband's name.
- Neville Boston
Person
Okay. In the event that that plate that's on the vehicle has GPS in it, once we have the conversation, we would send out kind of a kill message that would basically sever the GPS within the plate, make it non-operable. So they wouldn't be able to track. There's no more information that's given, it's killed. We actually literally worked with the chip manufacturer and, you know, our team to verify that that was done. And that was part of the conversations that we were having with folks from the DV community around ways in which we could help protect them.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And I would just add on is technically they don't have to call you. You noted in your just now a testimony call you, but per the bill language, what would they do?
- Neville Boston
Person
They would be able to switch it off within the vehicle and basically kill the ability for the plate to connect to GPS.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Is there a... When you get one of these license plates, do you let the DMV know I have this digital license plate?
- Neville Boston
Person
Yes. So we're connected to the DMV. Anybody that gets a plate has to have the plate provisioned. So they go through the same process, registration information, validating that, and then coming up with the number letter configuration, and then downloading that information to the plate.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Okay. The only reason why I ask is because in domestic abuse situations, they're often desperate circumstances for help. And so being able to even rip off the license plate, and if you get pulled over or something, say, hey, look, this is why I did this. Right? And it sounds like that could be verified that it was one of those digital license plates. But... Well, I really appreciate your approach to this issue because it's really important.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And I know the author, obviously, with some of the concerns that were raised, those are all very important to you, and I know you'll continue to work on this particular issue. And I don't know if we'll ever get to the point where we're making the opposition feel comfortable, but I know that that's important to you, and I appreciate that.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And again, the sensitivity of the issue the entire time from the manufacturer I think is a really important testament statement to you. Because it is a really important issue to me, and I think everybody on this Committee. So thank you.
- Neville Boston
Person
Yeah. And we'll continue to work with everybody to make sure that we have the best and safest product on the road. We've never been or shied away from having tough conversations. I would say, and I'm not sure a lot of people here may remember, but Joe Simitian, who was a huge privacy hawk, was actually the first person we talked to when we first were thinking about running legislation back in 2009.
- Neville Boston
Person
So, from the beginning, we've been having these conversations, and my former business partner was good friends with the folks that started the EFF, and we actually had conversations with them back in 2009. So it's been 15 years, so it's not a situation where we've ever shirked away from having tough conversations. We want to have the best information possible at the table, and we've always been open to, you know, making the product better across the board.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And I would just note that even in 2022, people talk about the negotiated deal, that we negotiated this out. And what it was is that we offered up what if we did XYZ, but we couldn't do... The technology, so to speak, wasn't there yet.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So we took that language out to be able to meet those objectives, knowing that we would come back separate so we can complete the pilot and then talk through what can we put into law to allow this license plates to be as safe as possible and recognizing there are individuals who may opt in to having GPS but at some point may no longer want to have GPS, whether that's temporarily or permanent, and giving them the full capability of being able to make that decision, whoever they are, as long as they're in the vehicle, so to speak.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And I do wanna commend you, as the author, for being... I mean, you put survivors first in this legislation. And the kill switch, which now you will see has been added to the other bill that will follow, really was... Came out of the discussions we had because you wanted to make sure that they were wholly protected. And so I think that I want to commend you for that.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I also want to add one thing because I know you are a leader in protecting LGBTQ individuals in accessing care. You are a leader in protecting women accessing abortion care in our state. So you would never in a million years want to do anything to risk those folks coming into California. So I guess I will also just put on the table that we do, that I have passed legislation that ensures companies don't turn over that data.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And there's no reason we couldn't add that to this piece of legislation and require the folks that sell the license plates here in California never turn over data related to healthcare access, which I...
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Absolutely.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm sure you'd be amenable to.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I thought we dealt with that one, but if it is not in there very clearly, happy to add it before we get to the floor. Because there's no way, shape, or form do I want anyone to be able to track this data, whether... except the person themselves, who's opting into, the single person. Whether they are another company or even the government. I think that it's private individuals' information. They are the ownership of that data and should not be shared with anyone, especially if it threatens their safety or their ability to live a free life.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes, absolutely. Thank you. Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Yeah, thank you. One thing, the author. I know that this is a pilot that's been extended multiple times, like three times. Obviously, just naturally have great privacy concerns, and only more greatly affirmed by law enforcement coming up in strong support. Correct me if I'm wrong, in the previous pilots, there was a requirement that the device display a visual indication in the location technology, if it was an active use, if somebody was actively tracking you, there had to be some sort of visual representation of that. And that's been removed in this bill. Is there any particular reason why that's the case?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I believe in the original, it was on the app itself, and so the only thing we had, and it didn't exist in the car before, it's the new ad. So when during the pilot period, the everything was available, GPS or not, and it really was... The battery doesn't include GPS at all. And so majority people chose the non-GPS option, so there's nothing to indicate.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And then in the fleet version, that the wired in it would be in your app would tell you whether it was on or not. And so there wasn't ever like a visual, there wasn't anything in the car. Now we've created something visual in the car through having it wired in all the way to the console where you can kill or turn off.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And I think that, I'm sure if... I don't want to answer for the technological people, but if it means that that needed to be lit or something to indicate that, so you can see it. I know dashboards, a lot of very busy right now.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
But I know that there's an ability to be able to see, and I think we have an identifier on the vehicle that you're entering a car that has GPS, but that's just a broad, that this is GPS enabled, but that's a broad disclaimer. Not that it's active or not on, but just knowing that, hey, you're entering a car that has this capability. But I'm happy to make that more safe or make that more apparent to the driver themselves.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I think to note from my colleague's comments is that by virtue of having the plate gives you some indication that you may be entering, that this might be a tracked vehicle because it's not, you know, it looks very, this plate looks very different than a metal plate. So you recognize that you're in something that's different.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Gotcha.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, yes. Mr. Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
A couple simple questions. I noticed that the language changed with the CHP, the California Highway Patrol, are they part of the approval process, or they're not definitive, or what is their role?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
They're a part of the approval process through DMV. So the ultimate sign off is DMV. One sign off, and then CHP is a part of the decision making process, but it requires only one sign off. Because the, originally, when they were doing the pilot program, then you had to get a sign off from CHP and DMV.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
But now that we have all the rules in place, all the laws in place, they've worked out, I don't know what the right word, technology, what the right word is, but I guess the acceptable specs they were tried out with, at the time, the only company who had filed an application. And so they no longer need their own separate sign off, but they are a part of the sign off for DMV.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So there's only one agency that checks the box to say... And not them, because they've already been through that process, or is for any other company that's through the process, or them if they want to change the plate. And that was CHP was fine with that. They would...
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
The Association supporting this?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah. Well, I wouldn't say supporting the bill. They've given all their technical... We work with them in 22, the previous author who did the pilot work with them, they have signed off on every step of the way. So I don't want to say that they're, they haven't put a letter of support. They're neutral on the bill, and they've given... Every amend that they have asked for over the process that I've been with it for two years, and I know with the previous author, previous to me, they have, all their amends have always been taken at face value.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
All right, another question on the making of the digital license plate. Is it reflectorized?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Is it what?
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Reflectorized material currently on all of our license plates. It's reflective material at night with the light shining on it.
- Neville Boston
Person
Okay, so the current license plate is retroreflective. Ours is reflective. So light shines and it shines back. It's not retroreflective.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Okay.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
You can see it at night.
- Neville Boston
Person
You can see it at night.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And just as a reminder, this came up in our other Committee. If, for whatever reason, the power, because it is battery operated or wired in, if there is a loss of power, the default is visual, where you can see the plate clearly, so it doesn't turn off at night.
- Neville Boston
Person
Yeah, night, every day.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Although, I'll remind the Committee that our jurisdiction is privacy. That question actually is in the jurisdiction of the Transportation Committee.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Thank you. All right. It's one other thing I was going to ask. Oh, about... Well, it's just in terms of the procurement process, will there be other competitors or participants in this marketplace?
- Neville Boston
Person
Absolutely.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah. There are other... There are other applicants who are in the process. Whether they complete the process or not, we're aware of others. So it's not just... So although it is one person in the market, I wouldn't call it a monopoly in that sense. They're just the person who... They have only one person who's completed the entire process and has an approved plate with the state. There's nothing in this... This is a digital license plate bill. It is not Reviver's bill. So any...
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So this is not exclusive to Reviver, gives them no exclusive rights. All of the language in the original bill, including this bill, does not give them any favor in comparison to their competitors. It's just they are the only person who has completed the entire process and has an approved plate.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Under their specifications?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Under their specifications are consistent with the law. And anybody else who completes that process would have to be consistent with the law.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Are they patented?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
They're patented. I'm sure their technology is patented.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Participate with that, they'd have to come up with a different type of product.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I guess technically. They couldn't use any of their patents, but they could get their own electronic version of the license plate. They could get their own digital license plate using their own technology and meet the requirements of the original law plus this new law. That would be the requirement. They would have to go through those standards.
- Neville Boston
Person
Let me, just really quick, AAMVA, which is the automobile administrators for the US and Canada, all North America, they set best standards. We've been working with them for the last 15 years. We have a standing meeting with them every month to talk about best practices and technology. So the entire time we've been kind of working hand in glove with them, with, also with law enforcement to make sure that whatever product we put on the road meets their standards. Their standards are 75ft during the day, dusk, and at night. We've met all of their standards for visibility across the board. And no, this is not Transportation.
- Neville Boston
Person
Yeah, that's a whole other...
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
But that's another Committee.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
All right. Thank you very much.
- Neville Boston
Person
Yeah. Just want to make sure.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yes, and whatever and whoever applies will, because of the laws we put in place and potentially more, will make sure that it is safe.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We trust the Transportation Committee, Madam Chair, is taking care of that. Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Very briefly, I just abstained on this bill in Transportation due to some of the privacy concerns, and I just want to say thank you to the author for continuing to work on it. Thank you for the amendments. I do think those have gotten the bill much closer to a place where... Just to a much better place. And so I will be supporting the bill today. Thank you.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Look at that. Ms. Ortega.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Thank you. I had a quick question. Just, I think I already know the answer, but I want confirmation that nothing that we are removing in terms of, you know, there's been a lot of privacy concerns that have been raised. And we're removing a big piece of that, and so there's a lot of hesitation. So I want to make sure that there's a provision on employee use, you know, their employers do not use this information to be able to follow or use that against an employee. So I want to make sure that that has stayed in place. Is that correct? No?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
That's in a, not in this bill. So they, in a separate bill, as it relates to, as I understand it, law is that employer cannot use your data. Because this is taking what is allowed for GPS to go to a personal consumer. But we already today allow GPS for a fleet.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Please don't interrupt her. Please let the author finish, and then we'll come to you.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Sorry, go ahead.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I was just noting that this bill expands it to personal. But as I understand it, there are separate laws around the use of GPS data, whether it's in a license plate or their phone or putting Tile or Apple in there about what an employer can use against an employee related to GPS data while that employee is working. And so it didn't need to be additional language in this bill.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
But it remains in place. So it's already...
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Yeah, it doesn't exclude it. And as a reminder, this bill expands to personal, so it doesn't really mess with the existing allowable by law for fleet GPS.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Okay.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
You get what I'm saying?
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Yeah, I'm just trying to make sure there's not a loophole, which is often what happens.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
And so that's an area that I'm very concerned in and want to make sure that, you know, we can...
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
No.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Absolutely. Before we go to opposition. That's my goal too to protect workers and understand. And I remember when I first got here, there was a whole thing about using GPS and what workers were doing, especially as it related to remote, and supported those bills. And so if there is any language that currently... I don't think there is, but my laptop's over there.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
There is any language relates to workers and GPS and especially for the fleet side because that's where that's current technology that they currently are allowed by law whether this goes through or not. You have my word to address that.
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
Yeah, I think we basically clarified, but just to be clear, this law is to expand GPS can able plates to residential use that had been taken out in 2022, but they were left in place for fleet use, for commercial use. There are some limited protections in AB 984 in 22 but not an awful lot. And there is nothing in this bill or in the residential expansion that would improve those in any significant way. So if the language in AB 984 isn't sufficient to protect employees, nothing that we're doing here is going to change that in any way.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And if it's okay, just to clarify, in 984 is not where I was talking about that language exists. I'm talking about a separate bill that was chaptered, signed into law as it relates to workers rights when they're at work and someone tracking them and all of that. 984 codified the pilot and made adjustments to that pilot. Through the pilot work, you know, we always find out whether something works or doesn't work. 984 made adjustments.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And one of the big adjustments that there was concern by our DV, ACLU, all those other organizations was still about letting private use because they felt like the technology didn't match the protection. And that is the thing that we've worked on for the last almost two years.
