The bill's text and specific threshold requirements have not yet been made fully public. The scope of preemption over existing state privacy laws and the precise mechanics of the private right of action remain subject to interpretation pending official legislative materials.
The SECURE Data Act represents the most significant federal privacy push in years and directly engages the central unresolved question in U.S. tech policy: whether privacy regulation should operate through a unified federal standard or through an expanding patchwork of state laws. The bill's broad preemption language, combined with its provisions addressing data transfers to adversarial nations, positions it as substantially more expansive than most existing state regimes and politically contentious. Attorneys should monitor the bill's progress through committee and track any amendments to preemption scope and enforcement mechanisms, particularly provisions affecting private litigation rights and the treatment of state attorney general authority.