French Govt. Fines Google $57m

'Dotun Akintomide
Writer

Ad

[VIDEO] ‘Things have gotten dangerously out of hand,’ 2Face cries out

By Obinna Uballa Nigerian music legend Innocent Idibia, popularly known as 2Face or 2Baba, has spoken out in a dramatic video posted on X.com late Thursday, accusing members of his own family of spreading damaging rumours, endangering his partner Natasha, and worsening the turmoil surrounding his private life. The visibly distressed singer said the situation…

Supreme Court dismisses Osun’s suit over withheld LG funds

By Obinna Uballa The Supreme Court on Friday struck out a suit filed by the Osun State Government seeking to compel the Federal Government to release withheld allocations for the state’s local government areas. In a 6-1 ruling, a seven-member panel of the apex court held that the case, filed by the state’s Attorney General,…

Rivers Political Earthquake: Speaker, 15 Lawmakers Dump PDP for APC

By Obinna Uballa Rivers State was thrown into fresh political turmoil on Friday as Speaker of the House of Assembly, Martin Amaewhule, and 15 other lawmakers formally defected from the Peoples Democratic Party to the All Progressives Congress. Amaewhule announced the mass defection during plenary, declaring that the lawmakers were leaving the PDP due to…

Ad

Applying the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR), France has slapped a fine of $57 million on U.S search giant, Google.

CNIL regulator handed the record fine for Google’s failure to provide transparent record.

It also accused Google of failing to provide easily accessible information on its data consent policies, a statement said.

“People expect high standards of transparency and control from us. We’re deeply committed to meeting those expectations and the consent requirements of the GDPR,” a Google spokesperson said in a statement.

“We’re studying the decision to determine our next steps.”

The ruling follows complaints lodged by two advocacy groups last May, 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 group, while the other was by None Of Your Business, created by the Austrian privacy activist Max Schrems.

Schrems had accused Google of securing “forced consent” through the use of pop-up boxes online or on its apps which imply that its services will not be available unless people accept its conditions of use.

“Also, the information provided is not sufficiently clear for the user to understand the legal basis for targeted advertising is consent, and not Google’s legitimate business interests,” the CNIL said.

Ad

X whatsapp