- Liz Ortega
Legislator
Yeah. And I appreciate that. And I understand the difference between, you know, the, this is for private vehicles. But a lot more people are using their private vehicles for work. So that's why I want to. I asked the question and want to make sure that I raise that concern and appreciate your response.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And I'll say that the amazing Julie Salley's pointed out that on page five, section F of the bill does contain a provision that I'm assuming is from the original law, so not in this amendment, that does protect employers from these being used to monitor them. Whether it's strong enough is an open question, but it does remain in the law. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Anyone else? I think we got everybody. Okay. Thank you. The one thing I will add before I turn to you is that I love my old license plate. And I support this because I think if you want to pay for this, and the cost is shocking to me. I'm fine with people doing it.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
But I do think that it is worth having a conversation with the Madam Transportation Chair that we should ensure that the old license plates are available for those of us that want to continue to use them, and that this doesn't take us down that path of them being taken away.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Cause I actually, I like my old license plate, so. But I know that you, you are always looking out for Californians who are low income and couldn't pay what this costs a year. So I trust that you'll protect that. And with that, would you like to close?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Absolutely. Thank you for the robust discussion and all the comments and concerns, and we will continue to address, as needed, any of those. I appreciate Mr. Boston being here and providing testimony and, you know, appreciate his product.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
I also appreciate the concerns that were brought up by opposition. They are not lost on me. And I share those concerns about technology overall, and will continue to fight to be sure that we are balancing consumer interests with consumer's privacy. Because sometimes we can be so interested in things and don't realize the rights we give up for those things. And I look forward to talking with my colleague because I found the section that has lots of protections in it. But I appreciate all of you. I respectfully ask for your aye vote.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Do we have a motion on the bill? Second? Thank you. Madam Secretary, call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number six, AB 3138 by Assembly Member Wilson. The motion is do pass as amended to the Appropriations Committee. [Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Great. So we can let Ms. Irwin take up Dr. Weber's bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Which is AB 3139, to continue our conversation about tracking people's vehicles.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Well, good afternoon members. I'm here to present AB 3139, a bill to provide additional privacy protections for domestic violence victims. Miss Weber would like to thank the committee chair and the staff for their thoughtful conversations, and Assemblymember Weber will be accepting the amendments today. As described in the analysis, consumers spend a lot of time inside their cars, running errands, commuting to work, or traveling with modern vehicles evolving into what some call smartphones on wheels. Their increased connectivity raises concerns about consumer privacy being compromised.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Such services grant access to drivers' data with limited control over how consumers to consumers their data may be used. This poses a threat to safety. In the case of domestic violence survivors, it can be a life-or-death situation. Researchers have analyzed 25 car brands and identified several problematic practices with relation to privacy that are common among most or all of these brands.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
First of all, excessive collection of personal data; second, sharing or selling consumers' data; and third, limited control provided to drivers over their personal data. These practices pose significant threats, especially for survivals of DV, as perpetrators exploit apps to remotely track and control cars. This enables them to locate survivors and manipulate car functions such as honking the horn or locking the doors. A recent article in the New York Times sheds light on the struggles of Christine Dowdall, a survivor of domestic violence.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
It highlights the challenges she encountered while attempting to prevent her abuser from accessing the connected services in her car to track her location. Miss Dowdell's case demonstrates that even when survivors provide evidence of payment history, court-ordered restraining orders, and legal documentation granting exclusive use of the car, preventing their abuser from accessing controlled car services to stalk or intimidate them remains challenging.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
For these reasons, AB 3139 does the following if technologically feasible: an auto manufacturer would need to update the technology in the vehicle to install an option allowing a consumer to immediately disable all remote tracking technology, the method for disabling will be required to be easy to access and disable without requiring a password or login information once enabled. Once disabled, the survivor will have seven days to submit the information currently required in the bill in order for the connection to remain severed.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Similarly, the registered owner of the car will have seven days to contact the auto manufacturer to have the connection restored. Assuming that the technology was disabled for a reason other than to protect a survivor, the connection will be turned back on by the manufacturer.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
If this is not technologically feasible for a manufacturer to update the vehicle system to allow it to be disabled by the consumer alone, then the victim would have to submit a separation request to the vehicle manufacturer, including the proper documentation, such as a copy of a signed affidavit from a licensed medical or mental health care provider or a restraining order. A vehicle manufacturer would be required to separate the perpetrator's access from the remote vehicle technology in one business day.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
With me here today to testify is Robert Herrell, Executive Director of the Construction Consumer Federation of California.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Robert Herrell
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and members. Robert Herrell, Executive Director of Consumer Federation of California. We're the sponsor of this measure. I know you've had a long afternoon, and you haven't even got to all of the AI bills, so I will try to be brief. The substitute for the author did a great job of summarizing. I would just note that the New York Times story, that it even came up, I believe Madam Chair, in the previous bill with Miss Dowdle, her husband was a DEA agent.
- Robert Herrell
Person
So this is a sensitive topic, especially when you talk to the domestic violence groups, that interactions with law enforcement can be a little tricky and complicated. And so - good afternoon. And so the context here is that the Federal Government passed on a bipartisan basis, and it was signed by President Biden in December 2022, the Safe Connections Act. That was where we started. This was to take that Safe Connections Act, which was to allow DV survivors to be able to sever, in the telecommunications context, a contract.
- Robert Herrell
Person
And the FCC is in the process, as is very nicely summarized in the analysis of beginning to implement that with an 18-month window that was provided for them in the congressional act that authorized, in the course of doing that, they're asking, I think, some very appropriate and challenging for the auto industry questions about the applicability here.
- Robert Herrell
Person
I'd also like to just take a moment before handing it over to the actual original author of the bill to note, to thank the Chair, and to thank the committee staff for working really comprehensively with the author, with us as the sponsor, with DV groups and others, to try to find something that is as maximally protective of survivors as is possible. We think this is a really common sense step in the right direction, and we urge your support of this bill.
- Robert Herrell
Person
Happy to answer questions if they come up.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Doctor Weber, did you want to add anything? I mean, Miss Irwin did a great job, but.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
I'm sure she did. I want to thank my colleague, Assembly Member Irwin, for stepping in, but we can continue.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay, anybody else here in support of this bill?
- Danielle Kando-Kaiser
Person
Good afternoon. Danny Kando-Kaiser. On behalf of the California Low Income Consumer Coalition and support.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Oakland Privacy in support of this bill.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Samantha Corbin with EFF: leave it as a support if amended. I'll be honest, I have no idea if the committee amendments resolve that issue, but we will let you know and thank you for all of your work.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We hope they do. Anyone here in opposition to this bill? Seeing none. We'll bring it back to the Committee. Oh, yes, sorry. I apologize. It's getting late. Would never want to...
- John Moffatt
Person
Good afternoon, Madam Chair and members of the committee. John Moffat, on behalf of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, we are the trade association for the automakers and associated technology providers for those automakers. I want to be very clear. I am not here in opposition.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
He's going to chide you for no letter.
- John Moffatt
Person
So I'm not here in opposition. We appreciate the time we spent with the author's office, with the sponsors. We appreciate the conversation with the committee last week. We especially appreciate what was communicated to us by the committee consultant that this committee will be looking at this issue and sort of looking at all of the different bills that are in this space. This is one of three bills in this space this year alone. There's two in the Senate and one on this side.
- John Moffatt
Person
We are not opposed to what is happening here. We are not opposed to the concept here. We are very concerned about the use of connected car technology by an abuser to track a victim. I think where we're coming from is we cannot comply with all three bills. So the fact that this committee is going to, presuming those two bills, come over here, try to align the conversation and align all three concepts, we really do appreciate. In addition to that, we appreciate the ongoing conversation.
- John Moffatt
Person
We appreciate the little bit different approach that the committee analysis outlines with respect to, "Okay, the default is disconnect the car, and then let's figure out what the process is for." Verification, documentation, all of that good stuff. For whether that disconnection remains or whether the car gets reconnected, what's the appropriate level of documentation? How is that communicated to us? You know, as explained to us by the committee and in the committee analysis, it contemplates capabilities within the car. To our knowledge, those don't exist yet.
- John Moffatt
Person
But we are asking the question in the alternative; we believe communication with the manufacturer is appropriate. And again, the default is turn it off, then get the information, work through that, and we look forward to continuing to work through those issues.
- John Moffatt
Person
The last issue that I just like to raise is our presumption is that the legislature, the committee, the author, the sponsors would want us to default on the side of being overly protective, and so we would just ask that, like California's law for landlords, that we actually have some liability protection built into the bill. So again, I apologize, I'm a bit of an in betweener. And with that, happy to answer any questions.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no additional or seeing no opposition - or because you weren't even opposition to the bill - bring it back to the committee. Any questions, concerns, thoughts? We have a motion. Second. I will say thank you to Doctor Weber.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I think we had a great conversation where I expressed my concerns, you expressed your goals, and we really came up with a solution that, once we started to workshop it, I think everyone feels really good about and is maximally protected for the survivors, but allows for some of your concerns to be addressed. So, I want to thank you for that work and that collaboration. And with that, and I think this is a really important bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We heard just earlier about all of the cases in which this is relevant and important, and we now have devices all over us that tell people who may want to harm us where we are, and we need the ability to stop that. So, thank you for your work on this. Would you like to close?
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Yes. Well, first I must thank you Chair, and also your committee staff. We have been going back and forth, having a lot of conversations about how we can get this right, and really appreciate the work and the collaboration. I want to thank the sponsors and want to thank those who represent the car manufacturers because I know that they want to be on the right side.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
And we want to make sure that we're working together to put something in place that is feasible, that's able to protect these victims of domestic violence because the last thing that these individuals should have to worry about is that their abuser can track them and their whereabouts based on them having access to their car. And so, with that, I just respectfully ask that you protect these victims and vote aye on AB 3139.
- Akilah Weber
Legislator
Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Doctor Weber. Madam Secretary, please call the roll item.
- Committee Secretary
Person
Number seven, AB 3139, by Assemblymember Weber. The motion is do-pass as amended to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Bill has five, so it needs one more, but we'll leave it on call for absence. members, thank you. Mister Lowenthal, you are up with AB 3172.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair and members. I heard once someone say the most important job of government is to protect our young people. Wait a minute. I think that was our Chair. Just a few moments ago, and with that, I'd like to start by accepting the amendments in the analysis of AB 3172. I want to especially thank your staff's excellent analysis, which contains thoughtful legal examination of the law germane and central to the bill's goals.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
The Federal Government, along with California, multiple other states, and many countries, including our allies overseas, have long sought ways to hold social media companies accountable for the negative impacts their platforms have on the well-being of children and teens. Recent congressional hearings and an alarming number of studies point to the negative impact social media can have on a child or teen's development, mental well-being, and health. More must be done and fast.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
AB 3172 will hold social media platforms accountable for the harm they cause to children and teenagers. This legislation would impose financial responsibility on large social media companies if their own negligence has been proven in court. AB 3172 does not change California's underlying law or the burden of proof required in court.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
What it does do in response to the damage knowingly and admittingly being done to an entire generation of children by just a handful of companies that are earning enormous profits off of children and teen users is actually apply appropriate financial incentives and accountability to prompt these few companies to be more careful and responsible partners, especially when it comes to children. Our top priority must be ensuring our children are safe and secure offline and online.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I don't need to tell you that millions of teenagers and children turn to social media apps as their primary form of social interaction and communication, and it is imperative that we are certain they are safe in doing so.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
While there are some varying degrees of guardrails built into some of these platforms, studies show there is much more that can and should be done, and too often, our questions and concerns to the corporations owning the platforms have gone unanswered, and the harms to our kids continued amount. I, like many parents, have skin in the game here. As a father of three daughters in the age of social media, I see firsthand the dramatic impacts and influence these companies have over my children's well-being.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
As a former social media company shareholder and someone who has spent their career in the tech and telecom industry, I believe in the potential for these companies to promote the healthy development of our youth to be a benefit to all users. But as a parent and as a Legislator, it is my responsibility to stand up and demand accountability and real action when they claim to want to protect our youth. I should make myself clear. I am not against social media.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
In fact, as a parent of young children, I see the positive effect some social media tools can have connecting young people. I just want social medias to much more vigorously step up to the plate and be responsible partners that take safety and the well-being of our children as serious as they do to shareholder value. AB 3172 will hopefully make social media companies more responsible for their own algorithms and actions that affect our kids and more accountable where there is proven neglect.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I would love to introduce my witnesses here. Naia Marong, a 17-year-old junior from West Campus High in Sacramento. Fred Whitaker, attorney and Chairman of the Orange County Republican Party. Scott Crommeland, an attorney.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Are all three planning on testifying so that we can divide time. Okay, so we'll do two minutes each and then opposition.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
I'm only here to answer questions.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
You're here to answer questions. Okay, so we'll do two minutes each. Thanks.
- Naia Marong
Person
My name is Naia Marong. I'm 17 years old, and I'm a junior at West Campus High School. I've had social media since I was in middle school, and I wanted to speak at this hearing to explain how social media has negatively impacted my mental health, as well as many other teens I know. Let me start off by emphasizing how addicting social media truly is. I'll find myself scrolling on TikTok or mindlessly browsing through my Instagram feed for hours on end.
