South Korea slaps Facebook with fine for sharing user info without consent

The country's agency for protecting personal information found that the personal information of least 3.3M of the 18M Facebook users in South Korea were provided to operators other than Facebook without their knowledge.

The Facebook logo is displayed on a mobile phone in this picture illustration taken December 2, 2019.
Reuters

The Facebook logo is displayed on a mobile phone in this picture illustration taken December 2, 2019.

A South Korean agency for protecting personal information has fined Facebook Inc $6.06 million and sought a criminal investigation for providing users' personal information to other operators without consent.

The country's Personal Information Protection Commission, launched in August this year, said in a statement on Wednesday it fined Facebook after a probe found that the personal information of least 3.3 million of the 18 million Facebook users in Korea were provided to operators other than Facebook without their knowledge, from May 2012 to June 2018.

READ MORE: Turkey fines social media giants for ignoring new laws

No permission 

When someone uses another operator's service through Facebook's log-in, the personal information of the user's Facebook friends were provided to other operators without their consent, the commission said.

The commission said it will refer Facebook Ireland Ltd, the recipient of the fine, to the country's prosecution for a criminal investigation.

"We have cooperating as much as possible throughout the investigation process, we regret that the Personal Information Protection Commission has sought a criminal investigation," a Seoul-based Facebook spokeswoman said in a statement, declining further comment as Facebook hasn't yet fully reviewed the details of the decision.

READ MORE: Ireland investigates how Facebook handles children's data on Instagram

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