The National Cybersecurity Alliance (NCA) has launched Data Privacy Week 2026, running from January 26-30, 2026. This year’s theme, “Take Control of Your Data,” emphasizes individuals’ fundamental rights to manage their digital footprints while challenging organizations to adopt more transparent data practices.

Event overview

AttributeDetails
DatesJanuary 26-30, 2026
ThemeTake Control of Your Data
OrganizerNational Cybersecurity Alliance
FormatVirtual webinars, educational sessions, resources
CostFree participation
Websitestaysafeonline.org/data-privacy-week

History and significance

Data Privacy Week evolved from Data Privacy Day, established in the United States and Canada in January 2008 as an extension of Europe’s Data Protection Day. The date commemorates the January 28, 1981 signing of Convention 108—the first legally binding international treaty dealing specifically with privacy and data protection.

MilestoneDateSignificance
Convention 108 signedJanuary 28, 1981First international privacy treaty
Data Protection Day (Europe)2007Annual observance established
Data Privacy Day (US/Canada)January 2008Extended to North America
Expansion to full week2022Reflects growing privacy complexity
Data Privacy Week 2026January 26-30, 2026Current observance

The expansion from a single day to a full week reflects the growing complexity and importance of privacy issues in the digital age.

2026 session schedule

DateTime (ET)SessionFocus
January 262:00 PMTalking to AI: Where Does Your Data Go?AI chatbot data practices
January 272:30 PMChildren’s Privacy in a Digital WorldK-12, teens, COPPA, COSA
January 281:00 PMPrivacy Law, Made SimpleRegulations, user rights, enforcement
January 291:00 PMDynamic Pricing: When Algorithms Set the CostPersonal data and pricing
January 301:00 PMThe Right to Be ForgottenData deletion rights and processes

AI and privacy session highlights

The opening session on AI data practices explores:

TopicDiscussion
Prompt storageWhat happens to prompts submitted to AI chatbots
Behavioral dataHow AI systems process and store user interactions
Model trainingWhether sensitive information may be used for training
Data retentionHow long AI companies keep user data
Practical protectionSteps to minimize AI data exposure

Children’s privacy session

The Tuesday session addresses evolving challenges facing children, teens, parents, and educators:

TopicCoverage
Age verificationTechnical and policy approaches
EdTech privacyData protections in K-12 and higher education
COPPA complianceRequirements for services targeting children
Children’s Online Safety Act (COSA)Pending legislation and implications
First Amendment considerationsPrivacy vs. free expression balance

Privacy law session

Wednesday’s session breaks down current privacy regulations:

ConceptExplanation
Consent requirementsWhat constitutes valid consent
Data access rightsHow to request your data
Deletion rights”Right to be forgotten” processes
PortabilityMoving data between services
EnforcementHow regulators investigate violations

Key privacy concerns for 2026

The NCA has identified several priority areas for this year’s campaign:

Data minimization

PrincipleApplication
Collect only necessary dataDon’t gather more than needed for stated purpose
Purpose limitationUse data only for disclosed purposes
Storage limitationDelete data when no longer needed
Legal basisGDPR Article 5, US state law requirements
ChallengeSolution
Opaque consent dialogsClear, plain-language explanations
Dark patternsHonest UI that doesn’t manipulate
Buried settingsAccessible privacy controls
Default opt-inPrivacy-protective defaults

Cross-border transfers

RegionFramework
European UnionGDPR, adequacy decisions, SCCs
United StatesState patchwork (19+ laws)
Asia-PacificVaried national frameworks
Latin AmericaEmerging comprehensive laws

AI and personal data

QuestionConsideration
Training dataIs personal data used to train models?
Opt-out rightsCan individuals exclude their data from training?
Inference dataWhat does AI infer about users?
Automated decisionsWhen does AI make decisions affecting individuals?

Biometric data

Data typePrivacy concern
Facial recognitionMass surveillance potential
FingerprintsIrrevocable identifier if compromised
Voice printsAuthentication and tracking
Behavioral biometricsKeystroke dynamics, gait analysis

Children’s online privacy

IssueStatus
COPPA (under 13)Existing federal law
Teen privacy (13-17)Limited federal protection
Age verificationTechnical challenges
Educational dataFERPA and state laws

Champions program

The NCA’s Data Privacy Week Champions program allows organizations and individuals to demonstrate their commitment to privacy without financial obligations.