- Naia Marong
Person
And the thing that's scary about this is how those hours only feel like minutes. Getting sucked into the realm of social media not only consumes our valuable time, but it also heightens teens' mental health issues. From my personal experience, I will find myself feeling more anxious and nervous after being on social media for long amounts of time. There have been extended amounts of time where I've taken a social media detox, and I've found myself feeling less anxious and more at peace.
- Naia Marong
Person
I support Assembly Bill 3172 because social media platforms will not stop pushing addictive, harmful features to kids and teens until they are held financially responsible. And I strongly urge this committee to pass Assembly Bill 3172 to protect our mental health. Thank you for the opportunity to speak today.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you for being here.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
Madam Chair and members, I'm Fred Whitaker. I'm the managing partner of Cummins and White Law Firm in Newport Beach. I'm the former mayor pro tem and city councilman in the City of Orange. And it's been my honor to, for the last ten years, serve as the Chairman of the Republican Party in Orange County. But today, I'm coming to you as an individual, somebody who's sporting AB 3172, a lawyer who works in the corporate world and is always for tort reform.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
And some of you may see me tomorrow coming to your offices asking for paga reform. But today I'm here for AB 3172, and I greatly appreciate the Assembly Member bringing this nill forward. There's two reasons to support AB 3172. 1st is Whether sex trafficking, addiction, tips on suicide, anorexia, or the sale of fentanyl, social media is facilitating and causing child harm that we have not seen forever. That harm needs to be stopped.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
And in my opinion, it can be only stopped one of two ways: regulatory or financially, and in my experience, the regulatory manner never works for large companies because large companies love regulation. They have a phalanx of lawyers, compliance officers, who then lobby their regulators and become their own experts for their own regulators. It's what I call malicious compliance. The only way that it actually stops is when there's a financial penalty for acting poorly. This is not talking about Section 230.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
They are completely protected on their content that's being published. This is talking about what their own conduct is with respect to 1714 in the Civil Code, just direct negligence, adding some statutory damages. And those statutory damages are not uncommon. There's many places in the civil code right now where this legislature has added statutory damages for negligent conduct that hurts vulnerable people, and our children are our most vulnerable.
- Fred Whitaker
Person
So I guarantee you, with a very robust plaintiff's bar in California, that with this legislation passing, the engineers at these social media companies will figure out how to change their algorithms to make things less addictive, to make bad things less attractive, and still have very profitable companies. I ask you to support AB 3172.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you so much. Anyone else here in support of this bill? Come on up.
- Ed Howard
Person
Madam Chair and members. Ed Howard, Senior Counsel at the Children's Advocacy Institute at the University of San Diego School of Law, and strong support.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Mikey Hothi
Person
Hello. Mikey Hothi with Common Sense Media. We're the bill sponsor and strong support as well.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- McKenna Jenkins
Person
Good evening, Madam Chair and members. Mckenna Jenkins, on behalf of NextGen California, and support. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Any primary witnesses in opposition?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Mr. Hoffman is now here. You don't get to play him on TV anymore.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
The impersonation continues.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, interesting. When you're ready, two minutes each. Thank you.
- Jess Miers
Person
Excellent. Thank you. Good afternoon. Chair Bauer-Kahan and members of the committee. I'm Jess Miers. I'm a digital native and senior counsel for Chamber of Progress, a tech coalition at advocating for equitable access for technological advancements for all Americans. Today, I'm here to voice our opposition to AB 3172, which, despite its stated goal of safeguarding teens, will have unintended consequences that undermine this objective.
- Jess Miers
Person
AB 3172 poses significant risk not just to the liberties of California's youth, but also to their access to vital information and the overall health of our digital ecosystem. The bill would compel platforms to arbitrarily decide what content is appropriate for young users, decisions that should be made by parents and guardians. This infringes on the First Amendment rights of platforms and users and opens the door to endless litigation, posing a significant risk to small and new platforms.
- Jess Miers
Person
As a result, platforms might restrict access for California's youth, disproportionately affecting marginalized groups, including LGBTQ youth seeking support and teens in need of reproductive sexual health information. AB 3172 unjustifiably infringes on platforms and users' First Amendment rights. By requiring platforms to assess users under 18, the bill mandates age verification, necessitating the collection of sensitive information like government IDs or biometric data, jeopardizing the user's privacy security, particularly in the litigious US environment, unlike the EU's.
- Jess Miers
Person
And of course, the folks said selling age verification solutions are the ones in favor of these regulations. We also remind this committee of the last time California attempted to foreclose minors' First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court made it crystal clear that minors indeed have a right to access information. That remains true today. Adults not only have the right to access legally protected information, too, but they also have a right to do so without surrendering their sensitive identification information. But don't hear it from us.
- Jess Miers
Person
The Supreme Court has held the same twice. Moreover, this Legislature has routinely demonstrated a lack of compelling evidence that these types of regulations are necessary and narrowly tailored. Numerous recent peer review studies not only cast significant doubt but reject the existence of any causal link between social media use and the alleged harms to teens. That's why the Northern District Court of California recently enjoined this state's deeply flawed age-appropriate design code, recognizing the same concerns. Not only that, the California courts have already been addressing concerns about online harms without additional legislation. As seen in recent cases in Lemmon v. Snap, Neville v. Snap, Liapes v. Face.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
You want to leave time for your colleague?
- Jess Miers
Person
Social media addiction and the current social media addiction class actions. Thank you so much for your time.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Thank you, Madam Chair and members of the committee. Jason Schmelzer here on behalf of Technet in respectful opposition to AB 3172. Technet and our members agree with the author's goal. We all believe that children online should be protected, and our members have frankly, been at the forefront of these efforts. We are, however, opposed to the bill for a variety of reasons. And I just want to touch on one thing that wasn't raised by my colleague.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
In the analysis, it basically states that the proponent says the goal is to incentivize platforms to change how they operate. Right? And we assume that they're referencing operations related to user content and the features that platforms use to deliver that content. But the bill doesn't target anything precisely, as has been noted by the author and the sponsors, it simply acknowledges the platform's general duty of care and then sets high statutory penalties for failure to meet that duty.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
But we read the high statutory penalties to apply to all claims against platforms by a minor for any purpose. So if a child is visiting our corporate headquarters and they have a trip and fall injury, and they violated their duty of care, and there's negligence, and it's proven in a court, the statutory penalties in this bill would apply, other such injuries would apply. We obviously don't think that's the author's intent. We think that's pretty clear based on the statements that were made coming in.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
But without that type of focus, I think it's hard to assume that social media companies are going to learn anything and change their operations because any of the claims that are brought related to content and content delivery mechanisms are going to be violative of Section 230 and potentially the First Amendment, depending upon the facts, and they're going to be out. What we're going to be left with are a bunch of claims for slip and fall injuries at the company headquarters, and we think that's problematic in the structure of the bill and urge your no vote today for that reason.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Any other folks here in opposition?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Electronic Frontier Foundation, in opposition for the reasons stated by my colleagues.
- Khara Boender
Person
Khara Boender, Computer and Communications Industry Association, respectful opposition.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Apologies, I was just relaxing. Ronak Daylami with Cal Chamber. Align our comments with our colleagues. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Seeing no further folks in the room wanting to weigh in, I'll bring it back to the committee members. Mr. Vice Chair.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I can just comment on all of these things. So I think the one difficult thing with this, I do have similar concerns as a prior bill, which is the size of the potential penalty. But the one thing that I'm always grappling with on the social media bills is it's sort of like, we all know it's there. We all know there's an issue out there, and I don't feel like it's being, truthfully, I just don't feel like it's being addressed.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I see what my kids are going through is there learning about as they're. This is why I lock down their phones. But on the moments I don't lock down their phones, I can see the types of content that just like, I mean, I sometimes gotta, like, shake them, you know? Didn't mean I didn't want to get on the meme caucus or whatever for that, but, yeah, for baby shaking.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
You might need that.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Sorry about that. Sergeants aren't around, are they? So it's like, we know there's an issue, and this became a very big concern with me when it originally came with fentanyl, just in terms of the young adult and children's interaction with social media and or just online platforms in general. And I remember meeting with some of the companies, not all of them. I mean, I will say that all of them were interested in, like, not helping to facilitate fentanyl sales.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So I'll just say that right then and there. But at some point, it's like, well, I know deaths are occurring and they're using this particular product, at least drug dealers are, to get it to children in my community. And at what point do we say, like, we gotta do something about this. We need to start taking this seriously as an institution here. So I'm getting sort of the point where my patience is starting to.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I don't know, I'm just, it's like my second year, so maybe I'm just getting grumpy in my second year, but 10? No, but we are getting to the point where it's like, I need some real solutions, and I am open to the platforms to bring them to me. Cause I don't. I'm not really comfortable with just relying on the goodwill that this isn't gonna happen, because it continues to happen again on my privacy or on my aging bill that I brought up upstairs.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
One, another Legislator, one of my colleagues brought up about how we know that a certain platform is being used for fraudulent activity to scam people on marketplaces and things like that, but it's like it continues to happen. And so at what point do we say, like, let's not let it continue to happen? And I think this bill kind of gets to that issue where it's like, okay, we're gonna stop letting that happen. And so I am.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
That said, it sounded like a really big buildup to say I'm not quite there yet on this legislation. Cause I understand some of the concerns around that, but I am definitely interested. I know this has been a huge priority for you. Sure. Please respond to that.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
First of all, Assemblymember, I feel like-minded with you on a myriad of issues, especially in this committee, and I truly appreciate the thought process that you go through and how you grapple with these things. And we talked together about how challenging it is to parent in this day and age, and how we need a village to support us.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
I want to let you know about my experiences trying to work with these social media companies in a way that you would truly appreciate to talk to them, to try and figure out are there ways that we can find commonality. What are your goals? Because our children are being productized. Let's not forget that despite all the issues that the opposition are bringing up in terms of First Amendment rights, none of us, and especially our children, are the end users in social media. They're the product.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
They're the product and they're being productized. And the more data that's gotten out of them, the more valuable that product is. And so they will do anything to maximize shareholder value in order to get as much money as they can from that product. So what did I do? I went to go to Snapchat, I went to TikTok to physically visit them. I've met with their third house representatives over and over again, and to ask for one simple thing.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
To meet with the thought leaders in those companies. Just a meeting. One meeting with the thought leaders in those companies. And guess what? I haven't gotten it. Way before this bill, way before anything else, I can't get a meeting. To the point of Mr. Whitaker, it's time that we bring them to the table. There's only one way that they're going to listen to us.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
As long as we continue to placate and push things off and keep harm down to a de minimis level where they're making billions of dollars off our children. We have to move this legislation forward to continue that conversation.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
You know. Well, thank you for that. And I know that you're very sincere in this and what our chair said a couple weeks ago on another bill was just when it gets to the point where. And, sorry to paraphrase, I'm probably messing it up, but when we get to the point where you can just go in and change your birthday, right? I mean, that's crazy. How? So you can't therefore sit back and say, I didn't know this person was not an adult.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
They went in there for their entire existence on XYZ platform. Okay, well, I'm not gonna. XYZ platform. They were a child, and now all of a sudden, you know, I just changed a couple digits here, and now I'm an adult. Unacceptable. Like, we can't allow activities like that to continue. And like you say, you know, placate forever. I mean, we're gonna get to the point where it's like, guys, we gotta stop. We gotta get serious about this. So I do have a lot of your concerns.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I don't know if this is it, and it's not, because, I don't know, I might change my decision up here. Right? You know, as we're sitting here having this discussion, that's why we have these hearings. But I'm equally as concerned about this as you have two kids that are now on social media, or they're actually not on social media, but they use products that they will soon be on social media. And they could be on social media.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
And I don't know it, but I have four kids, and I see, I go to these high school football games and I watch the kids stand in line and they are, like, glued to these things while it's like, dude, there's a football game going on right here. You know, so it's. At some point, it's like, we gotta. I love the products. I love the opportunity to share with your friends.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Some kids use these to talk with their friends or feel comfortable with issues that they have in their lives that they, for some reason, don't feel comfortable. But we have to get serious. And I appreciate you. And that's all. Thank you to listening to TED Talk.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Assemblymember, thank you for sharing with us your thought process and all those things. And I just want to remind you that the way the bill as written isn't creating levels of liability. It's simply saying once liability has already been determined, that there is a penalty imposed upon that. That's what it's saying. It's not creating new law.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So what I'll say, I don't know what I'm gonna do on this in a couple minutes here, but I hope before this gets to the floor that there's an opportunity to address some of the concerns that they brought up. And I, you know, maybe it's the first time you've heard, you know, in terms of trips and falls or whatever. I know you're not trying to address those issues in terms of your legislation isn't intended to capture trips and falls at company headquarters. But I hope I welcome them to come to the, have those meetings with you to address this before that goes to the floor.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
My goal, Assemblymember, is for tech companies to be more successful, not less, more successful.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Miss Dixon.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
This is such an important conversation. And how many times have we been talking about this today? And then in other committees as well. And at Congress we hear the hearings that are being held on Section 230 and nothing happens. And we keep this thing just as, just a circle that goes round and round and round with no solution. In the meantime, as you said, some amen children are being not just casually affected, significantly affected.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
That we all know the data on mental illness rates have increased in society and just the socialization of children. They don't interact with people anymore. They're only on their phones. We have a problem in the world, in this country, or in this state, that we, it is our responsibility to attempt to deal with it. Is there a perfect solution? I don't know, but your bill will send a message. Now I am, and I appreciate Mr. Whitaker being here.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
I mean I certainly am a consistent advocate for employers and businesses large and small. I want California to be a state where companies can succeed in business. I feel this is an important message that says we mean business. We have to do something substantive, meaningful, concrete, that sends a message that this madness has to stop.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
And I applaud you for your bill, and you're courageous in doing this, and I know you're getting, well maybe you're not getting all the phone calls from people because they won't meet with you, they should be meeting with you because this is an important for them that we're surfacing issues related to their operations of their company and their outreach to their marketplace, and we have serious issues with that and it deserves a conversation. So in my opinion, we're sending a message so they will sit down with you and have a serious conversation as this goes forward. So thank you very much.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Mr. Hoover.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Thank you. I share the kind of thoughts of my colleague from Placer County because I also don't know what I'm going to do in a few minutes here, but because this is a really difficult issue and I do understand some of the opposition's concerns. I guess my big question for the opposition, and again, to Mr. Patterson's point, I don't know if this bill is fully cooked yet. I don't know if it's there yet. It appears to me that there is some tailoring that can still be done on the specifics. But what is the answer to this, right? If it's not this bill, what are we going to do to reduce social media use for our kids?
