Microsoft
According to the French regulator, after investigations, the following was discovered:
Cookies were placed on users’ computers when they visited this site without their consent, and these cookies were used for advertising, among other things. Additionally, it “observed that there was no button allowing to refuse the deposit of cookies as easily as accepting it,” as stated in the article.
The CNIL stated that the fine was justified in part due to the company’s advertising profits and the data collected through cookies, which are tiny data files that track online browsing. The user could click a button on Bing to immediately accept all cookies, but two clicks were required to reject them, the company stated. The business was given three months to resolve the issue or face a €60,000 daily late payment penalty. The fine was forced on Microsoft Ireland, where the organization is situated in Europe.
Microsoft:
“We had made significant modifications to the way we use cookies prior to beginning this investigation. Concerned about the CNIL’s position regarding advertising fraud, we maintain respect. Businesses and individuals in France will suffer as a result of the authorities’ position.”
When you visit our website, cookies are placed on your computer, allowing your browser to keep track of your session. They are extremely valuable to technology platforms that personalize advertising, which are Facebook and Google’s main source of revenue.
However, advocates for privacy have long opposed this. Internet companies are now required to obtain user consent prior to installing cookies under stricter regulations since the European Union’s personal data law was passed in 2018.
Last year, the CNIL reported that he would endure a year exploring sites for rebelliousness with its standards on the utilization of web treats. French regulators imposed fines of €150 million and €60 million on Google and Facebook for similar violations involving the use of cookies. Additionally, both businesses are under investigation for their practices of transferring EU citizens’ personal information to servers in the United States. Additionally, the tech giant is still dealing with a flurry of incidents throughout Europe.
A binding decision on the handling of personal data by Meta, the owner of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, was issued earlier this month by the European data watchdog.
The European Data Protection Supervisor said in a statement that the decision concerns Meta’s use of data for targeted advertising, but he did not provide any specifics about his decision or the fines he had recommended. The latest case stems from a complaint made by the Noyb data protection group that Meta’s three apps do not adhere to strict European data protection laws.
The largest fine has been assessed to Microsft as a result of Microsoft’s ($64 million) violation of cookie regulations by a French privacy watchdog on Thursday. The National Commission for Technology and Freedoms (CNIL) in France said that Microsoft’s search engine Bing had not set up a system that made it easy for users to reject cookies rather than accept them, resulting in the largest fine ever imposed in 2022.
According to the French regulator, after investigations, the following was discovered:
Cookies were placed on users’ computers when they visited this site without their consent, and these cookies were used for advertising, among other things. Additionally, it “observed that there was no button allowing to refuse the deposit of cookies as easily as accepting it,” as stated in the article.
The CNIL stated that the fine was justified in part due to the company’s advertising profits and the data collected through cookies, which are tiny data files that track online browsing. The user could click a button on Bing to immediately accept all cookies, but two clicks were required to reject them, the company stated. The business was given three months to resolve the issue or face a €60,000 daily late payment penalty. The fine was forced on Microsoft Ireland, where the organization is situated in Europe.
Microsoft stated in a statement:
“We had made significant modifications to the way we use cookies prior to beginning this investigation. Concerned about the CNIL’s position regarding advertising fraud, we maintain respect. Businesses and individuals in France will suffer as a result of the authorities’ position.”
When you visit our website, cookies are placed on your computer, allowing your browser to keep track of your session. They are extremely valuable to technology platforms that personalize advertising, which are Facebook and Google’s main source of revenue.
However, advocates for privacy have long opposed this. Internet companies are now required to obtain user consent prior to installing cookies under stricter regulations since the European Union’s personal data law was passed in 2018.
Last year, the CNIL reported that he would endure a year exploring sites for rebelliousness with its standards on the utilization of web treats. French regulators imposed fines of €150 million and €60 million on Google and Facebook for similar violations involving the use of cookies. Additionally, both businesses are under investigation for their practices of transferring EU citizens’ personal information to servers in the United States. Additionally, the tech giant is still dealing with a flurry of incidents throughout Europe.
A binding decision on the handling of personal data by Meta, the owner of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, was issued earlier this month by the European data watchdog.
The European Data Protection Supervisor said in a statement that the decision concerns Meta’s use of data for targeted advertising, but he did not provide any specifics about his decision or the fines he had recommended. The latest case stems from a complaint made by the Noyb data protection group that Meta’s three apps do not adhere to strict European data protection laws.