PARIS: France's highest administrative authority on Friday dismissed a challenge by Google<\/a> against a fine of 50 million euros ($56 million) for failing to provide adequate information on its data consent policies.

The fine was imposed in 2019 by France's data watchdog, the
CNIL<\/a>.

It found at the time that Google made it too difficult for users to understand and manage preferences on how their personal information is used, in particular with regards to targeted advertising.

Its ruling applied principles enshrined in the EU's strict new General Data Protection Regulation (
GDPR<\/a>). Google then appealed.

But on Friday, the Council of State, a French government body that is also the court of last resort for matters of administrative justice, confirmed the CNIL ruling.

It agreed the information that Google provided to users \"does not meet the requirements of clarity and accessibility required by the GDPR\" even when the nature and volume of data collected was \"particularly intrusive.\"

The council said the CNIL's record fine was not disproportionate \"given the particular seriousness of the breaches committed, their continuous nature and duration, the ceilings provided for by the GDPR (up to four percent of turnover) and Google's financial situation.\"

In a statement sent to AFP, the American giant said it would \"now examine the changes we need to make\".

The matter was brought to the CNIL by two advocacy groups shortly after the landmark GDPR directive came into effect.

One was filed on behalf of some 10,000 signatories by France's
Quadrature du Net<\/a> group, and the other by None Of Your Business, created by the Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems.

Schrems had accused Google of securing \"forced consent\" via its
Android<\/a> mobile operating software through the use of pop-up boxes online or on its apps which imply that its services will not be available unless the conditions of use are accepted.

The CNIL noted in its ruling that details on how long a person's data can be kept and what it is used for were spread over several different web pages.

Modifying a user's data preferences required clicking through a variety of pages such as \"More Options\", and often the choices to accept Google's terms were pre-checked by default.

It was not the first time the regulator had taken Google to task.

In 2014 it fined the company 150,000 euros - the maximum possible at the time - for failing to comply with privacy guidelines.

And in 2016 it imposed a 100,000-euro penalty over non-compliance with the EU's \"right to be forgotten\" rule which allows people to request having references to them removed from search results.
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谷歌失去了上诉€5000万年法国好

法国最高行政机关上周五驳回一个挑战谷歌对罚款5000万欧元(5600万美元)未能提供足够的信息,其数据同意政策。

  • 更新在2020年6月19日下午16点坚持
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巴黎:法国最高行政机关上周五驳回了一个挑战谷歌对罚款5000万欧元(5600万美元)未能提供足够的信息,其数据同意政策。

罚款是2019年由法国的数据监管机构yann padova

发现的时候,谷歌让用户也难以理解和管理偏好如何使用他们的个人信息,特别是关于定向广告。

其执政的应用原则体现在欧盟严格的新通用数据保护法规(GDPR)。谷歌随后提起上诉。

广告
但周五,国务院,法国政府机构,也是行政正义的法院最后的问题,证实了yann padova裁决。

它同意谷歌提供给用户的信息不符合要求的明确性和可访问性的要求GDPR”即使收集的数据的性质和体积是“特别烦人。”

委员会说yann padova创纪录的好并不是不相称”考虑到特定的违反承诺的严重性,他们连续的性质和时间,提供的天花板的GDPR(高达百分之四的营业额)和谷歌的财务状况。”

在一份声明中向法新社、美国零售巨头表示,它将“现在检查我们需要做出的改变”。

这件事是由两个团体yann padova GDPR指令生效后不久地标。

一提起代表一些由法国的10000个签名杜交网集团和其他不关你的事,由奥地利隐私维权马克斯Schrems。

Schrems指责谷歌获得通过的“强制许可”安卓手机操作软件通过使用弹出框在线或在其应用程序意味着其服务将不可用,除非使用条件接受。

广告
在裁决指出,yann padova细节对一个人的数据可以保存多久它是用于分散在几个不同的网页。

修改一个用户的数据偏好等多种页面点击所需“更多选择”,通常选择接受谷歌的默认条款提前预支了。

这不是第一次监管机构采取了谷歌的任务。

2014年公司罚款150000欧元——当时的最大可能未能遵守隐私准则。

并在2016年实施100000欧元罚款不符合欧盟的“被遗忘”规则,允许人们请求引用他们从搜索结果中删除。

  • 发表在2020年6月19日上午10点坚持
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PARIS: France's highest administrative authority on Friday dismissed a challenge by Google<\/a> against a fine of 50 million euros ($56 million) for failing to provide adequate information on its data consent policies.

The fine was imposed in 2019 by France's data watchdog, the
CNIL<\/a>.

It found at the time that Google made it too difficult for users to understand and manage preferences on how their personal information is used, in particular with regards to targeted advertising.

Its ruling applied principles enshrined in the EU's strict new General Data Protection Regulation (
GDPR<\/a>). Google then appealed.

But on Friday, the Council of State, a French government body that is also the court of last resort for matters of administrative justice, confirmed the CNIL ruling.

It agreed the information that Google provided to users \"does not meet the requirements of clarity and accessibility required by the GDPR\" even when the nature and volume of data collected was \"particularly intrusive.\"

The council said the CNIL's record fine was not disproportionate \"given the particular seriousness of the breaches committed, their continuous nature and duration, the ceilings provided for by the GDPR (up to four percent of turnover) and Google's financial situation.\"

In a statement sent to AFP, the American giant said it would \"now examine the changes we need to make\".

The matter was brought to the CNIL by two advocacy groups shortly after the landmark GDPR directive came into effect.

One was filed on behalf of some 10,000 signatories by France's
Quadrature du Net<\/a> group, and the other by None Of Your Business, created by the Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems.

Schrems had accused Google of securing \"forced consent\" via its
Android<\/a> mobile operating software through the use of pop-up boxes online or on its apps which imply that its services will not be available unless the conditions of use are accepted.

The CNIL noted in its ruling that details on how long a person's data can be kept and what it is used for were spread over several different web pages.

Modifying a user's data preferences required clicking through a variety of pages such as \"More Options\", and often the choices to accept Google's terms were pre-checked by default.

It was not the first time the regulator had taken Google to task.

In 2014 it fined the company 150,000 euros - the maximum possible at the time - for failing to comply with privacy guidelines.

And in 2016 it imposed a 100,000-euro penalty over non-compliance with the EU's \"right to be forgotten\" rule which allows people to request having references to them removed from search results.
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