The Boundary Line: Five States Fence In Personal Data
Maryland just became the first state in the country to ban surveillance pricing in food retail. House Bill 895 stops grocery stores and delivery apps from using algorithms or personal data to charge different shoppers different prices for the same gallon of milk—House 96-32, Senate 41-1, signed by Governor Wes Moore on Monday. It happened in the same week the Department of Homeland Security quietly shut down the Office of the Immigration Detention Ombudsman, the last independent watchdog over ICE.
In the same seven days, New York’s Senate moved Senate Bill 1422 to let residents sue companies that scan their face or fingerprints without consent, Vermont passed House Bill 814 putting brain signals under the same legal protection as a fingerprint, Vermont also moved House Bill 211 creating a one-button portal to wipe every data broker’s file on you, Minnesota’s Tim Walz signed House File 1606 making Minnesota the first state to ban AI nudification apps (Senate 65-0), and New Jersey extended Daniel’s Law to victim advocates and forensic nurses. Connecticut’s Ned Lamont signed House Bill 5003 lifting workplace-assault pay for teachers and nurses to 100% of wages. Louisiana, New York, Alaska, Ohio, and Georgia moved healthcare bills filling federal vacuums. Tennessee passed House Bill 7002 unlocking mid-decade redistricting; South Carolina filed its own.
Five different invasions, five different states, one shared answer: it’s your face, your file, your price, your brain, your image—and the courthouse is open. Follow every bill at amendment.app.