Facebook Appeals Move to Curb EU-U.S. Data Transfer
September 11 2020 - 8:20AM
Dow Jones News
By Sam Schechner
Facebook Inc. is appealing a preliminary order by Ireland's
privacy regulator to suspend its data transfers from Europe to the
U.S., pushing its stance in a case with wide-ranging implications
for global tech businesses.
Facebook filed the case against Ireland's Data Protection
Commission before Ireland's High Court on Thursday, according to
the country's courts service. The social networking giant says it
is asking for judicial review of the data commission's process
because the regulator issued an initial conclusion before
regulatory guidance from a body representing all EU privacy
regulators.
"A lack of safe, secure and legal international data transfers
would have damaging consequences for the European economy,"
Facebook said. "We urge regulators to adopt a pragmatic and
proportionate approach until a sustainable long-term solution can
be reached," the company added.
The company wouldn't comment on whether it had asked the court
to halt finalization of the preliminary order, nor did it offer
more detail on the grounds for its request for a judicial
review.
Ireland's Data Protection Commission declined to comment.
The appeal comes after The Wall Street Journal on Wednesday
first reported that Ireland's Data Protection Commission had
informed Facebook in a preliminary decision that it expects to
order the suspension of the company's transfers of personal
information about EU users to Facebook's servers in the U.S.
The commission found that a July decision from the European
Union's top court meant that the main legal mechanism Facebook uses
to send its users' data to the U.S. is no longer valid. The July
decision restricted how companies could send Europeans' personal
information to the U.S. because the court said Europeans don't have
actionable rights to challenge its subsequent collection by U.S.
surveillance agencies.
How -- and whether -- Ireland's order is enforced will have a
broad impact on tech businesses and the companies they serve.
Though the order applies to Facebook, the same logic could apply to
other large tech companies that are subject to U.S. surveillance
laws, according to people familiar with the matter. Some lawyers
say resolving the core issues from the EU court decision might
require changes to U.S. surveillance laws to give more legal rights
to Europeans.
Ireland's data commission had given Facebook until roughly mid-
September to file its responses to the preliminary order, according
to people familiar with the matter. After that, the commission told
Facebook it would submit a draft order to a body comprising other
EU privacy regulators as part of their joint decision-making
process for cross-border cases under the EU's privacy law, the
people said.
A Facebook spokesperson Friday said that the company still plans
to submit its responses to Ireland's Data Protection Commission by
the deadline set by the regulator.
Separately, the body called the European Data Protection Board
said last week that it has formed a task force to investigate
complaints filed in response to the July ruling against 101
European websites, arguing that they must stop using tools from
tech providers, including Facebook and Alphabet Inc.'s Google, that
send personal data to the U.S.
Those complaints were filed by a group founded by Austrian
privacy activist Max Schrems, whose initial complaints nearly a
decade ago led to the July court decision. On Friday, Mr. Schrems
said on Twitter that Facebook's appeal shows "how it is wholly
illusionary to get such a case through in a couple of weeks/months
in the Irish legal system."
Write to Sam Schechner at sam.schechner@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 11, 2020 08:05 ET (12:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2020 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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