Friday, October 21, 2011










Facebook to give German state privacy exemption

 

Facebook has offered a special exemption from its data handling practices to Schleswig-Holstein after the northern German state's data protection commissioner complained about the online social network's popular "like" button.

Thilo Weichert, who leads the state’s data protection efforts, said in August that the site’s “like” button violated German privacy laws because it allowed Facebook to track members’ interests without their consent and sent the personal data to the United States.

But in a private meeting between Weichert and Richard Allan, Facebook’s head of privacy policy in Europe, the US internet
giant offered to shield visitors to websites operated from Schleswig-Holstein from having their data sent to the United States. It also provided a full accounting of how it collects and uses users’ data, public broadcaster NDR reported on Friday.

Although the full details of the arrangement are not yet clear, it appears the exemption would be unique. It would cover people who click the “like” button on various websites employing the feature. Facebook would identify those accessing the site from Schleswig-Holstein by sorting IP addresses, NDR reported.


Although Weichert had previously expressed scepticism that anything would come from the meeting, he said the agreement if implemented would “certainly be a great success.”


“For the first time, Facebook really understood what our legal arguments and technical problems are,” he told NDR.


It is unclear whether the arrangement could have implications for Facebook elsewhere in Germany. Facebook's Allan declined to speak to NDR.


The
social network continues to face criticism from other German political leaders despite agreeing last month to a voluntary code of conduct to protect Germans’ privacy.

In the
Tageszeitung newspaper on Friday, Hamburg data protection head Johannes Caspar said he was ratcheting up pressure on Facebook over its facial recognition technology.

“The time for negotiation is now over,” he told the newspaper, calling on Facebook to seek explicit consent from users for the service, which can automatically recognize faces in photos and add people’s names to them.


He threatened legal action if his office didn’t receive “clear confirmation” that Facebook would address the issue.





 
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