Facebook fined 150,000 euros
by French data watchdog
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[May 16, 2017]
PARIS
(Reuters) - Facebook has been fined 150,000 euros ($166,000) by
France's data protection watchdog for failing to prevent its users' data
being accessed by advertisers.
Watchdog CNIL said its fine - which was imposed on both Facebook Inc and
Facebook Ireland - was part of a wider European investigation also being
carried out in Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Germany into some of
Facebook's practices.
The 150,000 euro fine is small in the context of the company, which has
quarterly revenue of about $8 billion and a stock market capitalization
which stands at around $435 billion. But it is the maximum amount the
CNIL could fine when it started the investigation on the tech giant.
The CNIL can now issue fines of up to 3 million euros, after the passing
of a new law in October 2016.
Last year, the French watchdog had given Facebook a deadline to stop
tracking non-users' web activity without their consent and ordered the
social network to stop some transfers of personal data to the United
States.
Facebook argued that the Irish data protection authority, not the CNIL,
was the competent authority to formulate such orders, as the social
media company's European headquarters are located in Dublin.
In a statement on Tuesday, Facebook did not say whether it would now
take action as a result of the fine.
“We take note of the CNIL’s decision with which we respectfully
disagree," Facebook said in a statement emailed to Reuters.
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An illustration picture shows the log-on screen for the Website
Facebook on an Ipad, in Bordeaux, Southwestern France on January 30,
2013. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File Photo
"At Facebook, putting people in control of their privacy is at the heart
of everything we do. Over recent years, we've simplified our policies
further to help people understand how we use information to make
Facebook better," it said.
The French order was the first significant action taken against a
company transferring Europeans' data to the United States following an
EU court ruling last year that struck down an agreement that thousands
of companies, including Facebook, had relied on to avoid cumbersome EU
data transfer rules.
The transatlantic Safe Harbour pact was ruled illegal last year amid
concerns over mass U.S. government snooping. EU data protection
authorities said companies had three months to set up alternative legal
arrangements for transferring data.
A new EU data protection law is set to enter into force in 2018, which
could see companies get fined up to 4 percent of their global turnover
if they fall foul of the new regulation.
(Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Mathieu Rosemain; Editing by Andrew
Callus and Susan Fenton)
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