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Did you say reduce social media use?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Or fix, again, reduce social media use or reduce the harms or reduce the addiction? The addiction, yeah. Either one of you.
- Jess Miers
Person
Yeah, I mean, I'll point out a couple things here. And first of all, I just want to say, this bill does change the law. The law currently says under Section 230 that websites and users are not liable for third-party speech. The First Amendment says that the government cannot interfere with the publication decisions of an online company. This bill does both. It interferes with their editorial discretion, and it violates the principles under Section 230.
- Jess Miers
Person
So starting with that, I will say that I think it's quite interesting that of anywhere else, we don't really expect a perfect social harmony. Except on the internet for some reason, we expect absolute perfection. We expect absolute perfect society. And for some reason, we also expect the social media companies to grant us that perfect society.
- Jess Miers
Person
What these bills don't do is that they don't consider the fact that there are a lot of underlying harms and ills in our society, and that the Internet is mirror for those underlying harms and ills. What I'll also, and lastly conclude here with, is that Section 230 actually is the solution. Long time ago, in 1996, the Congress came up with Section 230 because they wanted to encourage these websites and services to actually engage in content moderation. And that's what we're seeing today. In fact, what we're actually seeing is that these social media services are doing more and more to reduce the amount of harmful content on these services.
- Jess Miers
Person
What this bill will do is just push the companies to say, look, kids and adults, you no longer can use this unless you give us over your ID, which I think is really funny for a bill that is trying to reduce social media ills and harm, mandating that now the same social media company should collect even more sensitive personal information from kids.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'll remind everyone in the room to please maintain a respectful tone. Oh, yes. Would you like to? Did you want to?
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I would like to continue, if I may.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah, please.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I didn't know if you had any thoughts as well, or. I didn't.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
Thank you.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
I want to make one final point.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
I think she covered most of what I would say. I guess I would just sort of add maybe to the example of fentanyl. And sort of springboarding off of the perfection online, the United States Government has spent the better part of the last half-century trying to stop the sale of illegal drugs in this country. They've got police power locked up half the world. Yet for some reason, we think that internet companies should be able to stop every sale on their platforms. They can't.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
That will not be an outcome that is achieved. What they can do and what we are doing is looking at all of our rules, the more important ones, obviously, dealing with CSAM we put more time into, and we have a variety of ways that we go after these types of things. There's algorithmic detection. We can identify bad content in the upload that violates our rules. We deal with user complaints from parents, from individuals. We work directly with law enforcement.
- Jason Schmelzer
Person
But perfection is not going to be achieved. And no matter what, this bill still doesn't grapple with a focus. What everybody is talking about in this hearing room right now will be essentially carved out because of Section 230 in the First Amendment. And then again, we're gonna be left with the slip and fall injuries. And I'm not quite sure how the author wants to contend with that, but it is a real point of this bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, and I appreciate that. There's actually, I'm hearing two different things from the opposition. I think you are being more honest about what the bill does. I would advise everyone to actually look at the language because that doesn't do much of what has been said here. And I guess I wanna start actually in one place because you said one thing in your opening remarks about age gating and the folks who are supporting it, being in it for the money. I think it's important that in light of that comment, you are forthcoming about who funds Chamber of Progress.
- Jess Miers
Person
Absolutely. I'd like to say first that Chamber of Progress does not accept a vote or veto from any of the technology companies or our partners that we have on our board. So we are very mission-driven and principle-driven, and we run, by the way, that we see those principles going forward.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
But you didn't answer the question.
- Jess Miers
Person
I can list all of them if you'd wish I could. You know, Google, Amazon, you know, we have several of the technology companies, but again, they don't give us a vote. They are not permitted to have a vote or veto over our principles.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. I think we've found perhaps the only organization on either side of the aisle that thinks 230 is the answer to anything these days, as evidenced by the conversations in Washington and here today, the bipartisanship sitting before us from Southern California. Did you want to add in, Miss Wicks?
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, thank you, Madam Chair. One, I want to insert myself into the conversation, if I could, and I also want to react to my colleague's questions. You know, this committee, the makeup of this committee is different than what it has been. We have some new folks on the committee. I am now legislatively middle-aged, so I'm in my 6th year, and we have some newer members here.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And so I'll also share a little bit of history, if I could, about some of the tech regulation we've attempted to do in this body. I have started doing tech regulation for children since the moment I've got this job back in 2018. Had some swings and some misses. Did a kid's act, didn't make it through. Have always had really good bipartisan conversations, which I think are similarly here now, which I've always appreciated. I did do a bill called Age-Appropriate Design in 2021, I think, 2022.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
God, I don't know. I am legislatively middle-aged. Geez. A couple years ago, and worked diligently with the tech companies on that bill. And the whole premise of that bill is to ensure that we have, by default and by design, safe standards for children. It was signed into law, and then the trade associations turned around and sued and stopped the bill right now. So we've tried other things, and we'll keep trying those things.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
And the reason we're trying those things is because our children are not safe right now. And it is our responsibility to ensure that they are. And the companies need to come to the table and meet with Assemblymember Lowenthal and anyone else to ensure that our kids are safe. They have to do it, and it is our responsibility to make sure that our children are safe. So we've tried other mechanisms, we tried other regulation. We're all grappling with this.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
But I think it's important to see this bill through so that we have the leverage to have the conversation. And I do think a lot of the folks in the tech industry want their children safe. I think they want that, too. But we have to have a vehicle to force the conversation. And I've met with a lot of them. I'll keep doing it. I know the author will as well.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
But I think it's important to send a message that we have to keep this built moving forward. I don't think banning social media is going to be the solution to the problem. Kids will get around it, right? I don't think the parental consent stuff is the best option either. Kids can figure out a way around that. It also puts the onus on the parents then when really the onus should be on the companies to create safer products.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
We don't have to ask if our children's car seats are safe, you know, we know they are because they're regulated to meet a regulation that we view as important and as a standard that we can uphold to. And the companies need to do the same thing. So I will be obviously, supporting the bill today, and I would implore our colleagues to support the bill as well so that we can keep the conversation going.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Because I have tried six ways till Sunday myself to try to make these companies come to the table, and they have many times. But then the trade associations turn around and sue and stop the bill from being put forth. I'm glad you're doing the bill. I'm happy to support it. I hope it can get bipartisan support and that we can really work collaboratively to try to solve the problem together. Count me in as someone who wants to be on the team to help as well, and appreciate you bringing the bill forward.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I know Mr. Hoover wanted to add closing remarks to his.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
Sorry, just wanted to close my thought and appreciate the work you're doing again. You know, I don't know if this bill is exactly where it needs to be final product, but I think one of the frustrating things for me today from the opposition is that there isn't a lot of acknowledgment. In fact, there's almost the opposite, that social media is causing harm of any kind. And I think we can argue over studies, we can argue over numbers on whether or not that's the case.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
But the reality is, and there's an amazing new book that just came out called the Anxious Generation, about the harms of, obviously, phones and social media and mental illness. But the reality is something a really major changed. The statistics have changed dramatically since 2010. We've seen rates of depression and anxiety in the US, while they were stable in the 2000s, rose by more than 50%. In many studies from 2010 to 2019, suicide rates during those times, 48% increase for adolescents ages 10 to 19.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
For girls ages 10 to 14, it rose 131%. I am the father of a daughter. These statistics, and again, I'm not sitting here saying that all of this is on social media. But what is the reality? The reality is, is in the latest Gallup numbers, the latest Gallup polling of American teens, American teens spend an average of 5 hours per day on social media sites. That is something that we have never experienced, our kids have never experienced in the history of the world.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
And you have to question what is happening when our teens are now spending 5 hours per day on social media and the rates of depression and suicide are going through the roof. I think we have to question that. And as lawmakers, we have to do something now, whether this is the something, I do want to keep the conversation going, and I want to continue to be a part of those conversations.
- Josh Hoover
Legislator
But, you know, I would just, you know, ask that the opposition, as this bill moves forward, I mean, I just think, you know, we need to acknowledge some of these harms, and we need to acknowledge that social media could be contributing to these harms. And if we don't do that, it is going to be really hard to have, I think, a full conversation. That's it. Thanks.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Mr. Vice Chair, you want to add something as well?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah, thank you. You know, I do not to dismiss concerns that are expressed from the opposition. I don't think they're necessarily responsible for all the content that's on their platforms. I mean, I do think there's if they were because I put a lot of crazy stuff on social media and sometimes has consequences here, but it is an exchange of ideas.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
But on the other end, I feel like when I look at the bill and it says ordinary care, and I think about, that was such a good statement last week, or whenever it was. I'm not quite in the middle-age sphere yet, but I think it was last week when mentioned that when you can go in and change your date in order to access other content that is not using care to protect our children.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And so what I'm gonna do today is I'm gonna support this bill today, but I ask that you think about that fine amount. And also, I don't think we should end the conversation. I might still vote no on the floor. It's sort of like the opposite of what people normally do. But I really wanna push for a conversation to happen. And so I'm gonna support it here today in committee because this, I'm very passionate about this issue as well. And at some point, I feel like I would just like to resolve some of this. So I'm gonna be supporting it. And thanks for getting this conversation going.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. And Miss Wicks, and I only have six more years to get this fixed. So we gotta get something going. So I actually want to read the bill because I am very confused by the conversation that happened here today. Cause it's not what's in the bill. So the bill is actually very, very simple. It says a social media platform that violates subdivision A and breaches its responsibility to ordinary care and skill to a child shall be liable for statutory damages as listed in the bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
That's the bill. So when we talk about age gating and we talk about, you know, all of these things, we're asking social media companies to do what we ask of every single company in the State of California. You cannot harm people in California and walk away without being responsible for it, unless you're a social media company because of Section 230. And I can't do anything about that. So I guess, and to Mr. Anthony's point, that will be exempt from this, because Section 230 stands.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So this will only apply to not the content piece, but hopefully to the lack of ordinary care taken in the addiction and in the failure to allow a kid to change their age without any checks. I mean, there's no way that YouTube didn't know my kid was the age he was because he'd been that age his entire life. And so when we say, you can do anything you want to our kids, and you don't have to be responsible for that, we are failing our children.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And I think that every parent up here knows, and that's why I think my colleague probably came around, is because we see it every single day in the classrooms, in our communities, and nobody thinks the social media and I work on youth mental health every day. It is one of the things I am most passionate about in this building. And do I think the social media companies are entirely responsible for that? No. But do I think they're a part of the problem? Yes.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And do I think that, like every other company in this state, they need to take ordinary care for their consumers? Yes. Do I think that's too much to ask? No. And I think you can do it. I really do. But nobody has expected it out of you yet, and we should because our kids are worth it with that. Would you like to close?
