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TECHNOLOGY

German competition watchdog set to crack down on Facebook data gathering

Facebook users should be asked for consent before data collected by the group's subsidiaries Whatsapp and Instagram and on third-party websites is combined with their social network account, Germany's competition authority said Thursday.

German competition watchdog set to crack down on Facebook data gathering
Photo: DPA

Neither should users who refuse permission for their data to be merged be shut out of Facebook services as a result, the Federal Competition Office (FCO) ruled.

“In future, Facebook will no longer be allowed to force its users to agree to the practically unrestricted collection and assigning of non-Facebook data to their Facebook user accounts,” FCO chief Andreas Mundt said in a statement.

“If users do not consent, Facebook may not exclude them from its services and must refrain from collecting and merging data from different sources.”

SEE ALSO: Merkel bids farewell to Facebook ahead of planned exit from politics

Officials have been looking into Facebook since mid-2016, charging that the Silicon Valley giant uses other networks — like subsidiaries Instagram and Whatsapp, as well as Twitter and other websites — to collect masses of information about users without their knowledge.

That data then provides the foundation for Facebook's advertising profits.

The FCO's requirement for specific consent to merge data with Facebook accounts stopped short of media rumours the authority could ban some of its products, such as the “Like” or “Share” buttons strewn around many third-party websites which aid data collection.

Nor has the Californian giant been ordered to pay a swingeing fine like those imposed by Brussels on rival Google over competition misdeeds.

'Exploitative abuse'

However, the FCO found that Facebook has a “dominant” position in social networking in Germany, with its 23 million daily active users representing 95 percent of the market — meaning there is no viable alternative service for most people.

Rival services like Snapchat, YouTube or Twitter “only offer parts of the services of a social network” and are not directly comparable, the authority said.

That meant that a one-off choice between accepting all kinds of data collection and not using Facebook at all “represents above all a so-called exploitative abuse”, the FCO argued.

SEE ALSO: Over 3,000 Germans potentially hit by Facebook data leak

“The only choice the user has is either to accept the comprehensive combination of data or to refrain from using the social network,” competition chief Mundt said.

“We are in the process of introducing competition law safety barriers to the internet,” he added, giving Facebook four months to present a “concept” for compliance and a year to implement it.

If not, the FCO can levy fines of up to €10 million per month.

In its own statement, Facebook said it would appeal the FCO's decision.

“The Bundeskartellamt's decision misapplies German competition law to set different rules that apply to only one company,” the California firm said, adding that “we face fierce competition in Germany” from other networks.

Rather than the FCO, the Irish Data Protection Commission should be overseeing Facebook's use of data as the company's European HQ is based in Dublin, the social network said.

 Long year

Thursday's German decision looks like a prolongation of Facebook's nightmarish 2018 into the new year.

In the past 12 months the firm was battered by a torrent of outcries and scandals. It was accused of offering a platform for manipulating voters and failing to protect user data.

As it celebrated its 15th birthday, the social network had to contend with the global Cambridge Analytica scandal of March 2018.

In that case, data belonging to tens of millions of Facebook users was harvested by the British company through an online personality quiz.

The same consultancy worked on both the Leave campaign in the UK's Brexit referendum of 2016 and on Donald Trump's election campaign in the same year.    The EU introduced its General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in May last year, intensifying regulators' focus on Facebook.

In January, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg defended his company in the international media, saying its advertising-based business model required collecting personal data.

“We don't sell people's data” to other firms, he insisted in an opinion piece published in the Wall Street Journal.

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LIVING IN FRANCE

France to roll out ID cards app

Technology is being rolled out to allow people to carry their French ID cards in an app form - and could be rolled out to other cards, including driving licences and cartes de séjour residency cards.

France to roll out ID cards app

Holders of French carte d’identité (ID cards) will soon be able to carry certified digital versions of them on their smartphone or other electronic devices, a decree published in the Journal Officiel has confirmed.

An official app is being developed for holders of the newer credit card-format ID cards that have information stored on a chip. A provisional test version of the app is expected at the end of May.

Users will be able to use the ID card app, when it becomes available, for a range of services “from checking in at the airport to renting a car”, according to Thierry Breton, EU Commissioner for the Internal Market.

All French citizens have an ID card, which can be used for proving identity in a range of circumstances and for travel within the EU and Schengen zone – the new app will be in addition to the plastic card that holders already have.

Under the plans, after downloading the app, card holders will need merely to hold the card close to their phone to transfer the required information. According to officials, the holder then can decide what information is passed on – such as proof of age, or home address – according to the situation.

The government has not given any examples of situations in which the app would need to be used, but has set out the main principles and the ambition of the plan: to allow everyone to identify themselves and connect to certain public and private organisations, in particular those linked to the France Connect portal.

READ ALSO What is France Connect and how could it make your life simpler?

Cards will continue to be issued for the foreseeable future – this is merely an extension of the existing system.

Only French citizens have ID cards, but if successful the app is expected to be rolled out to include other cards, such as driving licences, cartes de séjour residency cards or even visas. A digital wallet is being developed at the European level – Member States have until September to agree what it could contain.

READ ALSO Eight smartphone apps that make life in France a bit easier

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