Global Privacy Control (GPC)
¿Qué es Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
Global Privacy Control (GPC)A browser-level signal — an HTTP header and a JavaScript property — by which a user expresses a 'do not sell or share' opt-out, given binding legal force in California (CCPA/CPRA) and Colorado (CPA) regulations.
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a browser-level privacy signal developed by a coalition of privacy advocates, publishers, and browser vendors (DuckDuckGo, Mozilla, Brave, EFF, NYT, WaPo, Disconnect) and first deployed in 2021. It is both an HTTP request header (`Sec-GPC: 1`) and a JavaScript property (`navigator.globalPrivacyControl`) which, when present, communicates that the user does not want their personal data sold or shared for cross-context behavioural advertising. Unlike the failed earlier Do-Not-Track signal, GPC has explicit regulatory force: the California AG and CPPA require businesses subject to CCPA/CPRA to treat GPC as a valid opt-out of sale and sharing; Colorado's CPA requires similar handling; other U.S. state laws (Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, Oregon) have followed. Major browsers (Firefox, Brave, DuckDuckGo, Safari via add-ons) send GPC by default or by toggle; Chrome and Edge currently do not. From a compliance perspective, sites serving U.S. users must implement server-side handling of GPC, link consent records to the signal, and update opt-out states accordingly.
● Ejemplos
- 01
A retailer's web stack reads `Sec-GPC: 1` on incoming requests and disables third-party advertising scripts for California, Colorado, and Connecticut users on that request.
- 02
A CMP (consent management platform) integrates GPC handling so that the IAB TCF consent string is set to opt-out when the GPC header is present.
● Preguntas frecuentes
¿Qué es Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
A browser-level signal — an HTTP header and a JavaScript property — by which a user expresses a 'do not sell or share' opt-out, given binding legal force in California (CCPA/CPRA) and Colorado (CPA) regulations. Pertenece a la categoría de Privacidad y protección de datos en ciberseguridad.
¿Qué significa Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
A browser-level signal — an HTTP header and a JavaScript property — by which a user expresses a 'do not sell or share' opt-out, given binding legal force in California (CCPA/CPRA) and Colorado (CPA) regulations.
¿Cómo funciona Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
Global Privacy Control (GPC) is a browser-level privacy signal developed by a coalition of privacy advocates, publishers, and browser vendors (DuckDuckGo, Mozilla, Brave, EFF, NYT, WaPo, Disconnect) and first deployed in 2021. It is both an HTTP request header (`Sec-GPC: 1`) and a JavaScript property (`navigator.globalPrivacyControl`) which, when present, communicates that the user does not want their personal data sold or shared for cross-context behavioural advertising. Unlike the failed earlier Do-Not-Track signal, GPC has explicit regulatory force: the California AG and CPPA require businesses subject to CCPA/CPRA to treat GPC as a valid opt-out of sale and sharing; Colorado's CPA requires similar handling; other U.S. state laws (Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, Oregon) have followed. Major browsers (Firefox, Brave, DuckDuckGo, Safari via add-ons) send GPC by default or by toggle; Chrome and Edge currently do not. From a compliance perspective, sites serving U.S. users must implement server-side handling of GPC, link consent records to the signal, and update opt-out states accordingly.
¿Cómo defenderse de Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
Las defensas contra Global Privacy Control (GPC) combinan habitualmente controles técnicos y prácticas operativas, como se detalla en la definición.
¿Cuáles son otros nombres para Global Privacy Control (GPC)?
Nombres alternativos comunes: GPC, Sec-GPC header.
● Términos relacionados
- compliance№ 167
CCPA
Ley de Privacidad del Consumidor de California, ley estatal de EE. UU. que otorga derechos a los residentes de California sobre su información personal.
- compliance№ 251
CPRA
Ley de Derechos de Privacidad de California de 2020, que modifica y amplia la CCPA y entro en plena vigencia el 1 de enero de 2023.
- privacy№ 233
Gestión del consentimiento
Procesos y herramientas que recopilan, registran, refrescan y aplican los permisos del usuario para tratar datos personales y emplear cookies conforme a la normativa de privacidad.
- privacy№ 560
IAB TCF (Transparency and Consent Framework)
The Interactive Advertising Bureau Europe's framework for capturing, encoding, and propagating user consent for advertising and analytics data uses under GDPR — controversial, partly invalidated by Belgian DPA in 2022, then revised as TCF v2.2.
- privacy№ 1039
Derecho al olvido
Derecho del interesado a obtener la supresión de sus datos personales cuando ya no exista un motivo legal preponderante para seguir tratándolos, conforme al artículo 17 del RGPD.
- privacy№ 1263
Cookie de terceros
Cookie creada por un dominio distinto al que aparece en la barra del navegador, usada históricamente para rastrear a los usuarios entre sitios.
● Véase también
- № 299Dark Patterns