Connecticut Privacy Rights
Exercise your Connecticut Data Privacy Act rights. Locko.AI automates data removal from 723+ brokers with evidence-first verification.
Applicable Law: Connecticut Data Privacy Act (CTDPA)
Under Connecticut Data Privacy Act (CTDPA), Connecticut residents have the following rights:
Data brokers operating in Connecticut are required to:
The Connecticut Attorney General has exclusive enforcement authority. There is no private right of action. The AG can seek injunctive relief and civil penalties. A 60-day cure period applied initially but expired December 31, 2024.
Connecticut requires universal opt-out signal support, but Locko.AI goes further by submitting direct removal requests to each of 723+ brokers. Our agents handle form submissions, CAPTCHA challenges, and email confirmations that universal signals cannot cover.
The CTDPA protects Connecticut residents with rights to opt out of data sales, targeted advertising, and profiling. It requires businesses to honor universal opt-out signals and provides rights to access, correct, and delete personal data.
The CTDPA took effect July 1, 2023. The universal opt-out signal requirement became effective January 1, 2025. The 60-day cure period for violations expired December 31, 2024.
Locko.AI deploys autonomous agents that submit opt-out requests directly to 723+ data brokers, verify removal with before-and-after screenshots, and continuously monitor for data reappearance across all covered brokers.
Take the privacy risk assessment to see which data brokers have your personal information. Locko.AI automates removal across 723+ brokers with evidence you can verify.