A European Data Privacy Office Has 15 Open Investigations. Ten Are About Facebook. (nbcnews.com)
An office that's responsible for enforcing European data privacy laws against many of the biggest U.S. tech firms is spending much of its time on one company: Facebook. From a report: The Ireland Data Protection Commission said in a report that as of Dec. 31 it had 15 ongoing investigations of multinational tech companies. Ten of the investigations were about Facebook or its subsidiaries, Instagram and WhatsApp. One of the investigations into Facebook is especially wide-ranging, examining whether the social network has met its obligations "to secure and safeguard the personal data of its users." Twitter faces a similar probe, the report says. The report, released early on Thursday on Dublin time, underscores how much Facebook's handling of sensitive personal data is dominating legal and policy debates about privacy -- and how much potential regulatory danger the social network faces in Europe, where privacy laws are more strict than in the U.S.
The significance being that each one could potentially result in a fine of 4% of global turnover. I make that $2.2 billion per investigation.
Unfortunately some of it probably pre-dates GDPR so the fines might not reach that level.
Also it's good that they are being investigated for shirking their responsibilities.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Any service that asks for your mobile phone number is a no-starter for me too.
Why are people assuming everyone has a mobile phone number in 2019 is beyond comprehension. I know a lot of people who have a landline (no SMS), only have data (no SMS), some of them don't have either and only use any open wi-fi network they can find (no SMS either, only iMessage/etc).
#DeleteFacebook