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. I want to thank the opposition for their very thoughtful comments. And I want to thank all of those that came in and testified and are here on behalf of NTs in the tech industry. I want to reiterate, my goal is to make the tech sector stronger.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
We're very proud to be the host of tech companies here in the State of California is a vital part of our economy and very proud to be offering a bill that is going to get everybody on the same page and excited for the growth these companies. Beyond that, I'm proud of everyone in here. As a matter of fact, the extremely thoughtful comments by my colleagues and particularly those across the aisle, those of you who know me.
- Josh Lowenthal
Legislator
After a year and a half here, I gravitate towards bipartisan legislation and very proud to sit next to Mr. Whitaker, who had his hand in beating me in a race in 2018. And still we are here arm in arm on this issue because it affects families, and families doesn't have a party registration to it. So thank you very much. Please consider to move this bill forward so we can continue to work on it. And my commitment to you is to work with anyone and everyone to make this legislation stronger. Thank you.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We have a motion. Do we have a second? Great. Madam Secretary, please call the roll.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And that bill has 10 votes. It is out. But we will leave the roll open for absent members.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Great job.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Great job.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
All right. Madam Chair, we have AB 1836, correct?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. Thank you, Mr. Vice Chair. Thank you, Members. And I know it's late, so. And I want to thank Committee staff again. I know I took my privilege earlier to do so, but for their incredible work on all bills, but particularly this Bill, I'll be accepting the Committee amendments and the analysis today.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
The Committee amendments make clear that the Bill will not apply to First Amendment protected speech, which is one of the things we heard from the opposition, and restricts the definition of digital replica and provides clear provisions for family consent for the use of their loved one's digital replica. So hopefully that goes a long way in addressing the opposition's concerns, although I'm sure we will hear additional issues that are still present. With that, I'm proud to present AB 1836.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
California is a hub for artists and artistic expression. It is something California was built on and that we're incredibly proud of. Performers and celebrities build careers based on themselves, their voices, their images, their signature performances. Our state has an exceptionally strong right for living artists to protect against the exploitation of their likeness. And I want to pause there and explain that this Bill does not affect the rights of living artists.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
This Bill is focused on deceased performers and their rights to their likeness, et cetera. Under current law, images and videos of deceased performers are allowed to be used in a broad range of creative works, including an explicit exemption for audio visual works. Up until now, with the advent of AI, this meant the use of past performances, that artists had already had the opportunity to profit from, replaying old performances. But with AI, being deceased no longer means you can no longer perform.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so AI replicas of performers could allow, will allow, a full reanimation, creating work in their image and likeness. A full movie. Today I was having a conversation with a colleague, and I was saying you could make a new Robin Williams movie and put Robin Williams out there. One of my favorite actors. And today, his estate would have no say or compensation for that performance. We've already seen replicas of Amy Winehouse and George Carlin pop up completely identifiable as them, but with new material.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
The broad exemptions allowed in current law for this clear misappropriation without a court weighing in on whether something is protected by the First Amendment. The Bill allows to cease performers the right to not be reanimated without their consent or the will, through their estate and compensation for them. And let me be clear. Nothing in this Bill will stop those works from being created, but we will compensate individuals for their likeness, for their work.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And it's important to note that in order for these new works to be created, for that Robin Williams movie to be made, they would have to use his performance and feed it into the AI tool to create that new performance. So his art, his likeness, his work, his voice would be used to create a new performance with no compensation to his estate. And so this Bill would protect against those future abuses, again, without altering the current state for living actors.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
With me in support is Shane Gusman and Doug MIrell with SAG-AFTRA.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, Shane Gusman, on behalf of SAG-AFTRA , the sponsor of the Bill. Rather than hear another lobbyist talk, with the Committee's permission, the family of Donna Summer, music legend Donna Summer, wrote a really moving support letter on behalf of the Bill, and I was asked to read their letter. So, with the Committee's permission, I would like to do that.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
The Chair would be mad at me if I didn't allow that, so please.
- Shane Gusman
Person
I figured, but just checking. We write in strong support of Assembly Bill 1836, which will prohibit the digital replication of deceased performers in audiovisual works and sound recordings without consent. If you've ever been to a seventies or disco themed party, then you have undoubtedly heard the billboard hit "Last Dance," sung by Donna Summer. Donna was not only a beloved mother and wife, she was also a beloved artist who paved the way for future generations of artists to assert themselves creatively and commercially.
- Shane Gusman
Person
With her powerful voice and emotive delivery, she revolutionized the sound and style of popular music. Her influence extends far beyond the disco era, shaping the landscape for contemporary pop, dance and R and B. Donna's songs celebrate female empowerment, breaking down barriers, and challenging stereotypes in the music industry to this day. As her family and representatives to her state, it is our responsibility to protect the integrity of Donna's legacy. Today, Donna's legacy is threatened by the exponential advancements in artificial intelligence.
- Shane Gusman
Person
This technology can be used to create or modify audio visual content in ways that were previously impossible or difficult, leading to the potential misuse or abuse. The ease and speed in which new fake performances can be generated. Generated is astonishing. Will today be the day that we turn on the radio or television and hear our voice and likeness digitally replicated without our consent? This uncertainty in the age of artificial intelligence is very unsettling for us.
- Shane Gusman
Person
The threat of exploitation not only disrespects the legacy of Donna, but also undermines our rights as her loved ones and beneficiaries to her estate, to control how our voice and likeness are used. As digital technologies have advanced, it is clear that the express specific exemptions against liability for unauthorized use of voice and likeness in musical compositions and audio visual works provided under current law are no longer viable.
- Shane Gusman
Person
Rather than leave the families and beneficiaries of deceased California performers at the mercy of those who will exploit their legacies, we ask that the California Legislature step in and ensure that digital replica rights be protected. Donna may not be with us today, but her voice lives on through us and only us. Please let us honor Donna's memory and the memory of those who have left us. For those reasons, we urge your aye vote on AB 1836.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
Thank you. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair. Good afternoon, Mr. Chair. Thank you, Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan and Members of the Committee. My name is Doug Mirell and I'm a partner in the Los Angeles law firm of Greenberg Glusker Fields Claman and Machtinger. I appear in strong support of AB 1836, and I join the author of this Bill in applauding the Committee's excellent and comprehensive analysis of this legislation.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
My primary interest lies in ensuring that consent remains the fundamental touchstone when it comes to deciding whether to allow generative artificial intelligence technology to be used to digitally reanimate deceased performers.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
As someone who has spent over 25 years working with this Legislature to address issues arising from the post mortem right of publicity, California must now protect against technological encroachments upon that well established-right. Now, some of this Bill's opponents fail to appreciate that nothing in AB 1836 would require motion picture producers or studios to do anything other than what they have been doing.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
As the Committee's analysis points out, there are at least five instances in the last quarter century where permission to use the voice and or likeness of deceased performers has been sought and obtained from the families or other representatives of their respective estates. These include Oliver Reed in Gladiator, Paul Walker in Furious 7, Peter Cushing in Rogue One, Carrie Fisher in the Rise of Skywalker, and most recently, James Dean in Finding Jack.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
And I know of no reason why such consent cannot or should not continue to be required when AI versions of recognizable deceased performers are being used. And put most simply, passage of AB 1836 will assure this result from now into the future. Now, of course, AB 1836 has to be read consistently with the First Amendment, but current Civil Code section 3344.1 contains an over-broad enumeration of categorically exempt expressive works that goes beyond what the First Amendment requires.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
The author's amendments found in the Committee's analysis, respond to the opponent's concerns by including a more limited list of statutory exclusions for AI created digital replicas. And moreover, to the best of my knowledge, no one has ever asserted that the absence of any expressive works exemptions in California's counterpart statute for the right of publicity of living persons somehow renders that law infirm. So, in conclusion, too often the development of the law lags behind the advancement of technology.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
But fortunately, AB 1836 wisely anticipates and ensures the rights of families and other representatives of deceased performers to consent or refuse to consent to AI manipulations of their loved ones. I urge an aye vote, and I'm happy to answer any questions.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right, thank you very much. And do we have any other speakers in support?
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
On behalf of the California Labor Federation, in support.
- Carl London Ii
Person
Madam Chair, Members, Carl London on behalf of the Recording Industry Association of America. We're kind of a 'tweener. Can I make a brief statement about why? Conceptually, the industry is very supportive. We work very closely with SAG-AFTRA through our collective bargaining processes, particularly on the AI issues. We work together in Tennessee to establish a law there, this Bill. Right now, we'd like to work with the author on tightening up the fair use provisions of the Bill.
- Carl London Ii
Person
Also would note that the digital replica definition is narrower than the one we reached with our partner in our collective bargaining agreement. So we need to reconcile that somehow in the process. The third thing is that we would like to work on potentially adding a provision to the Bill that allows us to step in and sue on behalf of the artists when there are situations where damages are to be sought.
- Carl London Ii
Person
That's a routine matter because we are both rights holders and the artists typically aren't wanting to be in the position of suing, but rather, we'll have the record company do it for them. So, working through that with the author and SAG-AFTRA, we'd like to work on that and get to a position where we're fully in support, but conceptually are very supportive of this Bill. Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you. Witnesses. Do we have some witnesses in opposition? A witness in opposition. Two witnesses in opposition. So that'll be three minutes each. Whenever you are ready.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
Chair Bauer-Kahan, Vice Chair Patterson, Members of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to testify today on AB 1836, which would create a broad new digital replica right for deceased personalities. My name is Ben Sheffner, and I'm here today on behalf of the Motion Picture Association and our member studios. That's Disney, NBC Universal, Netflix, Paramount, Sony Pictures, and Warner Brothers Discovery. It's notable that I'm sitting here next to a representative of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. MPA and EFF often disagree on intellectual property issues, but on this we're on the same page because the Bill's broad language would unconstitutionally restrict wide swaths of First Amendment protected speech.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
Let me start by saying that MPA shares the concerns of actors and recording artists about the unauthorized replication of their likenesses and voices to replace performances by them. Respectfully, however, MPA must oppose AB 1836 and is recently amended. First, the Bill's statutory exemptions are inadequate.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
Such exemptions are crucial to giving our members and other filmmakers the confidence that they can make biopics, docudramas, and similar works without the fear of meritless lawsuits, including legal actions brought to muzzle filmmakers seeking to tell fact-based stories about the world around us and the people in it, warts and all. And second, the Bill's focus on deceased personalities has no valid justification under the First Amendment.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
It's one thing to protect the ability of living performers to practice their craft, which MPA supports, but if the Bill is to cover deceased personalities, it must be limited to deceptive uses of digital replicas. Otherwise, we will face years of uncertainty and potentially abandoned projects, while the law is subject to First Amendment challenge. MPA has already had productive discussions with the Bill's author, and we look forward to continuing those discussions and hopefully arriving at a solution that protects performers while respecting filmmakers' First Amendment rights and creative freedoms.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, I'm not the chair. Thank you anyways.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I'm the chair right now.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I get to say, Madam Chair, can I say thank you?
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Madam Chair, good afternoon. Thank you for the opportunity to testify. Samantha Corbin, representing EFF today on AB 1836. We do have concerns about the bill's attempt to dramatically expand the reach of publicity rights in California, which are already among the most expansive in the nation. In particular to encompass uses that are not tied to commercial products or advertising.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Under the measure is written, a diseased personalities estate could use it to extract statutory damages of $10,000 for the use of a dead person's image or voice, quote, "in any manner related to the work performed by the deceased personality while living," which we believe is an incredibly broad and unclear standard that could invite years of litigation. What's worse is the language currently eliminates existing exemptions for important uses such as plays, films, and news commentary.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
EFF has a longstanding opposition to expanding the rights of publicity and would prefer to see the very understandable concerns of the author and how AI work can affect actors and other creators addressed in ways that do not involve property rights, such perhaps as through privacy language or even through codifying agreements made by affected workers throughout the collective bargaining process.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
A right of publicity approach, we believe, disproportionately hurts smaller creators, who are often unable to afford litigation or pay fines, even though their works fall under First Amendment covered speech, such as parody or satire. As written, AB 1836 does not protect any living person, but only serves those who hope to grow rich exploiting the identities of the dead long after they are gone, which we do not believe to be the author's intent. We appreciate your effort on this Bill. Look forward to continuing conversation.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
I do want to make a clarification that for Miss Corbin, one of the pieces of text that you quoted was pre-amendments.
- Samantha Corbin
Person
Perfect.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Maybe she loves it now, we don't know.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right, have any other witnesses in opposition?
- Alex Torres
Person
Chair and Members, Alex Torres here on behalf of Warner Brothers Discovery, would align our position and our thoughts with our friends at the MPA. Thank you.
- Trent Smith
Person
Trent Smith, on behalf of the Walt Disney Company, again, align our remarks with the MPA.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Ronak Daylami with Cal Chamber. Also align our comments with MPA. Thank you.
- Khara Boender
Person
Khara Boender, on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association, respectful opposition, aligned with MPA.
- Timothy Lynch
Person
Tim Lynch on behalf of the Entertainment Software Association, thanking the author for their willingness to meet with us and sharing our, our thoughts behind MPA as well.
