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New Jersey legislators are joining a growing line of states in proposing a bill to strengthen data privacy protections, following in the footsteps of privacy laws enacted in Europe and California.
The New Jersey bill (AB 3255) would require businesses to obtain permission from New Jersey consumers before they could collect and sell/share personal data to third parties. The legislation would have implications for most companies doing business in New Jersey and that collect consumer data of New Jersey residents.
The bill was introduced by Assemblyman John Burzichelli in the General Assembly on Feb. 25, 2020, and referred to the Assembly's Science, Innovation and Technology Committee, which is chaired by Assemblyman Andrew Zwicker. As of press time, no committee hearings have yet been held to consider this bill.
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In June 2024, the First Department decided Huguenot LLC v. Megalith Capital Group Fund I, L.P., which resolved a question of liability for a group of condominium apartment buyers and in so doing, touched on a wide range of issues about how contracts can obligate purchasers of real property.
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