Toronto Star

Court sets rules for how EU can collect Facebook’s data

Company can’t be forced to hand over documents without a detailed review

- STEPHANIE BODONI BLOOMBERG

FFacebook Inc. may be able to slow down but not derail European Union antitrust investigat­ors’ demands to turn over vast amounts of data following an EU court order that sets ground rules for efforts to build a case against the U.S. tech giant.

In a decision that isn’t a decisive victory for either side, the president of the EU’s secondhigh­est court said on Thursday that the European Commission can’t force the social network ggiant to hand over potentiall­y sensitive records without a detailed review.

Instead, the EU must work with Facebook in identifyin­g such informatio­n and store it in a “virtual data room.” The ruling follows a dispute over arrangemen­ts on how to view the data. “The members of the team responsibl­e for the investigat­ion shall examine and select the documents in question,” while giving Facebook lawyers “the opportunit­y to comment on them before the documents considered relevant are placed on the file,” Marc van der Woude said in Thursday’s court order. The EU last year started exaamining Facebook’s sales plat- f form and how it uses data from apps as part of a broader crackdown on Silicon Valley. The EU is also looking at how Amazon.com Inc. collects data from retailers through its platform and is also investigat­ing into Apple Inc.’s App Store. Regulators can require companies to give documents mentioning certain keywords under threat of fines.

Facebook sued the commission in July, citing “the exceptiona­lly broad nature” of the EU’s orders. It also filed two challenges seeking a court suspension of the EU data demands.

Facebook said in a statement tthat it particular­ly welcomed the court’s assessment “that highly personal and irrelevant informatio­n enjoy strong legal protection­s which need to be respected in the commission’s ongoing investigat­ion.”

“In the meantime, we continue to co-operate with the commission and have already provided it with over a million documents,” the company said.

The Brussels-based commission said it “will duly implement” the court’s order and “continue to defend its case in court,” according to an emailed statement. The EU’s demands impose on FFacebook “a positive obligation to search for all of its electronic files on the basis of broad search terms and to communicat­e to the commission the documents responding to those search terms, even if those documents contain sensitive personal data,” the court decided. FFacebook “correctly claims that that obligation requires it to process sensitive personal data.”

The decision on so-called interim measures can be appealed. Facebook’s main appeals over the legality of the EU’s demands remain pending.

 ?? LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? The EU last year started examining Facebook’s sales platform and how it uses data from apps as part of a broader crackdown on Silicon Valley, inclusing Amazon and Apple.
LIONEL BONAVENTUR­E AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO The EU last year started examining Facebook’s sales platform and how it uses data from apps as part of a broader crackdown on Silicon Valley, inclusing Amazon and Apple.
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