A human rights activist, Tanya O'Carll, has managed to force social networks to not use their data for directed advertising. The agreement is contained in an agreement to an individual challenge that presented against monitoring and finishing profiles in 2022.
O'Carll had argued that a legal right to object to the use of personal data for direct marketing that is contained in the United Kingdom Data Protection Law (and the EU), together with an unqualified right that personal data will no longer be processed for such a purpose if the user objects meant that the target must respect their objection and stop tracking and outlighting it to fulfill their microtrigue ads.
Goal refuted this: to affirm that their “personalized ads” are not direct marketing. The case had to be heard in the Superior Court of English on Monday, but the agreement ends legal action.
For O'Carll it is an individual victory: Goal you must stop using your data for ad orientation when you use your services. She also believes that the agreement establishes a precedent that should allow others to confidence the same right to object to marketing directed to force the technological giant to respect their privacy.
In statements to Techcrunch on the result, O'Carll explained that it essentially had few options to accept the agreement once the target agreed what its legal action had been asking for (that is, not processing its data for specific ads). If I had proceeded and the litigation failed, I could have faced substantial costs, he told us.
“It's a bittersweet victory,” he said. “In many ways, I have achieved what I set out to achieve, which is to demonstrate that there is the right to object, to demonstrate that it applies exactly to a goal model and many other companies on the Internet, that directed advertising is, in fact, direct marketing.
“And I think I've It is shown That is the case. But, of course, it is not determined by law. Table has not had to accept responsibility, so they can still say that they have just resolved with an individual in this case. “
Although the EU has long received comprehensive legal protections for the information of people, such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the legal challenge of the O'Carroll law had depended, in which the United Kingdom internal data protection framework is still based on which a privacy pain is based on the commercial models of surveillance AD.
Years of What-A-Mole regulatory have developed in relation to multiple GDPR complaints about the company since the regime entered into force in May 2018.
And although Meta has accumulated a large number of GDPR fines, including some of the largest privacy fines for technology, its surveillance business model without consent has proven more difficult to change. Although there are signs that the application action is finally eliminating this position in Europe. And O'Carl's example emphasizes that the return of privacy is possible.
“What gives me hope is that the ICO (the Office of the United Kingdom Information Commissioner) intervened in the case and did very clearly, and incredibly convincingly and persuasively, on the side with me,” added O'Carroll, suggesting that other target users who also take measures to object to their processing of their data may have a greater possibility that the ICO will accelerate them to support them if I applications now.
That said, she believes that the company will probably change to a “payment or consent” model in the United Kingdom, which is the legal basis to which it moved in the EU last year. That requires users to consent to monitoring and profile or pay to the goal to access versions without advertisements of their services.
O'Carll said that you cannot reveal the complete details of access without follow -up that Meta will provide, but confirmed that you will not have to pay goal.
(Tagstotranslate) Meta (T) GDPR