§ 7025. Opt-out Preference Signals.

(a) The purpose of an opt-out preference signal is to provide consumers with a simple and easy- to-use method by which consumers interacting with businesses online can automatically exercise their right to opt-out of sale/sharing. Through an opt-out preference signal, a consumer can opt-out of sale and sharing of their personal information with all businesses they interact with online without having to make individualized requests with each business.

(b) A business that sells or shares personal information shall process any opt-out preference signal that meets the following requirements as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing:

(1) The signal shall be in a format commonly used and recognized by An example would be an HTTP header field or JavaScript object.

(2) The platform, technology, or mechanism that sends the opt-out preference signal shall make clear to the consumer, whether in its configuration or in disclosures to the public, that the use of the signal is meant to have the effect of opting the consumer out of the sale and sharing of their personal The configuration or disclosure does not need to be tailored only to California or to refer to California.

(c) When a business that collects personal information from consumers online receives or detects an opt-out preference signal that complies with subsection (b):

(1) The business shall treat the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing submitted pursuant to Civil Code section 1798.120 for that browser or device and any consumer profile associated with that browser or device, including pseudonymous profiles. If known, the business shall also treat the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing for the consumer. This is not required for a business that does not sell or share personal information.

(2) The business shall not require a consumer to provide additional information beyond what is necessary to send the signal. However, a business may provide the consumer with an option to provide additional information if it will help facilitate the consumer’s request to opt-out of sale/sharing. Any information provided by the consumer shall not be used, disclosed, or retained for any purpose other than processing the request to opt- out of sale/sharing. For example, a business may give the consumer the option to provide information that identifies the consumer so that the request to opt-out of sale/sharing can apply to offline sale or sharing of personal information. However, if the consumer does not respond, the business shall still process the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing for that browser or device and any consumer profile the business associates with that browser or device, including pseudonymous profiles.

(3) If the opt-out preference signal conflicts with a consumer’s business-specific privacy setting that allows the business to sell or share their personal information, the business shall process the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing, but may notify the consumer of the conflict and provide the consumer with an opportunity to consent to the sale or sharing of their personal The business shall comply with section 7004 in obtaining the consumer’s consent to the sale or sharing of their personal information. If the consumer consents to the sale or sharing of their personal information, the business may ignore the opt-out preference signal for as long as the consumer is known to the business.

(4) If the opt-out preference signal conflicts with the consumer’s participation in a business’s financial incentive program that requires the consumer to consent to the sale or sharing of personal information, the business may notify the consumer that processing the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing would withdraw the consumer from the financial incentive program and ask the consumer to affirm that they intend to withdraw from the financial incentive program. If the consumer affirms that they intend to withdraw from the financial incentive program, the business shall process the consumer’s request to opt-out of sale/sharing. If the business asks and the consumer does not affirm their intent to withdraw, the business may ignore the opt-out preference signal with respect to that consumer’s participation in the financial incentive program for as long as the consumer is known to the business. If the business does not ask the consumer to affirm their intent with regard to the financial incentive program, the business shall still process the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing for that browser or device and any consumer profile the business associates with that browser or device.

(5) Where the consumer is known to the business, the business shall not interpret the absence of an opt-out preference signal after the consumer previously sent an opt-out preference signal as consent to opt-in to the sale or sharing of personal information.

(6) A business may display whether it has processed the consumer’s opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing on its website. For example, the business may display on its website “Opt-Out Preference Signal Honored” when a browser, device, or consumer using an opt-out preference signal visits the website, or display through a toggle or radio button that the consumer has opted out of the sale of their personal information.

(7) Illustrative examples follow:

(A) Caleb visits Business N’s website using a browser with an opt-out preference signal enabled, but he is not otherwise logged into his account and the business cannot otherwise associate Caleb’s browser with a consumer profile the business maintains. Business N collects and shares Caleb’s personal information tied to his browser identifier for cross-context behavioral advertising. Upon receiving the opt-out preference signal, Business N shall stop selling and sharing Caleb’s information linked to Caleb’s browser identifier for cross-context behavioral advertising, but it would not be able to apply the request to opt-out of the sale/sharing to Caleb’s account information because the connection between Caleb’s browser and Caleb’s account is not known to the business.

(B) Noelle has an account with Business O, an online retailer who manages consumer’s privacy choices through a settings menu. Noelle’s privacy settings default to allowing Business O to sell and share her personal information with the business’s marketing partners. Noelle enables an opt-out preference signal on her browser and then visits Business O’s website. Business O recognizes that Noelle is visiting its website because she is logged into her account. Upon receiving Noelle’s opt-out preference signal, Business O shall treat the signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing and shall apply it to her device and/or browser and also to her account and any offline sale or sharing of personal information. Business O may inform Noelle that her opt-out preference signal differs from her current privacy settings and provide her with an opportunity to consent to the sale or sharing of her personal information, but it must process the request to opt-out of sale/sharing unless Noelle instructs otherwise. Business O must also wait at least 12 months before asking Noelle to opt-in to the sale or sharing of her personal information in accordance with section 7026, subsection (k). In addition, Business O’s notification would not allow it to fall within the exception set forth in Civil Code section 1798.135, subdivision (b)(1), because it would not be complying with the requirements set forth in subsection (f).

