Facebook appeals against Cambridge Analytica fine

Facebook has appealed against a fine imposed on it by the UK's data watchdog after the Cambridge Analytica scandal.
The social network says that because the regulator found no evidence that UK users' personal data had been shared inappropriately, the £500,000 penalty was unjustified.
Last month, the watchdog said Facebook's failure to make suitable checks on apps and developers amounted to a "serious breach of the law".
It has acknowledged the appeal.
This was the last day on which the US firm could challenge the Information Commissioner's ruling.
The affair stems from the discovery that an academic at the University of Cambridge - Dr Aleksandr Kogan - used a personality quiz to harvest up to 87 million Facebook users' details.
Some of this was subsequently shared with the political consultancy Cambridge Analytica, which used it to target political advertising in the US.
It was initially reported that about 1.1 million UK-based users had had their details exposed.
But Cambridge Analytica said it had only ever licensed data belonging to about 30 million people, and a probe by the Information Commissioner's Office found no evidence that UK citizens were among them.
Even so, the ICO imposed the maximum penalty possible on Facebook on the basis that UK members had been put at risk and the tech firm had not done enough to address this after learning of the problem.
"The ICO's investigation stemmed from concerns that UK citizens' data may have been impacted by Cambridge Analytica, yet they now have confirmed that they have found no evidence to suggest that information of Facebook users in the UK was ever shared by Dr Kogan with Cambridge Analytica, or used by its affiliates in the Brexit referendum," said a statement from Facebook's lawyer Anna Benckert.
"Therefore, the core of the ICO's argument no longer relates to the events involving Cambridge Analytica. Instead, their reasoning challenges some of the basic principles of how people should be allowed to share information online, with implications which go far beyond just Facebook, which is why we have chosen to appeal.
"For example, under the ICO's theory people should not be allowed to forward an email or message without having agreement from each person on the original thread.
"These are things done by millions of people every day on services across the internet, which is why we believe the ICO's decision raises important questions of principle for everyone online which should be considered by an impartial court based on all the relevant evidence."
An independent body, known as a General Regulatory Chamber tribunal, will consider the challenge.
If it is unhappy with the decision, Facebook can subsequently take the case to the Court of Appeal.
"Any organisation issued with a monetary penalty notice by the Information Commissioner has the right to appeal the decision to the First-tier Tribunal," said a spokesman for the ICO.
"The progression of any appeal is a matter for the tribunal. We have not yet been notified by the tribunal that an appeal has been received."
The appeal risks dragging out an affair that has undermined the public and politicians' trust in Facebook.
However, the BBC understands that the US firm was concerned that the ICO's ruling would form the basis for decisions taken by other regulators, which could prove more damaging still.
The ICO has itself noted that the £500,000 fine would be "significantly higher" had the EU's General Data Protection Regulation been in force earlier.
The move has not, however, changed chief executive Mark Zuckerberg's mind about rejecting an invitation to be cross-examined by MPs.

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, Technology correspondent

Image copyright Getty Images/BBC
Image caption The stakes are high for both Facebook's chief and the UK's Information Commissioner
Facebook's decision to appeal against this fine is a move that Sir Humphrey, the civil servant in Yes Minister, would describe as "brave".
At a time when the social media firm is under fire and accused of using dodgy tactics to combat its critics, picking a fight with the UK regulator over an issue which was beginning to fade into the background seems reckless.
After all, the social media giant admits that it got a whole lot of things wrong in the Cambridge Analytica affair, in particular allowing the data of friends of people who took part in a personality quiz to be scraped.
But Facebook feels that the Information Commissioner's Office moved the goalposts halfway through its investigation, deciding that one million UK users had suffered harm and then finding that the researcher Dr Aleksandr Kogan did not pass their data on to Cambridge Analytica.
Some data protection experts think the company has a point.
Mark Zuckerberg and his company appear determined to fight back against what they see as a flawed process but the appeal is a gamble.
The stakes are also high for the Information Commissioner Elizabeth Denham. She made the unusual decision to go public with her intention to impose a fine before receiving representations from the company.
If Facebook's appeal succeeds, her authority as a regulator will be seriously undermined.

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