Google faces financial sanctions in France after failing to comply
with an order to alter how it stores and shares user data to conform to
the nation's privacy laws.
The enforcement follows an analysis led by European data protection
authorities of a new privacy policy that Google enacted in 2012,
France's privacy watchdog, the Commission Nationale de L'Informatique et des Libertes, said Friday on its website.
Google was ordered in June by the CNIL to comply with French data
protection laws within three months. But Google had not changed its
policies to comply with French laws by a deadline on Friday, because the
company said that France's data protection laws did not apply to users
of certain Google services in France, the CNIL said.
The company "has not implemented the requested changes," the CNIL said.
As a result, "the chair of the CNIL will now designate a rapporteur
for the purpose of initiating a formal procedure for imposing sanctions,
according to the provisions laid down in the French data protection
law," the watchdog said. Google could be fined a maximum of €150,000
($202,562), or €300,000 for a second offense, and could in some
circumstances be ordered to refrain from processing personal data in
certain ways for three months.
What bothers France
The CNIL took issue with several areas of Google's data policies, in
particular how the company stores and uses people's data. How Google
informs users about data that it processes and obtains consent from
users before storing tracking cookies were cited as areas of concern by
the CNIL.
In a statement, Google said that its privacy policy respects European
law. "We have engaged fully with the CNIL throughout this process, and
we'll continue to do so going forward," a spokeswoman said.
Google is also embroiled with European authorities in an antitrust
case for allegedly breaking competition rules. The company recently
submitted proposals to avoid fines in that case.