(C) Angela also has an account with Business O and has enabled an opt-out preference signal on her browser while logged into her account. Business O applies the opt-out preference signal as a valid request to opt-out of sale/sharing not only to Angela’s current browser, but also to Angela’s account because she is known to the business while making the request. Angela later logs into her account with Business O using a different device that does not have the opt-out preference signal enabled. Business O shall not interpret the absence of the opt- out preference signal as consent to opt-in to the sale of personal information.

(D) Ramona participates in Business P’s financial incentive program where she receives coupons in exchange for allowing the business to pseudonymously track and share her online browsing habits with marketing partners. Ramona enables an opt-out preference signal on her browser and then visits Business P’s website. Business P knows that it is Ramona through a cookie that has been placed on her browser, but also detects the opt-out preference signal. Business P may ignore the opt-out preference signal and notify Ramona that her opt-out preference signal conflicts with her participation in the financial incentive program and ask whether she intends to withdraw from the financial incentive If Ramona does not affirm her intent to withdraw, Business P may ignore the opt-out preference signal and place Ramona on a whitelist so that Business P does not have to notify Ramona of the conflict again.

(E) Ramona clears her cookies and revisits Business P’s website with the opt-out preference signal enabled. Business P no longer knows that it is Ramona visiting its website. Business P shall honor Ramona’s opt-out preference signal as it pertains to her browser or device and any consumer profile the business associates with that browser or device.

(d) The business and the platform, technology, or mechanism that sends the opt-out preference signal shall not use, disclose, or retain any personal information collected from the consumer in connection with the sending or processing the request to opt-out of sale/sharing for any purpose other than sending or processing the opt-out preference signal.

(e) Civil Code section 1798.135, subdivisions (b)(1) and (3), provide a business the choice between (1) processing opt-out preference signals and providing the “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” and “Limit the Use of My Sensitive Personal Information” links or the Alternative Opt-out Link; or (2) processing opt-out preference signals in a frictionless manner in accordance with these regulations and not having to provide the “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” and “Limit the Use of My Sensitive Personal Information” links or the Alternative Opt-out Link. They do not give the business the choice between posting the above-referenced links or honoring opt-out preference signals. Even if the business posts the above-referenced links, the business must still process opt-out preference signals, though it may do so in a non-frictionless manner. If a business processes opt-out preference signals in a frictionless manner in accordance with subsections (f) and (g), then it may, but is not required to, provide the above-referenced links.

(f) Except as allowed by these regulations, processing an opt-out preference signal in a frictionless manner as required by Civil Code section 135, subdivision (b)(1), means that the business shall not:

(1) Charge a fee or require any valuable consideration if the consumer uses an opt-out preference signal.

(2) Change the consumer’s experience with the product or service offered by the For example, the consumer who uses an opt-out preference signal shall have the same experience with regard to how the business’s product or service functions compared to a consumer who does not use an opt-out preference signal.

(3) Display a notification, pop-up, text, graphic, animation, sound, video, or any interstitial content in response to the opt-out preference signal. However, a business’s display of whether the consumer visiting their website has opted out of the sale or sharing their personal information shall not be considered a violation of this regulation. The business may also provide a link to a privacy settings page, menu, or similar interface that enables the consumer to consent to the business ignoring the opt-out preference signal with respect to the business’s sale or sharing of the consumer’s personal information provided that it complies with subsections (f)(1) through (3).

(g) A business meeting the requirements of Civil Code section 135, subdivision (b)(1) is not required to post the “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link or the Alternative Opt-out Link if it meets all of the following additional requirements:

(1) Processes the opt-out preference signal in a frictionless manner in accordance with the CCPA and these regulations.

(2) Includes in its privacy policy the following information:

(A) A description of the consumer’s right to opt-out of the sale or sharing of their personal information by the business;

(B) A statement that the business processes opt-out preference signals in a frictionless manner;

(C) Information on how consumers can implement opt-out preference signals for the business to process in frictionless manner; and

(D) Instructions for any other method by which the consumer may submit a request to opt-out of sale/sharing.

(3) Allows the opt-out preference signal to fully effectuate the consumer’s request to opt- out of sale/sharing. For example, if the business sells or shares personal information offline and needs to request from the consumer additional information that is not provided by the opt-out preference signal in order to apply the request to opt-out of sale/sharing to offline sales and sharing of personal information, then the business has not fully effectuated the consumer’s request to opt-out of sale/sharing. Illustrative examples follow.

(A) Business Q collects consumers’ online browsing history and shares it with third parties for cross-context behavioral advertising purposes. Business Q also sells consumers’ personal information offline to marketing Business Q cannot fall within the exception set forth in Civil Code section 1798.135, subdivision (b)(1), because a consumer’s opt-out preference signal would only apply to Business Q’s online sharing of personal information about the consumer’s browser or device; the consumer’s opt-out preference signal would not apply to Business Q’s offline selling of the consumer’s information because Business Q could not apply it to the offline selling without additional information provided by the consumer, i.e., the logging into an account.

(B) Business R only sells and shares personal information online for cross-context behavioral advertising purposes. Business R may use the exception set forth in Civil Code section 1798.135, subdivision (b)(1), and not post the “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link because a consumer using an opt-out preference signal would fully effectuate their right to opt-out of the sale or sharing of their personal information.

Note: Authority cited: Section 1798.185, Civil Code. Reference: Sections 1798.120, 1798.135, 1798.140 and 1798.185, Civil Code.