Belgian Privacy Watchdog Takes Facebook to Court
Belgium’s privacy watchdog has begun legal action against Facebook, accusing the social network site of tracking its users across the web and even monitoring the activities of those without an account. The independent Privacy Commission, which is working with German, Dutch, French and Spanish counterparts, accused Facebook in May of trampling on European privacy laws after trying to find out more about the US social media giant’s practices. “We did not get satisfactory answers so this was the next step,” said a spokeswoman for the Commission for the Protection of Privacy (CPP).
The commission has asked the court, which will convene on June 18, for an immediate order banning Facebook from monitoring non-users in particular, which it may do via plug-ins or cookies. Facebook said it was surprised and disappointed that the CPP had agreed to a meeting and then taken the “theatrical” action of taking Facebook to court the day before. It said it was confident there was no merit in the case, but it would be happy to work to resolve the concerns through a dialogue with its regulator, the Irish Data Protection Commissioner. Facebook has previously described cookies as an industry standard and said that Internet users had the right to opt out.
Belgian Privacy Watchdog Takes Facebook to Court