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Instagram Fined €405m over Children’s Data Privacy

Meta indicated it would contest the fine, stating it did not agree with the method used to determine the fine

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Sadaf Hasan
Sadaf Hasan
Aspiring reporter covering trending topics

UNITED STATES: Ireland’s data protection authority fined Facebook owner Meta €405 million for abusing children’s privacy on its Instagram service. The long-running issue centered on children’s data, notably their email and phone numbers.

According to reports, several users who wanted access to analytics tools like profile visits upgraded to corporate accounts without realising that doing so made more of their data public.

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Meta, the company that owns Instagram, declared that it would challenge the ruling. The third penalty the regulator has imposed on the business.

Ireland’s Data Protection Commissioner (DPC) stated, “We adopted our final judgement last Friday, and it does entail a fine of €405m [£349m].”

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Meta indicated it would contest the fine, stating it did not agree with the method used to determine the fine. It claimed to have “engaged fully” with the regulator during the probe. It claimed that the default settings had been modified since then.

“When a person under the age of 18 joins Instagram, their account is automatically set to private, meaning that only individuals they know can view what they post and that adults cannot message teenagers who don’t follow them.”

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According to Meta, the regulator’s judgement regarding Instagram is still being looked at. The firm responded, “This inquiry focused on outdated settings that we updated over a year ago. Since then, we’ve added numerous new features to help keep adolescents secure and their information private”.

Big Breach

The DPC governs large technological firms with European headquarters in the Republic of Ireland. It has never imposed a fine that size for violating the General Data Protection Regulation of the European Union. But in contrast, the Luxembourgish data authorities penalized Amazon a record €746 million while it fined WhatsApp €225 million.

Andy Burrows, director of child safety online policy at the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), said of Instagram’s fine: “This was a grave infringement with significant safeguarding consequences and the potential to do genuine harm to children using Instagram.

“The decision highlights how regulation is making children safer online and how effective enforcement can protect children on social media.

“It’s now up to the next prime minister to deliver the Online Safety Bill in full and without delay to meet his promise to provide children with the best protections possible.”

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