The victim asked Facebook to send all relevant information it has on the alleged tormentor, including data and photographs
Reuters
Italy's Data Protection Authority has ordered Facebook to
hand over to an Italian user all the data it has on him and a troll who
set up a fake account to discredit and extort him. The social media
giant has also been asked to provide the details of how the alleged
victim's personal data was used, who it was sent to and who might have
got knowledge about it as well.
The user in question claimed that another user who
befriended him on Facebook started to make demands for money. When these
demands were refused, the "friend" set up a phony account using the
complainant's personal information and photos and started to post and
send pictures and videos from the fake account, which the victim claimed
damaged his reputation.
The victim then asked Facebook to send all the relevant information it has on him, including data and photographs, according to official documents. Facebook
responded by sending him an email explaining how he could download his
personal data using the standard data and said it had taken steps to
delete the fake account.
The victim, however, said the response was "unsatisfactory",
claiming that he could not understand the downloaded information. He
also added that the response did not include any information about the
alleged troll who set up the fake account either.
After taking it up with the local authorities, the Italian data watchdog agreed with him
saying the personal data of both the real and bogus accounts should be
sent to the victim under local law. They also asked Facebook not to
destroy the phony account's data or process it further, saying it wants
the data preserved for likely use in a criminal investigation by the
local authorities.
The Italian watchdog's ruling falls in line with an
interesting trend of national courts asserting jurisdiction over
Facebook and other international tech firms. Despite Facebook's argument
that it is only answerable to the privacy watchdog in Ireland, where
its EU headquarters is based, the social media firm has faced a series
of defeats involving the issue of jurisdiction recently.
In February, a Paris appeals court ruled that Facebook can
be sued in France over its decision to suspend an account of a French
user who posted a photo of a famous 19th-century nude painting. Earlier
this month, the tech firm faced a privacy probe in Germany
after it was pulled up by French authorities over its tracking of
non-users in February. Last year, Belgium's Privacy Commission ordered
Facebook to stop tracking non-users when they weren't on the website as well.
The latest case also follows two significant rulings from
the Court of Justice of the European Union. The Google Spain case
applied the "right to be forgotten" to the tech giant while the Weltimmo case ruled
that an EU company is subject to the data protection laws in which they
operate, if it operates a service in the native language and has
established representatives in that country.
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