The Gold Coast Bulletin

Privacy watchdog taking social media giant to court

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FACEBOOK could face millions in fines with Australia’s privacy watchdog taking the social media giant to court.

The Australian Informatio­n Commission­er lodged court documents yesterday alleging users unwittingl­y had their personal data used for political purposes.

The commission­er is alleging in Federal Court that Facebook allowed Australian users’ personal data to be sold for political profiling by a third party app. That data was sent to nowdefunct British consultant­s Cambridge Analytica, which used Facebook informatio­n in 2015 without permission to profile American voters.

Commission­er Angelene Falk claims 311,127 Australian­s had their Facebook data sold and used for purposes that include political profiling.

“Users were unable to exercise reasonable choice and control about how their personal informatio­n was disclosed,” she said.

“Facebook’s default settings facilitate­d the disclosure of personal informatio­n, including sensitive informatio­n, at the expense of privacy.”

Users of the app This Is Your Digital Life – and even their friends who did not install the app – had their data sold on.

Court documents say most of the people who had their data sold didn’t even install the app. The producers of the app sold that data to Cambridge Analytica, it’s alleged.

Facebook paid a record $US5 billion fine to resolve a US government probe into the Cambridge Analytica scandal.

Australia’s Federal Court could whack Facebook with a $1.7 million fine for each privacy offence.

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