Fighting for You: December 2025 Legislative and Regulatory Update Howard Fienberg Government Affairs 1/6/2026 8:58:00 AM As 2025 ended, the Insights Association reflected on a year of sustained advocacy victories and ongoing challenges across consumer privacy, data security, artificial intelligence, taxation, and more policy issues directly affecting the insights industry. This final Fighting for You update of the year highlights where we successfully held the line, where new risks are emerging, and how your support positions us to continue the fight in 2026. Read More
Fighting for You: May 2023 Legislative & Regulatory Update Howard Fienberg Government Affairs 5/31/2023 1:24:00 PM As temperatures rose, so did the threats and opportunities for the insights industry in advocacy during May, ranging from three new comprehensive state privacy laws, advancing regulation of artificial intelligence, compliance concerns with state sales taxes, jousting over the Census Household Panel, restrictions on high-end incentives for research subjects, state legislation to ban non-competes, and a new Maryland law restricting most telephone calls for research purposes. Read More
Fighting for You - April 2023 Legislative and Regulatory Update Howard Fienberg Government Affairs 4/28/2023 11:25:00 AM The insights industry faced challenges on multiple advocacy fronts in April, such as: growing risks from the boom in generative AI; new privacy laws and regulations; an FTC proposal to eliminate noncompete agreements; a new attempt at insourcing insights work by the Census Bureau; and a proposed new tax on data in Nevada. Read More
Fighting for You: April 2022 Legislative and Regulatory Update Howard Fienberg Government Affairs 4/22/2022 10:42:00 AM Since our last Fighting for You, the Insights Association has been charging full-steam into debates over consumer privacy and data security at the state, federal and trans-national levels; opposing a new project at the Census Bureau that would compete directly against the insights industry; scrutinizing Congressional legislation and possible Securities and Exchange Commission regulation that could treat research subjects like employees, instead of independent contractors; and advocating against ... Read More