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Facebook owner Meta, forced to pay nearly $100K per day for violation, is still breaking rule, regulator says

Meta Platforms should continue paying a daily fee of nearly $100,000 as it remains in violation of the European General Data Protection Regulation, a Norwegian regulator argued.

Meta Platforms, the owner of Instagram and Facebook, is in violation of European data privacy rules in Norway despite being fined nearly $100,000 per day, according to the country's data regulator.

Hanne Inger Bjurstroem Jahren, a lawyer representing regulator Datatilsynet, told a court Wednesday that Meta is not in compliance with the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), and thus should continue paying the fine, Reuters reported.

"There is no discussion on whether the company is in violation of these rules ... Today Meta breaks GDPR rules," she told the court during the last day of a two-day hearing.

The giant tech company has been ordered to pay a fine of one million crowns (just over $94,000) per day since Aug. 14 for breaching users' rights to privacy.

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Datatilsynet determined Meta was violating regulations by harvesting user data and using it to target advertising at them. The practice, known as behavioral advertising, is fairly common to Big Tech, but doing so without the consent of users violates the European rule, Reuters reported.

During the first hearing on Tuesday, Meta told the court it had already committed to ask for consent from its users but did not specify when or how it would do so.

According to Reuters, the owner of Facebook and Instagram is seeking a temporary injunction to prevent having to pay the daily fee, which will remain in effect for at least the next three months, as it argued Datatilsynet used an "expedited process" and did not sufficiently provide the company time to answer.

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The Norwegian regulator argued that despite the apparent change in policy — that Meta would now seek consent from users — the company still remained in violation until the change was implemented as users' rights continued being violated.

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Datatilsynet suggested the fine could be made permanent if it were to refer its decision to the European Data Protection Board.

According to Reuters, the board has the authority to make the fine permanent should it agree with the regulator's decision. However, Datatilsynet has yet to take this step.

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