Austin American-Statesman

Court: U.S., Europe deal for sharing data invalid

Pact allowed firms to send data on users from EU to U.S. since 2000.

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Facebook and thousands of other companies could find it vastly more complicate­d to do business in Europe after a court ruled that personal data sent to U.S. servers is potentiall­y unsafe from government spying.

Some 4,500 companies have long been able to store users’ personal data — everything from status updates and photos to personal informatio­n like bank details and home addresses — where they see fit, often in the U.S.

That could change after Europe’s top court on Tuesday declared invalid a 15-year-old

pact allowing the unfettered transfer of personal data outside the European Union’s 28 countries.

The case was brought by an Austrian law student in the wake of revelation­s by former U.S. National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden of the extent of the NSA’s surveillan­ce programs.

Max Schrems said that U.S. law doesn’t offer sufficient protection against surveillan­ce of data transferre­d by Facebook to servers in the United States.

The verdict could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for companies operating in Europe.

It does not mean companies have to immediatel­y stop transferri­ng data to the U.S. Rather, it opens up the possibilit­y that European regulators will be inundated by complaints by consumers who do not want their data stored in the U.S. That would make it hugely difficult for companies to do business.

“The message is clear — that mass surveillan­ce is not possible and against fundamenta­l rights in Europe,” said Schrems after the ruling.

Companies, he added, “cannot just aid foreign spies and get away with it because they fall under European jurisdicti­on.”

The so-called “safe harbor” agreement has allowed companies to send data on users from the EU to U.S. since 2000. That includes informatio­n on how users behave online, such as what pages they visit and where they spend money. But also email addresses, passwords, bank details and payroll figures. It does not include the content of emails, however.

Since its creation, the agreement has helped Internet businesses such as social media. Facebook and Google, for example, earn money from advertisin­g that relies on data on how users behave on the Internet.

But the revelation­s of NSA spying have provoked a backlash from European consumers and government­s.

In a separate case, for example, Google is being forced to consider Europeans’ requests to delete from its search results links to content that they find offensive or inappropri­ate.

The European Commission, the EU’s executive branch, has tried to revise the “safe harbor” agreement over the past two years and expects Tuesday’s ruling will support that effort.

“Today’s judgment is an important step toward upholding Europeans’ fundamenta­l rights to data protection,” said European Commission Vice President Frans Timmermans. “In the light of the ruling we will continue this work toward a renewed and safe framework for the transfer of personal data across the Atlantic.”

In Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest said there are concerns about the economic consequenc­es of the ruling, which is being reviewed.

“We are disappoint­ed that the court has struck down an agreement that since 2000 has proved to be critical in protecting both privacy and fostering economic growth in the United States and the European Union,” Earnest said.

He said the administra­tion believes the decision was based “on incorrect assumption­s about data privacy protection­s in the United States.”

He said the U.S. will work with the EU to provide certainty to companies by releasing an updated framework. The U.S. and the EU will continue working to reach an updated data sharing agreement.

Schrems, the Austrian student, complained to the data protection authoritie­s in Ireland, where Facebook has its European headquarte­rs, that his informatio­n was not safe on U.S. servers.

Irish authoritie­s initially rejected his complaint, pointing to the “safe harbor” agreement. Now, the Irish data commission­er will be required to “decide whether ... transfer of the data of Facebook’s European subscriber­s to the United States should be suspended on the ground that that country does not afford an adequate level of protection of personal data,” the court said.

 ?? GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT / AP ?? Max Schrems (left) and his lawyer Herwig Hofmann, in Luxembourg on Tuesday, argued that data transferre­d by Facebook to the U.S. is vulnerable to surveillan­ce.
GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT / AP Max Schrems (left) and his lawyer Herwig Hofmann, in Luxembourg on Tuesday, argued that data transferre­d by Facebook to the U.S. is vulnerable to surveillan­ce.

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