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Euro data watchdog bans Meta's use of personal data for ads
(www.theregister.com)
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This is the best summary I could come up with:
Meta has argued that its Terms & Conditions contract, which users of its services accept, represents a valid legal basis to process personal data and deliver behaviorally targeted ads.
The Register understands that within a week or two, Meta is likely to add a popup notification in its Facebook and Instagram apps in the EEA that asks for consent to process personal data in a legally acceptable way.
While Noyb says it intends to fight this approach, the group also acknowledges that news organizations like Der Standard have gotten away with using the subscription-or-ads model as an indicator of consent for personal data collection.
Alexander Hanff, a privacy advocate who recently asked the DPC to disallow YouTube's use of scripts to detect the presence of ad blocking extensions, echoed Datatilsynet's sentiment about the dubious legality of Meta's subscription option as a measure of consent.
Other enforcement options, depending on the DPC's legal authority, could include bank account seizures, orders to Apple and Google to remove Facebook and Instagram from European App Stores, or directing ISPs to undertake network-level intervention.
Hanff said he expects Meta will try to obtain an injunction to block DPC from carrying out the EDPB ban, and failing that will either comply or withdraw its services from Europe until the company can find a valid legal basis or business model that's acceptable to European authorities.
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