*By Mike Teich*
A sweeping data privacy bill has been approved in California, but it may be too late for internet users to protect their information, said former National Counterterrorism Center officer Dave White.
"You have to consider yourself compromised," he said. "You’ve already given your data away."
Experts are calling it the nation's most far-reaching law to give consumers more control over their personal data. Under the law, customers can request what personal data companies have collected and what third parties have received it.
The passing of the historical bill didn't come without criticism. The ACLU of Northern California said the legislation falls "woefully short" in defending individuals' rights.
"It's a great first step," White said. However, “it doesn’t go far enough."
Companies that collect user data, from Amazon to Microsoft to Uber, lobbied aggressively against the law, pouring millions into a [opposition campaigns](https://www.theverge.com/2018/6/15/17468292/amazon-microsoft-uber-california-consumer-privacy-act).
But consumer advocates called it a milestone victory. "Today was a [huge win](http://money.cnn.com/2018/06/28/technology/california-consumer-privacy-act/index.html) and gives consumer privacy advocates a blueprint for success," James P. Steyer, CEO and founder of Common Sense Media. "We look forward to working together with lawmakers across the nation to ensure robust data privacy protections for all Americans."
For full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/california-passes-historic-privacy-bill).
The Cheddar Sports crew caught up with the team members of the Philadelphia Fusion, who upset the top-seeded New York Excelsior in the first round of the Overwatch championship. Getting to this weekend's Grand Finals, the team said, is a dream come true.
Shares of the e-commerce giant soared hours after the company trounced estimates for earnings. Its fast-growing cloud business saw revenues rise nearly 50 percent to $6.1 billion. Forrester Research's Sucharita Kodali told Cheddar the company may beat Apple to the vaunted $1 trillion market cap mark.
Shares of Tenable opened on the Nasdaq at $33 a share, well above the IPO price of $23. CEO Amit Yoran told Cheddar that cyberhacking is an "existential threat to so many organizations," and he wants to protect governments, the public sector, retailers, and cloud-computing companies from these dangers.
Aneesh Chaganty is the writer-director of "Searching," an experimental film shot entirely from the point of view of smartphones and computer screens. A former video maker at Google, Chaganty explains to Cheddar that his experience at the company prepared him for his film's technical complications.
Anthony Pompliano, partner at investment firm Morgan Creek Digital Assets, explains why he thinks prices of the cryptocurrency could increase more than sixfold by the end of the year.
Shares of Facebook plunged Thursday after its latest earnings report. But Jefferies analyst Brent Thill tells Cheddar the company won't suffer in the long term, particularly because Europe's new data rules are "great hygiene" to work out the kinks.
President Trump accused Twitter of so-called "shadow banning" high-profile Republicans from the platform. Twitter has said that, while some users appear to not be showing up in auto-fill search results, down-ranking the results has been based solely on user behavior, not on their political leaning.
These are the headlines you Need2Know.
Revenue growth at the music streaming service took a bit of a hit from new data regulations in Europe, but subscriber growth continued as the company hit 83 million paying users in the second quarter.
Cheddar's Hope King sat down with Reddit Co-Founder Alexis Ohanian on Wednesday. Ohanian, whose wife Serena Williams gave birth to their first child last year, has been an advocate for increased parental leave.
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