Bill

Bill > S2140


NJ S2140

NJ S2140
Prohibits providers of commercial mobile service and developers of mobile application from disclosing customer's global position system data to third parties under certain circumstances.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill prohibits commercial mobile service providers and mobile device application developers from disclosing a customer's global positioning system (GPS) data to a third party, unless the customer has given consent for the third party to access the customer's GPS data. In order to obtain a customer's consent, the bill requires a mobile device application developer to provide notice to the customer, which customer would be required to affirmatively elect to allow their location data to be disclosed to a third party. However, the bill provides that these entities would not be required to obtain a customer's consent before disclosing any GPS data that is required to comply with a law or regulation, law enforcement investigation, legal process, or court order. Under the bill, a third party that accesses a customer's GPS data would also be prohibited from selling the customer's data in any circumstances. Additionally, the bill provides that the third party may only disclose the customer's GPS data as necessary to effectuate the purpose for which the consent was given. A commercial mobile service provider, mobile device application developer, or third party that violates the provisions of this bill would be deemed to violate the State's consumer fraud act, which may result in a penalty of not more than $10,000 for the first offense and not more than $20,000 for each subsequent offense.

AI Summary

This bill prohibits companies that provide mobile phone services (commercial mobile service providers) and companies that create mobile apps (mobile device application developers) from sharing a customer's location data, known as Global Positioning System (GPS) data, with other companies (third parties) unless the customer explicitly agrees. To get this agreement, app developers must clearly inform customers that their location data will be shared and require customers to actively choose to allow this sharing, for example, by checking a box that says "I agree to allow my location data to be disclosed to a third party." However, these companies are allowed to share GPS data without consent if it's required by law, a court order, or for a law enforcement investigation. Any third party that receives this location data is also forbidden from selling it and can only use or share it for the specific reason the customer initially agreed to. Violating these rules will be considered a violation of the state's consumer fraud act, potentially leading to fines of up to $10,000 for a first offense and $20,000 for subsequent offenses.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (1)

Last Action

Introduced in the Senate, Referred to Senate Economic Growth Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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