The US tech giant Microsoft has been penalised 60 million euros ($64 million) by France’s privacy authorities for forcing advertising cookies on customers. The National Commission for Technology and Freedoms (CNIL), which levied the biggest fine in 2022, claimed that Microsoft’s search engine Bing did not have a framework in place that allowed users to reject cookies as easily as accepting them.
Microsoft fined 60 million euros ($64 million) by French privacy authorities
According to the French authority, investigations revealed that “cookies were put on users’ terminals when they visited this site without their authorization, and these cookies were exploited, among other things, for advertising purposes.”
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French regulators revealed that there was no button allowing to refuse the deposit of cookies as easily as accepting it
The report “found that there was no button allowing to refuse the deposit of cookies as easy as accepting it” as well.
The CNIL claimed that the fine was justified in part by the advertising earnings the business made from information obtained through cookies, which are little data files used to track internet activity.
The business has three months to fix the problem or face an additional fine of 60,000 euros per day late.
The CNIL announced last year that it would review websites for a year to see if they were utilising web cookies according to the laws.
The CNI penalised Google and Facebook with fines of 150 million and 60 million euros, respectively, last year for violations of a similar nature.
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