Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Facebook pays $9.5 million to end Competition Bureau's probe into privacy claims

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 May, 2020 07:56 PM
  • Facebook pays $9.5 million to end Competition Bureau's probe into privacy claims

Facebook will pay $9.5 million in a no-contest agreement with the Competition Bureau, which says the social media company made false or misleading claims about how much control Canadians had over the privacy of their personal information.

The $9 million penalty and $500,000 in costs that Facebook has agreed to pay is a small amount for a global giant that had a US$4.9 billion profit, or about C$6.8 billion at current exchange rates, in the first three months of this year.

University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist said in an email that Canada is part of a growing global trend to use competition laws to address privacy and data governance issues raised by global companies.

Geist said there's an ongoing concern about the weakness of Canada's privacy laws, which have limited the ability to levy significant penalties.

"Canada needs to prioritize updating our privacy and data governance laws so that they can better address the emerging challenges posed by the digital marketplace," Geist said.

However, Geist said it was difficult to comment in detail without reviewing the settlement.

In its press statement Tuesday, the Competition Bureau said Facebook gave the false impression that its privacy settings would give users control over who could see and access their personal information.

Following an investigation, the bureau said it concluded Facebook did not limit some third-party developers in a manner consistent with the claims.

"This personal information included content users posted on Facebook, messages users exchanged on Messenger, and other information about identifiable users," the bureau said.

"Facebook also allowed certain third-party developers to access the personal information of users’ friends after users installed certain third-party applications."

The bureau also said Facebook claims that it would no longer allow such access to the personal information of users’ friends after April 30, 2015, but the practice continued with some third-party developers until 2018.

Besides the financial penalty in the settlement, Facebook has also agreed not to make misleading representations about the extent to which users can control access to their personal data on Facebook and the Messenger app.

"Although we do not agree with the Commissioner's conclusions, we are resolving this matter by entering into a consent agreement and not contesting the conclusions for the purposes of this agreement," Facebook said in a statement.

"We look forward to continuing our productive relationship with the Commissioner and the Competition Bureau. We will build on the improvements we've made in protecting people's information and how we communicate about the privacy controls Canadians can use."

The agreement with the competition bureau is separate from a current lawsuit filed in April by Facebook in Federal Court of Canada.

Facebook wants a judge to toss out the federal privacy commissioner's finding that the social media giant's lax practices allowed personal data to be used for political purposes.

Both the competition bureau and privacy commissioner's probes covered a period that included the 2016 presidential election in the United States.

During that time Cambridge Analytica distributed an app through Facebook that collected information about the people who installed the app as well as data about their Facebook friends.

MORE National ARTICLES

Conservatives gear up to grill government in modified return of House of Commons propose and oppose: Tories

Conservatives gear up to grill government in modified return of House of Commons propose and oppose: Tories
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer laid out Monday the numerous lines of inquiry his party intends to follow this week as a modified version of a House of Commons sitting gets underway. They include the state of the nation's emergency supply stockpile, the mishmash of federal economic benefit programs that allow some to fall through the cracks and to what extent the minority Liberals are backstopping provincial efforts to reopen their economies, Scheer said.

Conservatives gear up to grill government in modified return of House of Commons propose and oppose: Tories

Learning to live with COVID-19 requires permanent fixes to vulnerable settings

Learning to live with COVID-19 requires permanent fixes to vulnerable settings
Canada's chief public health officer warned Monday there is still a lot we don't know about the virus that causes COVID-19, but said stopping this pandemic or preventing a future one will require more than just physical distancing and handwashing. Dr. Theresa Tam said we simply do not know yet whether someone who has had COVID-19 will be immune from getting it again, or how long that immunity will last.

Learning to live with COVID-19 requires permanent fixes to vulnerable settings

B.C. university creates institute to take microscope-telescope view of pandemic

B.C. university creates institute to take microscope-telescope view of pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic has placed the world at a tipping point that's challenging social, political, economic and environmental structures, says the director of a new academic research institute at British Columbia's Royal Roads University. Dr. Thomas Homer-Dixon said Monday the pandemic is an event with the power to cause those structures to fall like dominos or shift radically to new paths.

B.C. university creates institute to take microscope-telescope view of pandemic

Drugs and cash seized from a Whalley area residence in Surrey

Drugs and cash seized from a Whalley area residence in Surrey
Illicit drugs and cash have been seized from a residence in the Whalley area following an investigation by the Surrey RCMP. The investigation began on March 5th, 2020 by the Surrey RCMP Community Response Unit (CRU). CRU observed suspicious activity consistent with drug trafficking at a residence in the 11400 block of 124 street.     

Drugs and cash seized from a Whalley area residence in Surrey

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby
The body of a missing British Columbia woman has been found two months after she disappeared. A statement from New Westminster police says the body believed to be that of Nirla Sharma was discovered Sunday along the Fraser River between New Westminster and Burnaby. The woman's disappearance from her New Westminster home sparked a major search in late February.

Police say B.C. woman whose disappearance sparked wide search found dead in Burnaby

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses have applied for the federal government's wage-subsidy program to help them deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. The emergency measure will cover 75 per cent of wages for employers that have seen sharp declines in revenue since the novel coronavirus hit Canada hard in March, up to $847 per worker.    

PM Trudeau says nearly 10,000 businesses apply for wage subsidy in first hours