Champion benefits

BenefitDescription
Educational materialsCustomizable guides and presentations
Social media toolkitsReady-to-use content templates
Best practices guidesImplementation recommendations
RecognitionListing on NCA platforms
Network accessConnection with privacy community

How to participate

StepAction
1Register at staysafeonline.org
2Download provided resources
3Customize for your organization
4Share on organizational channels
5Host internal privacy awareness activities

Organizational participation guide

ActivityDescriptionEffort
Privacy settings auditReview and update account configurationsLow
Policy reviewUpdate privacy policies for clarityMedium
Impact assessmentsConduct PIAs for new projectsMedium
Employee trainingEducate staff on data handlingMedium
Vendor reviewAssess third-party data practicesHigh
Data inventoryMap data collection and flowsHigh

Individual privacy actions

Immediate steps

ActionTime required
Review app permissions15 minutes
Check social media privacy settings20 minutes
Enable MFA on critical accounts30 minutes
Install password manager45 minutes
Review data broker exposure1 hour

Ongoing practices

PracticeFrequency
Review privacy policies before signupEach new service
Opt out of data sharingWhen offered
Exercise data deletion rightsQuarterly
Use privacy-focused browsersDaily
Audit connected appsMonthly

Privacy landscape 2026

Data Privacy Week 2026 arrives amid significant regulatory developments:

United States

DevelopmentStatus
State privacy laws19+ states with comprehensive laws
Federal legislationOngoing discussions, no comprehensive law
FTC enforcementActive against deceptive practices
State AG actionsIncreasing enforcement activity

State privacy law map (2026)

StateLawEffective
CaliforniaCPRAAlready active
VirginiaVCDPAAlready active
ColoradoCPAAlready active
ConnecticutCTDPAAlready active
UtahUCPAAlready active
Iowa, Indiana, Tennessee, etc.Various2024-2026
Additional statesPending/enacted2025-2027

International

JurisdictionDevelopment
European UnionAI Act enforcement beginning February 2026
United KingdomPost-Brexit data framework evolution
CanadaPrivacy law modernization discussions
BrazilLGPD enforcement maturation

About the National Cybersecurity Alliance

The NCA is a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating a safer, interconnected world through education and advocacy.

Key initiatives

InitiativeTiming
Cybersecurity Awareness MonthOctober
Data Privacy WeekJanuary
CyberSecure My BusinessOngoing SMB program
See Yourself in CyberYear-round campaign

Partners

SectorExamples
GovernmentCISA, FTC
IndustryMajor technology companies
AcademiaUniversities and research institutions
NonprofitPrivacy and consumer advocacy groups

Resources

Free materials available

ResourceFormat
Educational guidesPDF, web
Social media contentImages, text templates
Presentation slidesPowerPoint, Google Slides
InfographicsPNG, PDF
Webinar recordingsVideo (post-event)

For different audiences

AudienceAvailable resources
IndividualsPersonal privacy guides
Small businessesSMB privacy toolkit
EnterprisePolicy templates
EducatorsClassroom materials
ParentsFamily privacy guide

Privacy technology tools

CategoryExamples
Password managers1Password, Bitwarden, Dashlane
Privacy browsersFirefox, Brave, Safari
Search enginesDuckDuckGo, Startpage
EmailProtonMail, Tutanota
VPNMullvad, ProtonVPN (for specific use cases)
Ad blockersuBlock Origin

Context

Privacy has evolved from a compliance checkbox to a competitive differentiator. Organizations that demonstrate genuine respect for user data build trust; those that don’t face regulatory penalties, reputational damage, and customer attrition.

EraPrivacy approach
Pre-2018Afterthought, minimal compliance
2018-2022GDPR-driven compliance focus
2023-2025Competitive differentiator
2026+AI governance integration

Data Privacy Week provides an opportunity to reset organizational practices and individual habits around data protection. The “Take Control of Your Data” theme acknowledges that privacy is ultimately about empowerment—giving people meaningful choices about their information rather than burying controls in settings menus.

The convergence of AI proliferation, expanding state privacy laws, and increasing consumer awareness makes 2026 a pivotal year for privacy practices. Organizations that invest in transparent, user-respecting data practices now will be better positioned as regulatory requirements continue to expand.

Visit staysafeonline.org/data-privacy-week for full event schedules, registration, and downloadable resources.