- Felipe Fuentes
Person
Felipe Fuentes, here on behalf of the NBC Universal. Opposed unless amended.
- Tiffany Phan
Person
Good afternoon. Tiffany Phan, on behalf of Sony Pictures. Align our comments with NPA. Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right, questions or comments from Committee Members? Assemblymember Ward.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. Thank you for this Bill. It's been one that's been very interesting to digest because I fully agree with where you are trying to be able to support the work that's been done and the earnings that those workers are entitled to. More importantly, the reputation and the control, I think, of their craft.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
That's something that we agree on very strongly. As I'm trying to get my mind in gear for this new day that we're in right now, that maybe previously you would have somebody who acted like an actor, right? Maybe even with the use of prosthetics and makeup and everything, you could get really close to trying to really look like that person, work on their intonation, sound like that person, and that's something that, you know, was permitted, right? In a sense, you're acting like an actor.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And here we have a digital replica that in this case is a computer that is trying to be able to do very much the same, albeit what technological advances is happening at an alarming rate, I think, before all of us. And I guess I'm trying to reconcile, you know, how we're treating this differently. So if somebody was out there claiming to be Tom Cruise, looking like Tom Cruise, talking like Tom Cruise. Right. They would not be subject to penalty under the law.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
But here in this Bill, somebody doing, well, Tom Cruise is not dead, I guess, in this situation. But were he deceased, right? Explain to me, I guess, the distinction there, why this is important to kind of narrow it in this circumstance.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah. And to your point, the example you gave of an actor playing, you know, if there's a movie, I guess I'll go back to the Robin Williams example, Mrs. Doubtfire follow up, and somebody wants to play the same role that he played and try to look like him and act like him. Nothing in this Bill stops that. And that's what they used to do, and they can continue to do that.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
What this Bill would attempt to do is say you can't take his performance in that first film, feed it into an AI tool, and create a new performance of that movie and profit off of it without consent from his estate. And I think that's the difference. And if you look at our definition of digital replica, that is in the amendments.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So this is one of the things that is new as of a couple days ago, I think, which says it means a digital simulation of the voice or likeness of an individual that so closely resembles the individual's voice or likeness that a layperson would not be able to readily distinguish from the individual's authentic voice or likeness. We're talking about making that person again. Right. You wouldn't know the difference.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I can't imagine a scenario where you would have an actor where you as a layperson wouldn't be able to tell it's a different person. Just because we don't have that ability to mimic somebody in the way the AI tools do.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
It's difficult, right? I think somebody, sometimes a really well trained actor can get really, really close to that. And certainly, I think back to the issue about, you know, is this deception. Right. You know, if you're really able to convince somebody that you are Robin Williams, that's both talent, but, you know, also kind of runs into the same issue that we're facing here.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And I guess I was just thinking a little bit more about, you know, the distinction sort of between these two situations in a way, even though, yes, a computer AI, Gen AI, is able to use the original likeness of a actor. Right? To recreate that and create a new movie. But a live individual also has to use the same likeness of that person to recreate the work. Right? The character, the art. And so that's a lot harder to do.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
And so I'm just trying to kind of see, are we being equitable here, I guess, in how we're maybe thinking about the laws that applies to different situations. The other one is the situation of the living. If, yes, this is about going out to be able to support somebody who's deceased and protect their craft and their estate. But why not apply, separate from my earlier line of questioning, why not apply this to somebody who is living, or that law that already exists?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
That law already exists. Yeah, they are protected.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Got it. Okay. So if somebody is using AI to recreate Liza Minnelli.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
There is a separate code that would protect them.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Got it. Okay. I think it's important, as you know, we are getting into.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
But yes, I agree they should be protected, too.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
So for me, consistency is key, right? Trying to make sure that, like, you know, in this, as things have evolved around us, how do we make sure the law both reflects that evolution, but also is consistent with other sort of similar situations. I'm aware. Thank you for, as well, I've heard you've had conversation with opposition as well, and as you're working on things around the definition of a digital replica, definitions around deceptive use, I think I trusted those will continue.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
I wanted to give opposition maybe a chance to, if there were sort of key bullet points that you wanted to see if this Bill moves forward, what really needs to be hashed out here to make it workable in your eyes?
- Ben Sheffner
Person
Sure. Thank you for the question, Assemblymember Ward. So I want to say first of all, that in the amendments, which we just saw for the first time yesterday, we think that the definition of digital replica is much improved. So thank you very much. We appreciate that. The key sticking point, I would say, is the exceptions. And I think it's important to realize or to understand that there's various ways that one could use a digital rep.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
A digital rep using a digital replica of, say, Tom Cruise to have him act in the, have that digital replica act in the next Mission Impossible movie is not something we support. It's in fact, it's something that we agreed in the labor, in the collective bargaining agreement entered into last fall not to do. And if the Bill simply did that, we would be fine.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
But there are plenty of examples of uses of digital replicas that we believe are fully protected by the First Amendment and would not require consent in things like parody or satire, or if you're making a bio instead of making a new performance featuring Tom Cruise, if you're making a biopic or a docudrama about Tom Cruise.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
So that's what our preferred exceptions attempt to do, is say, no, you can't replace somebody's performance, but there's all these other legitimate First Amendment protected uses that you should be able to engage in. So I want to thank the sponsor and staff for the amendments, but the exceptions in the amendments don't quite satisfy our concerns. Let me explain why, if I have.
- Unidentified Speaker
Person
Chair is in charge.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
So I would say it's a case of, you know, giving with one hand and taking away with the other. So the amendments. I'm sorry. The exceptions in the amendments do incorporate a lot of our language, which we appreciate. However, there is this introductory phrase which says, to the extent protected by the First Amendment, and that, although it may seem innocuous on its face, of course, everything is subject to the First Amendment. It really sort of takes away the benefit of the First Amendment, of the statutory exemptions, which are that they provide clarity and certainty before a studio goes and spends $200 million to make a movie. They want to know what's allowed and what's not allowed. Having that to the extent protected by the First Amendment language, again, kind of obviates the benefit of that clarity from the exceptions and basically says, well, you're still going to have to go through all the murky First Amendment analysis, you know, throw it into the hands of a court to determine whether those statutory exemptions apply. Again, the statutory.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
We're not calling for the completely categorical statutory exemptions that are in existing 3344.1. We know that they need to be narrower, and that's what our preferred language does.
- Chris Ward
Legislator
Okay. Thank you for all the clarification. It's super interesting, I think. I think it can be incredibly helpful, and I think there might be an area of agreement, so I'm sure it'll continue to be worked on. Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Did you want to comment? You looked like you wanted to comment on that statement.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah, I mean, if council wants to, I think. Would that be okay?
- Douglas Mirell
Person
Just very briefly, just to be clear, Mr. Sheffner, who I respect and I've known for many years, he mentioned parody and satire. Those are explicit exceptions in the amended language that's in front of you, along with scholarship, comment, criticism, news, public affairs, sports broadcasts, or accounts, as well as fleeting or incidental usages.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
And beyond that, there's a safe harbor provision that's been crafted that deals with the deceptiveness issue and it says that if the use is intended to create, and does create a false impression that the work is using somebody in a way that they authorized, that's impermissible, that's not covered. So I think we have really covered the waterfront with respect to the kinds of exemptions that MPA was seeking.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right. Mr. Bryan.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair. A lot of my questions, comments, I aligned with my colleague from San Diego, who gave plenty of time for them to be raised. But I think this is a really important issue, and you've given me an incredible amount to think about, Madam Chair. And I think it's really, really, really important, especially right now. Strangely, the term deceased personality came up several times. Right.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I understand that that's a legal term. It references the commercial value of somebody, whether they had it alive or not, their likeness, their signature, their voice, et cetera. But yet, it still is very triggering for me in this conversation for some reason, because we are talking about the inability to distinguish that this is not the person. Right. So this isn't a deceased person.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
Now, this is like you, for all intents and purposes, of the way that you are being betrayed and the way you are being received by an audience. And so I think that's a very important thing for us to kind good of ground these discussions in, as we continue to have them. I watched the One Love movie the other day. I knew it wasn't Bob Marley. He looked like Bob Marley, he definitely sounded like Bob Marley.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
There were moments where I knew they were referencing something, an actual interview I know of Bob Marley, I went back and watched that interview with Bob Marley to compare and contrast. They were verbatim, but yet I could still distinguish between the fact that that was not Bob Marley. And I think it changed the way I digested the biopic, even though I learned a lot still, and it was still profound, and I think it was a highly grossing film.
- Isaac Bryan
Legislator
And I think what we're talking about is kind of a step further. If I couldn't do any of those things. And for those reasons, I just wanted to thank the author for raising the level of this conversation and convening this table. I'm hoping those conversations continue, because I think that this is important, and grateful for the comments by the opposition and my colleague from San Diego for creating space for you to even further clarify those. And with that, I make a motion to move the Bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right. Assemblymember Wilson.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you, Madam Chair, I appreciate. Thank you, Madam Chair, for giving me the floor. And thank you, Madam Chair, seated. Thank you for talking, for bringing this Bill forward and taking time to work through amends and appreciate the narrowing of the definition as it relates to digital replica. I think that was very helpful. And we've had a chance to talk today about this, and I share some of the concerns that my colleague from San Diego did. I have two questions. I have one clarifying, wanting to understand, and then an actual question.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So some of what this is surrounding is the, your Bill is surrounding is the right of publicity, which. Yeah. Regulates commercial speech. And some of the opposition is surrounding as virtue of people who came up to speak, do a lot of what they call expressive works, which is different than commercial speech, even though it is very commercial. As my colleague from LA noted, the fact that you could get it was very profitable, the movie One Love.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And so I wondered your thoughts on that in terms of the fact that this covers, even though they're deceased, it covers it, does it seem like it includes expressive works versus just commercial speech? And then the question, so I wanted to clarify what your intention was there. And then also the question related to that is that expressive works is, of course, covered by the First Amendment.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And your language, which allows for the reference to the First Amendment meaning, it seems to appear in meanings you can litigate for the First Amendment, not necessarily then giving them the right that they have in other language where it's expressly called words out.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so, yeah, so I will actually defer on the expressive works to the expert on that. But I will say on the First Amendment point, the reason we refer to that is because, as I'm sure you're aware, the First Amendment, the contours of the First Amendment, and where the line is, for example, on parody, and what is a parody is very, has been litigated a lot, is a well established body of law that is complex, but is established.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so that is what I believe the contour should be, what the First Amendment law is settled as. And so that's what we're referencing here. But that doesn't mean one would have to go back to court to redefine parody. I mean, it is defined in many sort of well established cases. And so I think it is important that we defer back to the well established First Amendment law. But I don't think that means you have to relitigate it by any stretch of the imagination. But I will defer to the expert on expressive works.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
And as you answer that, but don't you find out, I mean, it's through suing, it's through going through litigation, where then you prove out that it is parody, that what you're doing is parody versus, I'm just saying in other languages and others, I understand it, other codes that calls out specifically. But you don't use that language. You use First Amendment.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Well, even in the other code, one could still believe that their work didn't fall under that section, which would take you to court, I think what, and you can correct me if I'm wrong, but putting my old litigator hat on, I think what is more comforting about that other language is you are more likely to be thrown out in motions practice at the beginning because you have these, I think, well defined. Okay, so he's agreeing with me. I'm not misstating their position.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I don't like to do that. And so, but I still think here, if you fell under what was the well established contours of First Amendment law, you could still be thrown out in motions practice. But if you're sort of in the murky waters. Yeah, it would go further, but I think if you're in the murky waters, then we need to figure out where that falls. So I guess that would be my position. But I will.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
If I can just briefly address the First Amendment issue first. One of the interesting aspects of the way the law is developed in California is that when the post mortem right of publicity statute was first adopted in 1985, that was, I think 78 years before California adopted an anti-SLAPP statute, which is really what serves these days as a deterrent to people bringing frivolous cases in which they would ordinarily be barred by the First Amendment. So that's just one sort of side point I wanted to make.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
And really what the exceptions do here is they give you, in effect, a rather broad, safe harbor that says we don't have to go to court if this is the kind of usage that you're talking about. There may be other First Amendment protected usages, but this statute doesn't preclude you, obviously, from bringing those, because the First Amendment obviously is the First Amendment, you know, and it's, and it has greater weight than does a state statute or a federal statute.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
And so the other point, though, that I wanted to make with respect to commercial usages is that it has long been the case that the right of publicity has not been limited to commercial usages. I must confess that I had represented the MPAA, the predecessor organization, in trying to argue that that ought to be the law. But since Comedy III, the California Supreme Court's decision in 2002, that case involved, among other things, lithographs.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
Those aren't commercial products in any sense that I think we would think about them. And then the follow on case with the Winter brothers case involved comic books. And in those, and there's no suggestion in any of those cases that the right of publicity, using the adopted transformative use test that the court created in Comedy III, is inapplicable to expressive works in that way. And we're not limited to just, you know, public, we're not limited to lithographs or comic books.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
The Hart case, the Keller case, and the Davis case all involved video games where you had avatars who, who were realistically depicted in those video games as playing, in two cases, college football, in the Davis case, professional football. You have the No Doubt case where the band members for that group were depicted using, that mimic their likenesses, using their facial features and their styles. And so those are all expressive works which the courts have analyzed under the right of publicity and have said, in those cases, you don't have a First Amendment bar to bringing the action.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
So you're saying that because in those cases, the right of publicity was applied through court cases to expressive works, that gives basis to legislate a law that applies right of publicity to expressive works?
