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Issue 111

Message for our subscribers and readers

Dear Subscribers and Readers,

Wish you a very happy Data Protection Week, 2022! We thank you for your continuous patronage and support. We have published over 110 issues of our weekly newsletter on data protection and privacy covering enforcement, guidance, regulatory, big-tech, and region-specific updates from around the globe. 

We hope you enjoy reading our newsletter just as much as we enjoy creating it. If you have any thoughts, feedback, and suggestions on our newsletter, please reach out to us on our contact form.

We will continue to bring you regular insights into the national and international developments in the field of data protection and privacy. Stay tuned for exciting updates coming soon this week! Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter and ask your peers and colleagues to subscribe to our newsletter.  

Enforcement updates

CNIL fines Google and Meta for violating cookie consent regulations

The French data protection authority (CNIL) has fined Facebook Ireland Limited for EUR 60 million, as a part of its ongoing enforcement campaign on guidelines and recommendations on cookies. The CNIL found that Facebook Ireland had inadequate measures in place failing to make it easy to reject consent to the use of cookies as it is to accept the same. In light of this, CNIL opined that this was a breach of Article 82 of the French Data Protection Act and issued the fine accordingly.

Illinois court denies Amazon’s defense in a lawsuit regarding illegal collection of biometric data

In a lawsuit filed in the US District Court of Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division an Amazon warehouse employee accused the company of unlawfully collecting facial scans of its employees as a part of its COVID-19 wellness checks. The former employee alleged that the e-commerce giant collected his facial and other biometric data without proper consent under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act. In response to this, Amazon filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit which was declined by the court.

Morgan Stanley agrees to pay for settlement for data breach 

Morgan Stanley agreed to pay USD 60 million to settle a class action lawsuit which accused them of exposing personal data of about 15 million customers. In 2016, customers had accused Morgan Stanley of negligently decommissioning two wealth management data centers which were unencrypted and contained personal data of its customers when they were sold to unauthorized third parties. According to the settlement papers, Morgan Stanley denied wrongdoings and has made substantial upgrades to its data security practices. 

Guidance updates 

Regulatory updates around the globe 

US updates 

EU updates 

 India updates

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