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Home Government & Politics

France fines Google, Facebook 210 million euros over data collection breaches, by Stanley Ugagbe

Nigerian Canadian Newspaper Canada by Nigerian Canadian Newspaper Canada
January 10, 2022
in Government & Politics
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France’s privacy watchdog, National Commission for Information Technology and Civil Liberties (CNIL) has fined Google and Facebook 210 million euros for data collection breaches.

Google was fined 150 million euros ($170 million) while Meta Platforms Inc.’s Facebook was fined 60 million euros. It was clarified that both were fined for the way they manage cookies.

In a statement, CNIL issued the companies with a three-month ultimatum “to provide internet users located in France with a means of refusing cookies as simple as the existing means of accepting them, in order to guarantee their freedom of consent.”

Delineating on the development, CNIL said failing to do so will come with the risk of an additional daily fine of 100,000 euros.

It was stated that the latest penalties follow probes by the watchdog looking at companies’ compliance with new rules on cookies, which are tracking devices that are placed on people’s computers.

It would be recalled that the Privacy Protestion Authority had in 2020 fined Google 100 million euros and online shopping giant Amazon.com Inc. 35 million euros for placing such cookies on people’s computers without their consent.

Records have it that EU data protection regulators’ powers have increased significantly since the bloc’s General Data Protection Regulation, or GDPR, took effect in May 2018.

It should be noted that the law allows watchdogs, for the first time, to levy penalties of as much as 4 per cent of a company’s annual global sales.

However, the recent fines were levied based on separate rules regulating the use of cookies and other online tracking devices.

In a statement, Google said “people trust us to respect their right to privacy and keep them safe” and that the company understands its “responsibility to protect that trust and are committing to further changes and active work with the CNIL in light of this decision under the” European Union’s e-privacy rules.

The social media company said “Our cookie consent controls provide people with greater control over their data, including a new settings menu on Facebook and Instagram where people can revisit and manage their decisions at any time, and we continue to develop and improve these controls”.

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