![California AG Issues First CCPA Opinion: Consumers’ “Right to Know” Includes Businesses’ Internally Generated Inferences](https://media2.mofo.com/v3/images/blt5775cc69c999c255/bltdf65ab0fd2188f59/627315f123c6cf2a1c3af54b/12_30_privacylitigation_ccpa_tile_300x2001.jpg?format=auto&quality=60&width=700)
The California Office of the Attorney General (OAG) recently concluded that the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) generally requires a covered business to disclose, upon request, its inferences about a consumer—whether generated internally or obtained from another source—unless the business can demonstrate that a statutory exception applies. In its first formal opinion (No. 20-303) under the CCPA, OGC has thus taken an expansive view of a consumer’s CCPA “right to know” the specific pieces of personal information that a business collects.
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