Europe's highest court ruled in 2020 that an EU-U.S. data
transfer agreement was invalid, citing surveillance concerns.
That promoted Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC) to
issue a provisional order that the mechanism Facebook uses to
transfer data from European Union users to the United States
"cannot in practice be used."
The order was frozen following a challenge by Facebook in the
Irish High Court but resumed last May when the court dismissed
Facebook's claims.
Facebook has warned a stoppage could have "devastating" and
"irreversible" consequences for its business, which relies on
processing user data to serve targeted online ads. The DPC has
said other companies could face massive disruption.
The DPC, which is the EU's lead regulator of Facebook and many
other of the world's largest technology company's due to the
location of their EU headquarters in Ireland, issued its revised
preliminary decision on Monday, which Facebook owner Meta
Platforms has 28 days to respond to.
The DPC declined to give details of its revised findings.
Under EU data protection rules, the DPC must then share the
ruling with all concerned EU supervisory authorities and
consider their views before issuing a final verdict.
A DPC spokesperson anticipated the revised findings would be
shared with other EU regulators in April.
A spokesperson for Meta confirmed it had received the revised
version.
"Suspending data transfers would be damaging not only to the
millions of people, charities, and businesses in the EU who use
our services, but also to thousands of other companies who rely
on EU-US data transfers to provide a global service," she said.
"A long-term solution on EU-US data transfers is needed to keep
people, businesses and economies connected."
(Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Mark Potter)
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