• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Data v. Privacy

  • Home
  • Contact

Tennessee Information Protection Act Passes House on a 90-0 Vote

April 10, 2023 by Eric Reagan Leave a Comment

The Tennessee Information Protection Act (TIPA) passed the House (HB1181) today on a 90-0 vote. The TIPA version that passed (virtually the same as the previously-discussed amended Senate bill) looks to be the most business-friendly state privacy law to date.

SB0073 is scheduled for a vote in the Senate later this week, which is also expected to easily pass. As a result, it’s likely that Tennessee will be the next state with a privacy law within the next week or so.

A quick summary of TIPA:

  • Effective July 1, 2025
  • Applies to businesses that have $25M+ in annual revenue AND process the personal info of at least (1) 175,000 consumers; or (2) 25,000 consumers if they derive 50% of their revenue from the sale of personal data.
  • Consumer does not include a person acting in commercial/employment context 
  • Sale of personal info requires “monetary” consideration
  • Personal information is “information that is linked or reasonably linkable to an identified or identifiable natural person” and excludes publicly available or de-identified consumer data
  • Consumer rights include:
    • Right to know
    • Right to access
    • Right to correct
    • Right to delete
    • Right to portability
    • Right to opt-out of sale, profiling, and targeted ads
  • Data controller responsibilities include:
    • Transparency requirement
    • Purpose limitation requirement
    • Secondary use prohibition
    • Data security requirement
    • Nondiscrimination policy
    • Sensitive data additional consent
  • Privacy Notice must include:
    • The categories of personal information processed by the controller
    • The purpose for processing personal information
    • How consumers may exercise their consumer rights
    • The categories of personal information that the controller sells to third parties
    • The categories of third parties, if any, to whom the controller sells personal information
    • The right to opt out of the sale of personal information to third parties and the ability to request deletion or correction of certain personal information.
  • Time to Respond to DSAR = 45 days + 45 additional days “when reasonable necessary”
  • Consumer has right to appeal with 60-day response required
  • No private right of action
  • TN Attorney General has sole enforcement authority
  • Up to $7500 fine per violation
  • Businesses have 60-day cure period
  • Data Processing Agreements must include:
    • Processing instructions
    • Nature and purpose of processing
    • Type of data subject to processing
    • Duration of processing
    • Rights and obligations of both parts
    • Duty of confidentiality with respect to the data
    • Processor duty to delete or return data at controller’s request
    • Assist with compliance obligations of controller for data in processor’s possession
    • Flowdown of processor requirements to its subcontractors
  • Data Protection Assessments required when:
    • Processing for targeted advertising
    • Sale of personal information
    • Profiling, when there is a risk of:
      • unfair or deceptive treatment / unlawful disparate impact
      • financial, physical, or reputational injury
      • invasion of privacy
      • other substantial injury
    • Sensitive data processing
    • Any processing with a heightened risk of harm
  • Affirmative defense for businesses with privacy program that reasonably conforms to NIST Privacy Framework or other documented policies, standards, and procedures designed to safeguard privacy

Filed Under: US Privacy Law Tagged With: NIST, privacy, Privacy Framework, State Privacy Laws, Tennessee, Tennessee Information Protection Act, TIPA, US Privacy Law

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2025 ยท DatavPrivacy.com