make sure whatever you re doing is fair and do it in a transparent way. if there is a sign explaining what you are doing, that means you re being transparent. the second thing is make sure you re not keeping that information for longer than required, talking about storage limitation. you do not keep it for more than seven days, within seven days you will know if there has been an incident. you can actually set those devices to auto viewing after a while. some people would say they do not want to record anything at all, other people might insist on keeping it longer. a lot of the time with the ring cameras, people want to answer the door when they are not at home, you do not need to record that information. that at home, you do not need to record that information. that information. that is very good advice. there that information. that is very good advice. there is that information. that is very good advice. there is data that information. that is very good advice. there is data
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Building upon the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), on November 3, 2020, Californians voted to approve Proposition 24: the California Privacy Rights Act (CPRA). The CPRA does not replace the CCPA but rather adds to and modifies the language of the CCPA to strengthen consumer privacy rights and perhaps, in the future, form a basis for General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) data transfer adequacy. While the CPRA is a landmark legislative accomplishment for privacy rights, it creates new problems for blockchain-based technologies, particularly those provisions regarding the right of correction and principles of data minimization and storage limitation.