- Douglas Mirell
Person
Exactly right.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
If I could just briefly respond. And, again, appreciate the kind words from my friend Doug Mirell, and I respect his views on this very much as well. I do want to say that I believe either all or virtually all of the cases that he just cited came before a 2015 or '16 case from the US Supreme Court called Reed versus City of Gilbert, Arizona. And what the US Supreme Court said in that case is that if you have a content-based regulation of speech, which make no question, that's what we're doing.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
That's what we're talking about doing here. To be a content-based restriction on speech, it has to satisfy the strict scrutiny standard. That means that the government has to come forward with a compelling government interest, and the law, or the regulation needs to be narrowly tailored to serve that interest. The cases that Mr. Mirell was citing, again, either all or nearly all came before that, in fact.
- Ben Sheffner
Person
But the 9th Circuit interpreting the California right of publicity statute said, indeed, it is a content-based restriction on speech subject to strict scrutiny. And I think that's the lens that we all need to be looking at this proposed law through. And if it is enacted, the lens through which courts will be looking at it as well.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Can I ask a follow up to that? Sure. To the attorney or maybe to the author.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I would just point to the analysis, which, as noted today, is really clear, and actually distinguishes that case based on who brought it. So I think that there's a lot of.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Tell me what page it's on.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
On nine to 10. Okay. Thank you. So, yeah, I mean, I think they did a good job of explaining why that isn't necessarily what we should be relying on, and strict scrutiny shouldn't apply. And one of, I believe, the main points drawn out here was based on the plaintiff themselves, who was not someone who would have a commercial benefit from their likeness, unlike the people cited today.
- Douglas Mirell
Person
The Sarver case that was referred to in the 9th Circuit is not an avatar case. That's a case about The Hurt Locker motion picture, which portrayed an individual using another actor, like we discussed with Assemblymember Ward. And so, you know, that case is factually distinguishable. But also, too, the notion that the transformative use test no longer applies, I'm afraid, has not been adopted by the California courts. The 9th Circuit has made its determination, but that ruling has not been followed uniformly in California.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I will also just add one thing, Ms. Wilson, which is this Bill, if it were to pass out today, does go to Judiciary, who I think will weigh in heavily on exactly these issues, if that is of any comfort to you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right, we have a motion by Assemblymember Bryan. Do we have a second? Oh, Mr. Lowenthal, a second by Assemblymember Ortega. Ms. Bauer-Kahan, would you like to close?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I want to thank everyone for the robust discussion. And like you heard, I have. Although I didn't recognize you outside of your Zoom square, I have met with the opposition extensively and will continue to and appreciate and look forward to their feedback on the amendments that they just recently saw, so appreciate that was recent. And with that I respectfully ask for an aye vote.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And I would say we all know the author, and there's a very long trip before the Governor's desk, and she will continue to work with all the stakeholders. And with that, can we please call the roll?
- Committee Secretary
Person
Item number 10, AB 1836 by Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan. The motion is do pass as amended, to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call].
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
That Bill is out, 8-3, 5 to, 8-0.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Now, we are going to go on to the very light topic of automated decision.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Are they all still here? Is the opposition all still here?
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And that's item number 13, AB 2930. Whenever you're ready. Mister Patterson, did you want to?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Hi. You're doing great job. Okay.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right. And this is the last bill.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. We made it, guys. Thank you for your patience and your diligence. Thank you, Madam Chair, Mister Vice Chair and members. First, I want to accept committee amendments, and with that, I am proud to present AB 2930 modeled after President Biden's AI Bill of Rights. AB 2930 protects individuals from algorithmic discrimination by requiring the developers and users to assess automated decision tools for discriminatory bias and mitigate accordingly.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
ADTs, which we like to talk a lot about, Gen AI, but ADTs are the AI that is probably most prevalent in your life, and it is different. And it is crucial that this technology be deployed in a responsible manner because it is being used in the decisions that are most consequential to everyday Californians. Automated decision tools use statistical analysis to assess eligibility for a benefit or a penalty. Decisions that can have drastic impacts on an individual's life.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
For example, ADTs are now used for employment screening, insurance eligibility, and healthcare decisions use cases expand every single day. Currently, there is no accountability for unbiased data sets or programmers unconscious bias that can be embedded into ADTs, which can result in detrimental discrimination until enough discrimination has occurred that a civil rights lawsuit occurs. For instance, a study published in Science in 2019 showed that a clinical algorithm used across hospitals for determining patient care was racially biased against black patients.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
In this case, the algorithm used healthcare spending as a proxy for health needs. So, it falsely concluded that black patients were healthier than equally sick white patients because they had spent less money on healthcare. This deprived patients of color of the much-needed healthcare that they were seeking. This is just one example. We've seen examples in the employment context, in the housing context, and again and again, we know that we need to make sure that these tools are safe before they are deployed.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I want to say, before I turn it over to my witness, that I think one of the things about this bill, and I've been working on this bill for over a year now, that is most exciting to me, is that I think this is an opportunity for AI to improve the status quo.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
As a woman who worked in a male-dominated field, I knew when I walked into an interview that I had a worse chance of getting that job because of the bias of the person sitting across from me and the opportunity to test these tools to ensure that they are not deploying with bias and remove potentially some of that bias from decision making, such as hiring, such as housing, is an exciting future, and so I am by no means an enemy of this technology.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I actually think that this bill will allow this technology to foster, which you'll hear from industry partners on this, because trust in AI, which is something we need to talk about in this committee a lot, is critical to the success of AI. And AI as Assemblymember Wicks mentioned earlier, can be an incredible part of our economic ecosystem in California. But that will only be true if users trust it.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And this bill goes a long way in ensuring that some of the best use cases of AI in our society will be beneficial and not harmful, and users can trust it. With that, I will turn it over to Jerrell Cook from Workday.
- Jarrell Cook
Person
Thank you to the Chair and the committee. My name is Jerrell Cook. Here on behalf of Workday. Workday is headquartered in Pleasanton. We're a California company. We help organizations manage - so Workday helps organizations manage their most important assets, their people, and their money. We employ more than 6300 Californians and serve more than 10,000 organizations around the world. At Workday, we believe in the power of AI to unlock human potential. And while we see incredible opportunities in AI technology, we also recognize the risk of unintended consequences.
- Jarrell Cook
Person
As a cloud-native enterprise software company, we learned early on that investments in technology governance are critical to earning the trust that is key to unlocking technology's benefits. Consistent with that, Workday has a robust, responsible AI program that is driven by leadership commitment, includes dedicated company-wide resources, operationalizes our AI development guardrails, and provides a clear understanding of how our tools are developed, developed, and assessed. In addition, we believe that smart public policy is crucial.
- Jarrell Cook
Person
So Workday has been working or has been seeking to play a constructive role in the AI policy landscape since 2019, and we focus on four policy benchmarks. We want to ensure that policy on AI ensures a risk-based approach that leverages workable accountability tools, clearly delineates roles and responsibilities, and harmonizes with emerging governance frameworks. As introduced, AB 2930 would establish first in the nation guardrails, making it clear that discrimination, whether by a human or an automated decision tool, is illegal in California.
- Jarrell Cook
Person
Sharing a number of the policy goals that I mentioned, AB 2930, as introduced, represents a thoughtful AI regulatory framework and an important contribution to the ongoing policy discussion. We appreciate Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan's continued efforts to make progress on AI policy. Successful AI governance legislation will have as its hallmark workability steps to build meaningful trust and support for innovation. We are still reviewing the amendments that are being adopted today. We should point out that some of the clarifying amendments may put those goals at risk.
- Jarrell Cook
Person
We look forward to continue conversations with the author and the rest of the committee or the rest of the legislature as you continue to work on this measure. Thank you
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Who's my staff? Oh, okay.
- Mariko Yoshihara
Person
Mariko Yoshihara, on behalf of Tech Equity and the California Employment Lawyers Association, we have a support if amended position with a few other organizations. I just want to thank the author and her staff for working with us, and we look forward to continuing those conversations. Thank you.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you. How about witnesses in opposition?
- Tracy Rosenberg
Person
I'm still kind of a support. Tracy Rosenberg. On behalf of Oakland Privacy support if amended position. We are still checking out the amendments because they were published kind of late, but so far so good, and we like quite a few of them.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. Committee had a lot of bills, so they did their best.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Hi, it's just me.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
So can I take more time?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm not in charge.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Thank you, Madam Chairs, both of you. I appreciate it. Ronak Daylami with Cal Chamber respectfully in strong opposition to AB 2930 as it's currently in print. We thank the author for engaging with us on this topic over the last year, especially because we are largely aligned with her goal.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
In principle, bias and discrimination are serious problems, and our member companies want to be part of the solution when it comes to how to solve for the problem in the context of automated decision tools, we do urge a measured approach to avoid overregulation of these tools, which can contribute in many positive and valuable ways to society. Critically, as was acknowledged earlier, they can actually help reduce some of the bias and discrimination we have historically seen result from human decision-makers - excuse me.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Thus, overregulation can ultimately lead to the opposite outcome intended, creating a chilling effect that substantially undermines their utility and future improvement. While our concerns are rather extensive, our members have worked hard to identify the five issues that we feel are of general applicability that have to be addressed, understanding, of course, that priorities may shift as the bill applies in different ways, wasted different industries but first, the scope of the bill is, for lack of a better word, enormous.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
The breadth and vagueness of terms such as algorithmic discrimination, consequential decision, and controlling factors sweep in all kinds of ADT, both low-risk and high-risk uses and outcomes, as well as businesses of all sizes and across every industry. It's important to remember that algorithmic discrimination is discrimination, even under the status quo.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
So, the creation of a new construct for a single type of technology that is totally divorced from our existing anti-discrimination laws that have provided clear guidance to businesses for many years as to what is unlawful. It lends to confusion and potential over breadth when it comes to the bill's notice, provisions, and requirements to allow consumers to effectively opt out of an ADT when technically feasible.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
We believe the bill is impractical, if not totally unworkable, in some circumstances because technically anything is technically feasible with enough time and money. But we can't always provide that in every scenario, as we outline in our letter. Other major issues in our letter, of course, include the need for additional confidentiality protections to reduce fears that assessments will be used as litigation fodder and to encourage candor, which we believe is necessary to make these assessments as effective as possible.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Also, a single enforcer is needed to ensure consistent interpretation application across the state, as well as preemption to avoid conflict with rules and regulations passed by local entities and agencies both to ensure consistency and workability but also to preserve the authority of this legislature and the Governor on these issues of massive importance across the state.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
And finally, we are still reviewing the amendments, the committee amendments, but we are concerned that in our initial look that they appear to potentially take us further apart from resolution in some aspects, especially in replacing the controlling factor standard with an even more ambiguous and overly broad substantial factor standard. So, for these and other reasons, we do respectfully oppose today, but we actually really look forward to working with the author and are working on providing youth-suggested amendments.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Can't wait. It's been a year.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Thank you.
- Dean Grafilo
Person
Dean Grafilo with Capitol Advocacy here on behalf of the California Life Sciences. We're opposed unless amended to exempt the life sciences. Thank you.
- Dylan Hoffman
Person
Dylan Hoffman, on behalf of TechNet, I align my comments with the California Chamber. Respectfully opposed.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Dylan makes an appearance.
- Cameron Demetre
Person
Cameron Demetre with Capitol Advocacy on behalf of the American Property Casualty Insurance Association, in opposition.
- Michael Robson
Person
Mike Robson, on behalf of the American Staffing Association, the California staffing professionals in line with the Chamber, but we've also provided her own comments to the author and look forward to working with people.
- Khara Boender
Person
Khara Boender, on behalf of the Computer and Communications Industry Association, respectful opposition aligned with Cal Chambers's comments.
- Naomi Padron
Person
Good afternoon, Chair and members. Naomi Padron, on behalf of the California Credit Union League and also the Association of California Life and Health Insurance Companies. Thank you.
- Courtney Jensen
Person
Courtney Jensen, on behalf of the Civil Justice Association of California, CJAC, in opposition. Thank you.
- Indira McDonald
Person
Indira McDonald, on behalf of the California Mortgage Bankers Association, also respectfully opposed.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right. Questions or comments from the committee?
