Google's 2012 rewrite of its privacy policy, which gave the company the
right to "combine personal information" across multiple products, is still
ruffling feathers in Europe.
France's privacy watchdog, the Commission Nationale de l'Informatique et
des Libertes (CNIL), said today that six European countries are launching
"coordinated and simultaneous enforcement actions" because Google "has not
implemented any significant compliance measures," despite a request for changes
to the policy. The countries are France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain,
and the U.K.
It all dates back to early last year, when Google announced it would be
rolling out a simpler privacy policy that would cover many of its different
products and would, in some instances, "combine information you've provided from
one service with information from other services."
The planned change raised concern in the U.S. Congress, prompted EU
officials to ask Google to postpone the overhaul till its privacy implications
could be examined, and led to lawsuits from the Electronic Privacy Information
Center and the Center for Digital Democracy, among others.
In March of 2012, the same month the new policy kicked in, the CNIL began
an inquiry into the legality of the changes, and in October it asked Google to
amend the policy within four months to better inform users on how their data
would be used and set more precise limits on how long data would be retained,
among other things.
This past February, the CNIL said Google would face a coordinated crackdown
if it failed to adjust the policy. The CNIL said today that it met with
representatives from Google on March 19 but that since that meeting "no change
has been seen."
"It is now up to each national data protection authority to carry out
further investigations according to the provisions of its national law
transposing European legislation," the CNIL said in its statement today.
"Consequently, all the authorities composing the taskforce have launched actions
on 2 April 2013 on the basis of the provisions laid down in their respective
national legislation."
The Wall Street Journal noted today that the enforcement actions on the
part of the six countries could lead to millions of dollars in fines for Google
but that "with a fragmented set of regulators across each country and efforts
still in the works to draw up a unified European privacy law that could levy
unified fines, it's unclear how coordinated the authorities can be -- or how
powerful they can become in pushing changes at big companies like Google."
Google, for its part, has maintained that its privacy policy isn't illegal
and that the company has consistently cooperated with investigators. A Google
rep told CNET today that the company's privacy policy "respects European law and
allows us to create simpler, more effective services. We have engaged fully with
the DPAs [data-protection agencies] involved throughout this process, and we'll
continue to do so going forward."
http://www.windowsanyway.com/microsoft-office-for-mac-home-and-business-2011-product-key-p-3551.html
No comments:
Post a Comment