EU says Google policy breaches laws
March 1, 2012 by Super Admin
BRUSSELS, March 1 (UPI) — Changes to Google’s privacy policies now in effect are in breach of European Union laws, the EU’s justice commissioner says.
The policy change, implemented Thursday, means private data collected by one Google service can be shared with its other platforms including YouTube, Gmail and Blogger.
European authorities found that “transparency rules have not been applied” in changing the policies, Commissioner Viviane Reding told the BBC.
Google responded by saying it believes the new policy complies with EU law.
“We are confident that our new simple, clear and transparent privacy policy respects all European data protection laws and principles,” it said in a statement.
Google went ahead with implementing the changes despite warnings from the EU earlier this week after data regulators in France had cast doubt on the legality of the move and launched a Europe-wide investigation.
France’s privacy watchdog CNIL had urged Google to take a “pause” in rolling out the revised policy.
“The CNIL and EU data authorities are deeply concerned about the combination of personal data across services,” the regulator wrote.





You can opt-out at any time. We protect your information like a mother hen. We will not sell or rent your email address to anyone for any reason.