Skip to main content

Germany Takes Legal Actions Against Facebook

A German data protection official said Wednesday he launched legal proceedings against Facebook, which he accused of illegally accessing and saving personal data of people who don’t use the social networking site.

Johannes Caspar said his Hamburg data protection office had initiated legal steps that could result in Facebook being fined tens of thousands of euros for saving private information of individuals who don’t use the site and haven’t granted it access to their details.

“We consider the saving of data from third parties, in this context, to be against data privacy laws,” Caspar said in a statement.

Facebook has until Aug. 11 to respond formally to the legal complaint against it. Its response will determine whether the case goes further.

The company, based in Palo Alto, California, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Germans are protected by some of the world’s most strict privacy laws, which lay out in detail how and how much of an individual’s private information may be accessed by whom.

Germany also has launched an investigation into Google Inc. over its Street View mapping program.

In April, Facebook changed its privacy settings to allow users to block access to the contacts listed in their e-mail, but Caspar argues that the previously saved contacts have not been erased and are being used for marketing purposes.

“It is a system that is designed around making it possible for Facebook to expand, for its own benefit,” Caspar said in a telephone interview.

He said his office had received complaints from “many” people who had been contacted by Facebook after it obtained their names and e-mail addresses through people listing them as a contact.

He could not give a specific number, but said that it indicated third parties’ data had been obtained by Facebook had been saved for future use.

“Given that several million people in Germany alone are members, this is a very unsettling notion,” he said.

Germany’s consumer protection minister, Ilse Aigner, said last month that she plans to give up her Facebook account, arguing that it still wasn’t doing enough to protect users’ data.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Ian Bell
I work with the best people in the world and get paid to play with gadgets. What's not to like?
The future of Facebook is Instagram
Instagram

Instagram hasn’t seemed like its past self in a while.

At the bottom of its app, no longer will you find an option to compose a new post or even a tab to browse who liked and commented on your recent pictures and videos. Instead, these are now tucked away in a corner to make room for the photo-sharing social network’s latest ventures: E-commerce and a bottomless pit of vertical videos. That’s not to be confused with the clips housed under the TV-like icon or the row of ephemeral stories at the top of your feed.

Read more
Facebook’s new privacy tool convinced me to delete my account
facebook hacked

For years, my Facebook account has practically sat dormant. It's a nostalgic relic of the past that lets me occasionally walk down the memory lane of my life’s first two decades. But it's also a weak link in my digital privacy. I've known for years that Facebook is constantly watching, studying me as I wander through the web. Still, I never gathered up the courage to delete my account and burn it to the ground once and for all. Until last week, that is.
The final nail in the Facebook coffin
A few days ago, I found myself staring wide-eyed at the rundown of all the nearly 1,400 websites and apps that have gathered data on me and shared it with Facebook. I was looking at the Off-Facebook Activity tool, one of the recent additions to Facebook’s suite of security options for users that I had fortuitously stumbled upon. Moments later, my cursor was hovering over the Delete Account button.

Facebook knows a lot about you. After the countless controversies and privacy “bugs,” you probably already knew that. What most people are not familiar with, however, is the vast network of third parties that has enabled Facebook to invade nearly every app you use, and become the data superpower it is today.

Read more
Facebook’s new A.I. takes image recognition to a whole new level
facebook ai image recognition new takes to a whole level

“Hit me,” says Morpheus. “If you can.” Neo adopts a martial arts fighting pose, then launches a furious flurry at his mentor, flailing at him with high-speed strikes. Morpheus blocks every attempted attack effortlessly. The scene is, of course, the training sequence from 1999’s The Matrix, a movie that blew minds at the time with its combination of artificial intelligence-focused storyline and cutting-edge computer graphics.

More than 20 years later, the scene is being used as part of a Facebook demo to show me some of the company’s groundbreaking A.I. image recognition technology. On the screen, the scene plays out as normal. Almost. While Morpheus and the background are exactly the same, the 2D footage of Keanu Reeves has been transformed into a 3D model. Although this particular “pose estimation” demo is pre-rendered, Andrea Vedaldi, one of Facebook’s A.I. experts when it comes to computer vision and machine learning, said that such transformations can be rendered in real time.

Read more