South Korea fines Meta for illegal collection of user data

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(FILES) A photo taken on April 3, 2024 shows the logo of US online social media and social networking service Facebook on a smartphone screen in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany. Dozens of Facebook groups bill themselves as Kamala Harris fan pages but mount racist attacks, criticize her record on immigration and promote her rival Donald Trump, in what disinformation researchers call a "bait-and-switch" tactic aimed at deceiving voters in a tight US election race.
The Washington-based American Sunlight Project analyzed over 300 groups on the Meta-owned platform that masquerade as pro-Harris pages while misleading the Democratic contender's supporters with abusive, hateful posts or capitalize on her popularity to promote merchandise. (Photo by Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP)

It added that the tech giant collected sensitive information from around 980,000 domestic users in South Korea through their Facebook profiles.

PHOTO: AFP

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- South Korea has fined Facebook parent Meta more than 21.6 billion won (S$20.7 million) for illegally collecting sensitive user information from nearly a million people without consent and sharing it with advertisers, the country’s data watchdog said on Nov 5.

The firm, which also owns Instagram, ran afoul of laws prohibiting the use of information on political opinions, religious beliefs and people’s sex life unless the individual provides explicit consent, Seoul’s Personal Information Protection Commission added.

It said the tech giant collected sensitive information from around 980,000 domestic users in South Korea via their Facebook profiles. This included details about their religious beliefs and whether they are in a same-sex relationship.

The watchdog said it had confirmed that such information was provided to advertisers by Meta, with around 4,000 advertisers using it.

Meta “analysed user behaviour data, including pages liked and ads clicked on Facebook”, to create and implement targeted advertising related to “sensitive themes” such as transgender issues, homosexuality and North Korean defectors, officials said.

The commission said on Nov 5 it had decided to fine Meta 21.6 billion won. It added that it “also ordered the company to establish legal grounds for processing sensitive information, implement safety measures, and respond diligently to users’ requests for access to their personal data”.

The decision is “significant in that they ensure that foreign operators providing global services must comply with the obligations set forth in (South Korea’s) Protection Act regarding the processing of sensitive information”. AFP

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