November 24, 2021
2 mins read

Top EU privacy watchdog hit with corruption complaint

On each Sunday in advent, noyb will publish another document, together with a video explaining the documents and analysis of why the use of these documents is fully compliant with all applicable laws…reports Asian Lite News.

In a significant development, a European privacy campaign group noyb on Tuesday filed a criminal complaint against Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC), which is Facebook’s lead regulator in the EU for data protection.

In a statement, noyb said that Irish DPC demanded it to sign a “non-disclosure agreement” or remove the non-profit group from the Facebook procedure.

“In absence of such an NDA for the benefit of the DPC and Facebook, the DPC would not comply with the duty to hear the complainant anymore,” the group said in a statement.

“The DPC engaged in procedural blackmail. Only if we shut up, the DPC would ‘grant’ us our legal right to be heard. We have reported the incident to the Austrian Office for the Prosecution of Corruption. This is a regulator clearly asking for a ‘quid pro quo’ to do its job, which likely constitutes bribery in Austria,” said noyb chair, Max Schrems.

“The right to be heard was made conditional on us signing an agreement, to the benefit of the DPC and Facebook. It is nothing but an authority demanding to give up the freedom of speech in exchange for procedural rights,” he added.

The not-for-profit group said that Facebook would especially benefit from the NDA, as new documents indicate that EU regulators may find Facebook’s “GDPR bypass” illegal — possibly declaring Facebook’s use of personal data since 2018 unlawful, with major implications for Facebook’s business model in Europe.

In protest of the situation and to show that noyb has every liberty to discuss documents within the parameters of applicable law, noyb will now conduct “advent readings” from various Facebook and DPC documents.

Facebook. (File Photo: IANS)

On each Sunday in advent, noyb will publish another document, together with a video explaining the documents and analysis of why the use of these documents is fully compliant with all applicable laws.

“We very much hope that Facebook or the DPC will file legal proceedings against us, to finally clarify that freedom of speech prevails over the scare tactics of a multinational and its taxpayer-funded minion,” Schrems said.

Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC) was yet to react to the complaint.

ALSO READ-EU plans sanctions against companies that help smuggle migrants

Previous Story

UAE updates Covid-19 border entry rules

Next Story

UAE, Israel ink energy pact at Expo

Latest from -Top News

Israel Nails Houthi PM

Al-Rahawi was killed on Thursday alongside several ministers during a meeting in southern Sanaa…reports Asian Lite News The Houthis announced on Saturday that an Israeli airstrike killed Ahmed Al-Rahawi, the prime minister

SCO to map course towards regional security

This year’s event will be the fifth SCO summit hosted by China, and officials in Beijing are billing it as the largest and most consequential since the organisation’s creation in 2001,…reports Asian

Ukrainian MP Andriy Parubiy killed in Lviv

Parubiy, a sitting member of Ukraine’s parliament and former speaker of the Verkhovna Rada, died before emergency services could reach him Ukrainian lawmaker Andriy Parubiy was fatally shot in what authorities describe

West in a Fix as Modi Links China-Russia

For Washington and Brussels, the optics could hardly be more troubling. India, long courted as a democratic counterweight to China, is clasping hands with both Xi and Putin, writes Kaliph Anaz The
Go toTop