South Korea fines 'uncooperative Fb for sharing private knowledge with companions with out consent, orders felony probe

Fb, which shared private information of 3.3 million South Koreans with out their categorical consent, has been fined for $6 million and is dealing with a felony probe. Korean government mentioned the tech massive would not cooperate.
Facebook, which shared personal information of 3.3 million South Koreans without their explicit consent, has been fined for $6 million and is facing a criminal probe. Korean authorities said the tech giant would not cooperate.Original article
Author: Russia Today

The latest Tweets from RT (@RT_com). RT, the global news network, broadcasts from Moscow, London, Paris and Washington studios to over 100 countries

Russia Today has recently written 11 articles on similar topics including :
  1. "Controversialist UK media personality Piers Morgan has announced he's working with Facebook to hunt a person who sent him a "death threat" online, claiming police have turned his house into "Fort Knox". (March 3, 2021)
  2. "A German court has effectively sided with Facebook, overruling a decision by the countrys antitrust watchdog that claimed the social media giant had abused its position to illegally gather user data". (March 24, 2021)
  3. "Apple has announced that it will soon roll out a feature allowing users to block tech companies from tracking activity online and on other apps in a move thats angered Facebook over its impact on data collection". (April 8, 2021)
  4. "Britains competition watchdog has said Giphy and Facebook have five days to offer legally binding proposals to address concerns over their merger deal, which could see the social media giant further monopolize digital adverts". (March 25, 2021)
  5. "Facebook's mass ban of news publishers in Australia has misfired against numerous unrelated pages, including official state institutions, multiple charities and even health departments and hospitals". (February 18, 2021)
  6. "Moscow may be on a collision course with US-based networking conglomerates over perceived restrictions on Russian content, but its officials arent about to pull the plug on platforms in return, the countrys top senator has said". (March 2, 2021)
  7. "Papua New Guineas health minister, Jelta Wong, criticized Facebook on Thursday, claiming the spread of disinformation on the site poses the biggest challenge to tackling rising cases of Covid-19 in the country". (April 1, 2021)
  8. "Instagrams owner has confirmed it is thinking about creating a version of the platform that children under 13 can use. The move comes as the app faces criticism over the safety of minors online". (March 19, 2021)
  9. "Facebook VP of global affairs Nick Clegg has blamed users for spreading polarizing content on the platform in a blog defending its algorithms, saying the spread of harmful posts is not simply the fault of faceless machines". (March 31, 2021)
  10. "Social media giant Facebook said Wednesday it inadvertently blocked some content including a large swathe of charity and state health pages when it imposed a week-long ban on news in a standoff over Australias new media code". (February 24, 2021)
  11. "Facebook may have breached data protection regulations after the personal information of 533 million of its users was leaked online, Irelands data authority has said, as it announced an investigation into the social media giant". (April 14, 2021)
Posted on  , , , , , , ,