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South Korean Regulators Fine Meta $15 Million Over Data Privacy Breach
In a Rush? Here are the Quick Facts!
- Regulators are asking Meta $15.68 million in fines over illegal actions with s’ data
- South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission performed a 4-year investigation
- Meta allegedly used private data from 980,000 Facebook s and sold it to over 4,000 rs
South Korean Regulators requested Meta to pay 21.62 billion won—around $15.68 million—in fines for illegally sharing s’ private information.
According to ABC News, South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission performed a 4-year investigation—from July 2018 to March 2022—and revealed that Meta illegally collected private information from 980,000 Facebook s and shared this data with over 4,000 rs.
It’s not the first time an organization has revealed that Meta has shared s’ private data for advertising. The American marketing firm Cox Media Group recently itted to getting data from multiple tech companies including Meta.
The information gathered by Meta South Korea included political views, religion, same-sex unions, and more. The privacy laws in South Korea forbid sharing private information like sexual behavior, political views, and beliefs without the person’s consent.
Lee Eun Jung, a commission director who led the investigation on Meta, said Meta had categories according to s’ interests and the ads they clicked on on the platform.
“While Meta collected this sensitive information and used it for individualized services, they made only vague mentions of this use in their data policy and did not obtain specific consent,” Lee said.
Lee also criticized Meta’s security measures and accused them of putting s at risk by not taking basic actions like removing inactive pages.
Meta in Korea said they would “carefully review” the decision without further comments.
South Korea is not the only country going against Meta’s lack of protection towards its s these past few days. Last week, Brazil sued Meta—and other platforms—for not preventing addiction issues in minors.
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