The Asian Age

EU IMPOSED $114M IN FINES FOR BREACHES

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Munich, Jan. 20: European regulators have imposed 114 million euros ($126 million) in fines for data breaches since tougher privacy rules came into force in mid-2018, with approaches varying widely from country to country.

A report by law firm DLA Piper said France has imposed the biggest single fine — of 50 million euros against Google — while the Netherland­s, Britain and Germany led in terms of the number of data breach notificati­ons.

The General Data Protection Regulation was introduced in an effort to safeguard sensitive personal informatio­n and prescribes stiff penalties if companies lose control of data or process it without proper consent.

It is enforced by a patchwork of national data protection offices across the 28-member European Union, with responsibi­lity falling disproport­ionately on Ireland — the ‘lead’ regulator for Silicon Valley giants that have based their European operations there, such as Facebook.

The fines to date pale in comparison to multibilli­on-euro penalties imposed in EU anti-trust cases, but they are likely to rise over time as appeals and litigation subject the sanctions to scrutiny and create legal precedents.

In principle, regulators can impose fines of 2 oer cent or, in some cases 4 per cent, of global turnover. In practice, they will have to judge whether such a heavy penalty would stand up in court, said DLA Piper partner Ross McKean.

“It’s going to take time — the regulators are going to be wary about going to 4 per cent because they are going to get appealed,” McKean told Reuters. “And you lose credibilit­y as a regulator if you’re blown up on appeal.”

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