Why Big Tech Is Terrified of Massachusetts’ Location Privacy Law

Massachusetts Senate passes bill banning location data sales as House advances similar measure targeting surveillance economy

Al Landes Avatar
Al Landes Avatar

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Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Massachusetts Senate bans precise geolocation data sales with strongest state privacy protections
  • Law protects anyone tracked within state borders, creating nationwide compliance pressure
  • Companies may standardize up to avoid costly patchwork of conflicting state regulations

Your smartphone knows where you grab coffee, which gym you avoid, and how often you visit that therapist downtown. Data brokers have been selling this precise location information to anyone with a credit card—insurance companies, advertisers, even bounty hunters. Massachusetts lawmakers are finally saying enough.

The state Senate passed comprehensive privacy legislation in September 2025, and the House is advancing a companion bill, H.4746, that would ban the sale of precise geolocation data outright. This protection extends beyond residents to anyone whose movements get tracked within state borders—a middle finger to the borderless nature of digital surveillance.

Beyond Typical Privacy Theater

This isn’t another toothless “click OK to continue being tracked” law.

Unlike the notice-and-consent kabuki theater that defines most U.S. privacy protection, Massachusetts is building something with actual teeth. The ACLU of Massachusetts says the legislation “bans the sale of our precise geolocation data and creates statutory limits on data collection and processing, ending the ‘anything goes’ era of Big Tech surveillance once and for all.”

EPIC calls the Senate version potentially “the strongest state privacy law in the nation,” incorporating strict data minimization requirements and a private right of action that lets individuals sue companies for violations. The bill also envisions a data broker registry with one-stop deletion mechanisms.

Following the Money Trail

Data brokers built billion-dollar businesses on selling your daily movements.

The location data economy works like this: apps collect your precise coordinates, sell them to data brokers, who package and resell your movement patterns to whoever pays. This creates particular dangers for vulnerable groups—the ACLU specifically highlights “immigrants, protesters, and people seeking reproductive or gender-affirming healthcare” who face real-world consequences when their locations become commodities.

Massachusetts joins Maryland and Oregon in banning these sales, with Consumer Reports arguing that “preventing the commercial sale of consumers’ location data is one of the most effective steps lawmakers can take to safeguard consumer privacy.”

The Domino Effect

Tech companies may standardize to avoid a patchwork of conflicting state rules.

With more states expected to weigh similar bans in 2026, the surveillance economy faces its Netflix-password-sharing moment—a business model that worked until regulators decided it shouldn’t. Companies operating nationwide often find it easier to apply the strictest state standard across the board rather than maintain separate compliance systems.

Your location data might get better protection even if you don’t live in Massachusetts, simply because the administrative hassle of treating states differently becomes too expensive to justify. Data brokers could lose significant inventory sources, while app developers may need to shift toward subscription revenue rather than location data monetization.

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