Meta receives the European Union's largest penalty for privacy violations: Ireland fines Meta $1.3 billion
Along with the fine, the company will have five months to "suspend the transfer of [European users’] personal data" to the United States.
Meta has just received the largest penalty in the history of the European Union for violating privacy. The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) has fined it $1.3 billion (€1.2 billion) for mismanagement of user information.
It is the largest fine imposed by the European Union on a company for violating the privacy of its users, surpassing the payment of $886 million (€746 million) that Amazon Inc. faced in 2021 for the same reason.
Specifically, the EDPB accused Meta Platforms Ireland of sending European users’ private information to the United States. This poses "risks to the fundamental rights and freedoms of the persons whose data were transferred." European Union Court of Justice (ECJ) President Andrea Jelinek described this problem as "very serious":
Along with this, the company that owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp must, for the next five months, "suspend any future transfers of personal data to the United States" and has six months to stop "unlawful processing, including in-country storage" of personal data transferred from the European Union.
Meta appeals the ruling
Meta announced in a statement that it will appeal the penalty imposed by the DPC. Nick Clegg, Meta's president of Global Affairs, and Jennifer Newstead, the company's chief legal officer, said in the statement that the decision is "unnecessary":
Moreover, the company warned that this decision would affect the proper functioning of the internet because, without the independence to transfer data "across borders," the internet could "risks being carved up into national and regional silos":