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
Thank you. I had a chance. We talked about this bill, and so I'll be supporting it today. But I do think because there's quite a bit of issues with ADT, especially as it relates to existing biases. A lot of our technology feeds in. What's fed into it is human beings, and we have our biases. And instead of our technology fixing and filtering out our biases and kicking out a good product, it just exacerbates them. Right.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
It seems like it learns it even harder. But I do think that this is broad in a lot of aspects. And so, when going through some of the opposition letters, I found myself agreeing with some of the comments that they make. And so I do think that there is work to be done. But I also, and I've already shared this stuff with you, but I trust you as an author, so I know that you'll continue to do that work.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
But I just wanted to note that I think there is a great benefit to legislating in this space, like I said, because our biases are amplified when they're introduced to technology instead of filtered out. And we need to fix that. And so if working through and providing legislative language and putting something in the law that does that is a good thing.
- Lori Wilson
Legislator
But I think the way it is in terms of some aspects of it being not just broad, but who this applies to versus not the level of human beings when they enter into it to make a decision, what does soul mean? All of that, and I won't belabor the rest of the committee because I know we're all ready to go. But. Just everything we talked about earlier. I trust that you'll factor that all in.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. And as you heard from opposition, we met with them before we introduced it over a year ago. We are still awaiting the amendments that they are going to. I know they're going to provide me. I just know they're coming. But I look forward to that because I think part of it is you were raising things today that nobody had yet raised, in part because we haven't seen that. But I think as we see that and as we continue to work, we'll be able to address it more.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you. At this late hour. Just a quick question.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Could you just clarify the enforcement to Agency, Civil Rights, and Department of Financial?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah, so it's, the Civil Rights Department has authority over the impact assessment, so they can ask for them, and then there's some enforcement. But it's all - and actually, we'll see what happens today because last year, when I presented this, and it had a private right of action, which has been removed from the bill, many of my Republican colleagues said that was their sticking point. So, hopefully, that can bring you on because now it just has Governor enforcement through AG and local.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
So they're both involved.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I'm getting tired. Sorry.
- Diane Dixon
Legislator
Both agencies are involved?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. So the suits can be brought by the Attorney General's Office as well.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Thank you. Assemblymember Patterson.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah, in some ways, I feel like we took last year's bill, which I had some concerns with, and like gave it a little bit steroids and much bigger ambitious goal here.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Oh, it was just as ambitious last year, sir.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah. Yeah. Well, hey, you know, I know you're trying to get to. I do have just like last year concerns just to kind of build on some of the concerns because I've seen this deployment. I like defining what an automated decision tool is in the first place. That's a good thing. Artificial intelligence: I don't believe has yet been defined, although I think there's another bill somewhere.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
We passed it out on consent today.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Today. Okay. oh, that is right. Yes, I did. I said that was fine. So, we will have a definition for that. So that's a good thing. So I think those are some good items here, then. That's it. That's it. Thank you very much. No, I'll tell you some concerns I have is the - it is very broad, the CRD also having a potential enforcement mechanism. What I've kind of noticed is they seem to, they tend to have enforcement actions that make news a lot.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And that has concerned me a bit because I think what you're trying to get to is an area where some of the enforcement actions are when obviously things are discriminatory, or there are decisions being made that do have biases. And I don't think that's a bad reason. But I've had some concerns with some of the enforcement on that side. And I know that's not necessarily what you're trying to get involved with, but so we'll see where it goes.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
I hope the opposition sounds like it's and that you're not gonna be able to work it out, but I hope you do so. Well, I didn't really know what you were saying there. Well, I got a question though. You said that you've been trying to work it out for a year, right? Is that what you're saying? I was a little.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So, I was giving Miss Daylami a little bit of a hard time. So, no, they, it was held in Appropriations last year.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yes.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So we didn't have much of a chance, actually. We went through two committees, got out with unanimous democratic support, I will say, and then was held in appropriations because there is cost here; I'm not going to lie, Madam Appropriations Chair. And so we didn't really get a chance to, I mean, it's sort of as when things stall, they stall. And so we didn't get a chance. So that wasn't wholly fair of me. I will stand corrected.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
But no, so they are, as I understand it, and to the credit of the Chamber of Commerce, it is actually equally as ambitious. We didn't add any consequential decisions that were not in it last year. So that remains the same. But it is a lot of industries and a lot of their members are affected by this.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so it has taken the chamber, they have actually taken on, and I want to credit them with sort of trying to get consensus around some of it to help work with us, which is really an important role for the chamber to play, but that is hard. So they are doing their best, but we just haven't been able to see that yet.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so I am actually optimistic and I don't want to speak for the Chamber of Commerce, but I hope they are optimistic as well that we will be able to have a meeting of the minds. But I won't speak for her.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
A lot of optimism, and the appropriations chair is new, I hear, this year. So in terms of this impact assessment, I do have a question on that. And some people, I imagine, create automated decision tools within their own company to help do whatever they do. Right. So if it's filter through, you know, maybe potentially discriminatory, where discrimination can occur, hiring practices and things like that, filtering out resumes or whatever, are they going to be required to do impact assessments?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So if you develop the impact assessment, yes, and I will say one of the examples, and to their credit, I think Amazon actually put it out themselves when they had created their own tool for hiring. They tested it; it was biased. And then I don't believe they ever deployed it. They did not deploy it and they actually put that out into the public. But they did do an impact assessment because they were the developer of that tool.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so I will say one of the things that this bill does that I think does make part of why I'm optimistic is that most responsible developers, including who you heard from, do this. Like, I'm actually not asking for what is not already standard practice amongst the good AI developers. And so if you are Amazon and you're doing this, odds are you're already doing an impact assessment because if Amazon would have deployed that tool, they could have been sued for discrimination. Right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So there isn't; they have their own incentive to not test these tools. Right. I mean, they want to put out tools that are non-discriminatory. So, big companies are probably doing it. There are also many examples, though, of, I think, the apartment owners that might buy a tool that helps them look at resumes. They're not developing that tool, they're just deploying that tool.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so one of the things we are going to clarify in the bill because we realized just recently that it's not incredibly clear is that if a deployer buys an off-the-shelf product and uses it as intended and does not modify it, they are not responsible. Right. So your average apartment owner doesn't have to go do an impact assessment because the workday, the company that made it, tested it for a certain use and you're using it for that use.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So, we can trust that that impact assessment ensures it's non-discriminatory. Does that make sense?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
Yeah, it does. I guess I would say is there's an enforcement component in here, right? So we're going from having nothing, essentially nothing on the books on this, although a lot of companies are already doing it. And then there's an enforced, it goes straight, you know, there's an enforcement mechanism where this is still new, and all that sort of thing, where CRD can bring litigation or the District Attorney or these other Attorney General can bring litigation.
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
And it's like, let's just create the impact reports first and then see how that if there's a problem, then maybe we add enforcement to it at some point. You see what I'm saying but maybe disagree. But I don't know what are we enforcing yet? We don't know if there's even going to be an issue with this product. I don't think anybody putting out the product is like, hey, I got a discriminatory automated decision tool here, right?
- Joe Patterson
Legislator
So, if the impact assessment shows, because they're now going to the CRD, that it is just they do it and then it shows it's discriminatory and they continue to do the action anyways, that's going to be more public. Right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And to be clear, you know, one of the changes in the bill from last year is actually that used to, in the old version of it was annual all of the time. Okay, thank you. Annually, they would have to send the impact assessments to CRD. The bill now does not require that. It requires that if CRD requests it, you must send the impact assessment to them.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And so really, I don't think what we're going to see here, and it does require the impact assessment, show that it was tested, that it, you know, if something was found to be discriminatory, what their plan was to correct that the implementation, et cetera. And so I just, I guess I, again, my eternal optimism, Mister Vice Chair, but I guess I don't see a lot.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I think that what this does is it says you have to do it, you have to do the impact assessment, and if you find discrimination, you gotta fix it. Right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And as long as you do those things, this bill, as far as I see it, although I look forward to their amendments, isn't that hard to comply with, and again, as I said, not everybody's doing impact assessments, right? The best class are, and so we know you can do it, and we should bring everyone up to that standard. And that's why you see workday here because they are doing this right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
So for them, the idea that somebody might ask to see their impact assessment and show that they weren't discriminating and we did add additional trade secret protections, that's another amendment that we took, is not a scary thing because what we're asking is not hard and it is what a lot of companies are already doing.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Assemblymember Wicks.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Yeah, I'll be very brief.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
Just wanted to thank the author for bringing the bill forward. I know you were inspired, I think, by Biden's EO or EA on the topic and want to make a motion to move it. I know you'll work with opposition, which you always do, and also just want to thank Workday for sticking their neck out a little bit here and being actively part of the solution on this.
- Buffy Wicks
Legislator
I think it's super helpful when the companies come forward and try to work with us on bills that actually, you know, it gives us more insight into how to actually implement the stuff. So those are my remarks. That's it.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Thank you, Miss Wicks.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And I do, I do have a couple of questions, but first I want to say, and you know, for the entire committee, Miss Bauer-Kahn is working at a national level with a multistate group to try to really come up with, with a bill that's, that is consistent across the US. So your name is out there. Whenever we're at NCSL, they're talking about this bill and trying to get it right, and we do know that industry has talked about we need to regulate this.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
So I, hopefully this time through, you can come to some consensus with the chamber and all the groups that they represent. I have two issues that were brought up by the chamber, but we were curious about them also is you switch the definition from controlling to substantial in the automated decision tool, and controlling is basically, it's completely automated, and substantial is that there is human interaction. So why would those things be brought together? Doesn't that kind of muddle the issue?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Switch, do you mean? Right. We switched it from controlling.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
You switched it?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yeah. Sorry, I just said, you said brought together. So, I just want to make sure we were clear about what I did. So why would I hear switching?
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
When you say when I'm with controlling, it is completely automatic, and now you switch to substantial. So it is really substantial and controlling. You're putting everything.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Okay, thank you for the clarification. I want to make sure I understood the question, but yeah, so the reason we made that change was we heard from some of the privacy groups, civil rights groups. I don't know how you would describe them -that's an accurate description - that they were concerned of a situation where you basically had the tool making the decision. So you have a tool, but then you get a human that's sitting there and pressing a button. Right.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
And that that was the loophole that we had created. And I don't think, and again, we haven't had this conversation yet, but I think we will. I don't think that they would be upset by that being like saying you can't just have a person who's pressing okay. To whatever the ADT is deciding. That is still the ADT making the decision. Right. And so we use substantial in part because it is defined in law. And so we thought it was a good shift.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
It's something this committee has used in other legislation, but it's obviously something we're open to talking about. Okay.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And then maybe you can just respond to.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
Sure. I think the way that the bill is in print, it says a controlling factor, not the controlling factor, which is one of our issues. I do see the issue that you're raising. I think we don't read the language to operate that way as it's in print. We do have concerns, though, that moving to substantial makes any issues that we had in terms of over-breadth much worse, for lack of a better word.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
We do think that that exacerbates the issues that we've seen with the language. So.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
Okay. And then one other, thank you for that, and I'm - again, there's a long trip.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. And again, I think that what the other side was concerned about is probably something that the chamber can. We can work on.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
I can confirm that.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. Yes.
- Ronak Daylami
Person
We're not talking about the button presses.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
So then, the one other thing that we really have talked about at NCSL is not to reinvent the wheel. So, with AI and technology, sometimes there are already definitions, and you don't necessarily need to come up with a whole new definition. So the specific example is, why not cross reference? Is it fi ha and unru for algorithmic discrimination? So those are already terms that are used for discrimination.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
I mean, to be totally honest, I haven't looked at that. But I am happy to. I don't know the answer. Okay. And that's why this process is so healthy.
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
No, exactly.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
It is. We don't want a whole new language. If there are, if there is, you know, in housing, if there's, if there are already regulations for discrimination, you would, it would be prudent or persistent to adopt that as another set of regulations. So those were my questions. With that, we had a motion by Assemblymember Wicks and a second by Assemblymember Lowenthal, and I think this goes to Judicial. Yes. Okay.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
And would you like to close?
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Yes. Thank you all for the robust discussion. It is. I mean, I do love it when people ask questions about my bills and things I haven't thought of. That's what these committee hearings are about, so more work to be done, and I just want to thank you all for the discussion and know that I'm committed to continue working on it. And with that respect, the ask for your aye vote.
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
All right, and with that, can I please let Secretary - thank you.
- Committee Secretary
Person
All right. Item number 12, AB 2930, by Assemblymember Bauer-Kahan. The motion is do-pass as amended to the Judiciary Committee. [Roll Call]
- Jacqui Irwin
Legislator
8-3, that bill is out, and shall we start with the - oh.
- Committee Secretary
Person
[Roll Call]
- Rebecca Bauer-Kahan
Legislator
Committee hearing is adjourned.