AUGUSTA – The Maine House of Representatives today passed LD 1822, a bill to support Fourth Amendment rights and protect personal data by limiting sweeping digital surveillance.
Private companies routinely collect massive amounts of data about people’s everyday activities. That data is then sold to anyone willing to pay, including the government. For instance, in January 2026, the ACLU published documents obtained from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) showing the agency circumvented the Fourth Amendment. DHS purchased highly sensitive location data harvested from cell phones that enabled the government to track people’s movements over time – all without a warrant.
"The world's largest tech companies gather, sell, analyze, and exploit our most personal data for financial gain,” said ACLU of Maine Executive Director Molly Curren Rowles. “This surveillance-driven economy intrudes into our private lives and allows even the government to spy on us without our knowledge or consent. This reduces our freedom and safety, and threatens our democracy.”
“Data privacy isn’t about secrecy,” continued Curren Rowles. “It’s about control. Currently, our most personal information is available to the highest bidder. Personal data can be used to track people at protests, political rallies, places of worship, and family planning clinics. Maine lawmakers have a legacy of leading the nation in privacy protection, and we urge the Maine State Senate to continue that tradition by passing this crucial legislation.”
LD 1822 would protect Maine residents in four key ways:
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