Federal Analysis
Federal and State Agencies Strengthen Privacy Regulations
March 12, 2026
Federal and state governments in the U.S., alongside the European Union, are responding to emerging privacy and safety risks posed by subtle technologies such as smart devices, data brokers, and AI voice cloning. These technologies, while beneficial for crime prevention and emergency response, have raised concerns about data breaches, wrongful arrests, and targeted scams. Agencies including the Federal Trade Commission and state governments in California, Colorado, and Virginia are emphasizing the need for stronger regulatory frameworks, privacy-by-default settings, and increased vendor transparency to mitigate these risks.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals should anticipate increased demand for privacy-enhancing technologies, compliance solutions, and vendor transparency tools as agencies implement new regulations.
- Organizations providing smart device security, data protection services, and AI governance solutions may find emerging opportunities in federal and state contracts.
- Agencies will likely require vendors to demonstrate adherence to stricter privacy standards and transparent data handling practices.
- This trend indicates a growing market for privacy-focused technology procurement and consulting services across multiple jurisdictions.
Movies about killer robots show us such obvious and extreme dangers that we’ve allowed the slow creep of subtler but equally scary threats to our privacy and safety.
— Anonymous privacy researcher
Agencies
Federal Trade Commission, European Union, California State Government, Colorado State Government, Virginia State Government
Locations
Sources
- Subtle Tech Threats Erode Privacy and Safety · considerable.com · Mar 12