The Commission Nationale et libertés (Cnil), France’s privacy watchdog, announced on Thursday it was closing a lawsuit against Facebook over its user ad tracking, with the social network implementing a resolution within the time allowed.
In December, Cnil fined Facebook 60 million, which the group paid, and gave it three months to allow its users to opt out of cookies as easily as required by regulations. European Union data protection under a fine of 100,000 euros per day.
“Given the response provided within the deadline“by Facebook”which has placed an opt-out button titled “Allow essential cookies only” above the “Allow essential and optional cookies” button.“Cnil’s limited design on July 11 deemed the social network “had completed the assignment“.
New controls
Nevertheless, “this closure decision does not prejudge CNIL’s analysis of the suitability of new cookie consent windows“Warns Cnil, which does not rule out further checks on the social network to verify that the new information panels are clear enough and make it possible to collect.”target consent“.
Along with the sanctions against Facebook, the Cnil also imposed a record fine of 150 million euros against Google for not allowing the direct rejection of cookies on its search engine and YouTube video platform, and was aligned with this sanction. , still not eliminated.
Google announced in April that it hascarried out a complete overhaul of (its) approach, in particular changing the infrastructure we use to manage cookieshe wrote in a blog post.
Source: Le Figaro

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.