Monday, November 28, 2022

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Meta fined USD 275 million by European Union
Penalty against Meta for violating European privacy rules


The penalty, imposed by Ireland’s Data Protection Commission, brings the total fines to more than $900 million that the regulator has imposed on Meta since last year.
Representational picture

Adam Satariano | London | Published 29.11.22
TOMORROW'S NEWS TODAY

In the latest penalty against Meta for violating European privacy rules, the tech giant was fined roughly $275 million on Monday for a data leak discovered last year that led to the personal information of more than 500 million Facebook users being published online.

The penalty, imposed by Ireland’s Data Protection Commission, brings the total fines to more than $900 million that the regulator has imposed on Meta since last year.


In September, the same regulator fined the company roughly $400 million for its mistreatment of children’s data.

Last October, Irish authorities fined Meta, which was previously called Facebook, 225 million euros, or about $235 million, for violations related to its messaging service WhatsApp.

The accumulating penalties will be a welcome sign to privacy groups that want to see EU regulators more aggressively enforce the General Data Protection Regulation.

The law was hailed as a landmark moment in the regulation of technology companies when it took effect in 2018, but regulators have since faced criticism for not applying the rules strongly enough.

Ireland has been under pressure because of the key role it plays in enforcing EU data protection rules.

The country is tasked with policing tech companies’ compliance with the 2018 law as aresult of companies such as Meta, Google and Twitter alllocating their EU headquarters in Ireland.

TikTok, which also set up a EU hub in Ireland, is the subject of another investigation there.

The fine issued on Monday stems from an investigation started last year by Irish regulators into reports that Facebook had not safeguarded its platform against being“scraped” for information, leading to the publication on an online hacker forum of data that included users’ names, locations and birthdates, in violation of rules.

New York Times News Service

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