EU regulators wrangle over Twitter data privacy penalty

The Irish Data Privacy Commission was expected to issue its decision in the Twitter case, which would be its first involving a U.S.

But it said Thursday that its counterparts in other countries - so-called concerned supervisory authorities - challenged a draft decision it circulated in May.

Under the EUs General Data Protection Regulation, a single regulator takes the lead role in cross-border data privacy cases as part of a one-stop shop system.

But in this system, the main regulator has to share its draft decision with regulators in other EU member states and take their feedback into consideration. The Twitter case could foreshadow more disagreements and delays that Irish authorities may face as they wrap up about two dozen other investigations involving the Silicon Valley giants.

The Twitter case stems from a security breach that affected its Android app users and let anyone view protected tweets over more than four years.

The Irish regulator said in a June report it was investigating the company for failure to report the breach within 72 hours.

Original article
Author: Abc News

Abc News has recently written 10 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "A DHS official warns taking down social media accounts could hurt intel gathering on potential violent protests". (January 14, 2021)
  2. "Seven West Media has become the largest Australian news media business to strike a deal with Google to pay for journalism". (February 15, 2021)
  3. "Google believes hackers backed by the North Korean government posed as computer security bloggers on social media while attempting to steal information from researchers in the field". (January 27, 2021)
  4. "The CEOs of social media giants Facebook, Twitter and Google are giving an accounting to Congress of actions against the use of their platforms to spread falsehoods and incite violence". (March 25, 2021)
  5. "Anti-government extremists are working to circumvent recent social media clampdowns in order to continue recruiting new members, the Department of Homeland Security says". (March 31, 2021)
  6. "European Union officials agreed Thursday on a landmark provisional agreement aimed at clamping down on the biggest online companies, dubbed digital gatekeepers, by laying out a list of dos and donts". (March 25, 2022)
  7. "The discourse was never all that civil on Twitter". (November 6, 2022)
  8. "MeWe is a 4-year-old, full-featured social media company positioned as an anti-Facebook". (January 17, 2021)
  9. "Australias prime minister has urged Facebook to lift its blockade of Australian users and return to the negotiating table with news publishing businesses". (February 19, 2021)
  10. "Facebook says it will lift its ban on Australians sharing news after reaching a deal with Australias government on legislation that would make digital giants pay for journalism". (February 23, 2021)
Posted on  , , , , , , , ,