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Blog of Simple Analytics

The EU wants to kill cookie banners Google is tracking you (even when you use DuckDuckGo) German court rules Meta’s tracking tech violates GDPR Closing the data gap - Simple Analytics x Usercentrics The EU-US data deal may be dead in the water You are missing 20% of your website data with GA4 How a reverse trial will push Simple Analytics to the next level Google will start tracking all your devices (WTF?) Big Tech Fails EU’s Digital Services Act: Only Wikipedia Passes the Test Meta fined $102 million by the Irish Data Protection Commission Europeans spend 575 Million hours per year clicking cookie banners The most interesting GDPR fines GDPR and fines: all there is to know Google loses key antitrust case Web Analytics for Crypto Companies Web analytics for publishers Google pulls Uno Reverse card: Rolls back decision to kill third-party cookies Privacy Perspectives June 2024 Privacy Monthly June APRA fumbles targeted advertising Privacy Monthly May Meta loses key privacy battle Google delays cookie phase-out once again Privacy Monthly April 2024 Web Analytics and Consent Cookies 101 Privacy Monthly March 2024 German authority cracks down on cookie banners Google Tag Manager vs Google Analytics Google search alternative Data retention in Google Analytics Guide to Google Analytics and Cookie consent What are Google Analytics' identifiers? How to export data from Google Analytics Privacy Monthly February 2024 The Criteo case: a big deal for Big Tech Privacy Monthy January 2024 What the Digital Markets Act means for privacy Google Settles in $5B Incognito Mode Lawsuit Legal troubles for Adobe Analytics Web analytics for nonprofits HIPAA and mental health Why Meta subscriptions are under attack, and why it matters for privacy Privacy Monthly: December Simple Analytics AI Host analytics on Cloudflare Zaraz Add Google Analytics to Convertkit Google Analytics Pricing - Paid vs Free Road to 1 Million ARR - October update CCPA and Data Protection: all there is to know Analytics without a cookie banner Enterprise Analytics Privacy Monthly: November 2023 Delete Act: all you need to know Mobile App Tracking Under Fire The road to 1 Million ARR - September Update Privacy Monthly: October 2023 HIPAA violations First challenge to the EU-US data transfer framework Direct Marketing under GDPR Road to 1 million ARR - August Update CCPA vs CPRA: what is new? Privacy Monthly: September 2023 A/B Testing with Simple Analytics Dobbs v. Jackson ruling is a privacy mess Privacy Monthly: August 2023 What are your rights under the CCPA? When does the CCPA apply? How does the HIPAA compare to the CCPA and GDPR? Why Meta is in a world of trouble CJEU: cookie-based analytics collects sensitive data Road to 1 million ARR - July update All about the new Data Transfer Framework Road to 1 Million ARR - June update What is PHI under HIPAA? Sweden declares Google Analytics illegal Searching for GA4 Alternatives? Top 10 Reliable Options for Google Analyticss Ultimate HIPAA Compliance Checklist: Essential Steps for Healthcare Providers Privacy Monthly: June 2023 More troubles for Google Analytics The path to 1M ARR - May Update Data Processing Agreements Minimal Product Analytics Facebook data transfers declared illegal Is Google Analytics CCPA-compliant? Help us with your input Cookie banners: How to stay GDPR compliant? GDPR Compliance Checklist Privacy Monthly: May 2023 Simple Analytics: Privacy-first website analytics Improve your e-commerce performance with analytics European Facebook blackout is closer than we think Know your website’s Carbon Emissions - and how to reduce it The path to 1M ARR - April 2023 How to add video tracking using Google Tag Manager? How to track form submissions using Google Tag Manager? Why is my Simple Analytics data different from Google Analytics? Debug Simple Analytics script How to Import Google Analytics Data to Simple Analytics
Privacy Monthly July 2024
Carlo Cilent · 2024-07-16 · via Blog of Simple Analytics

Hi there! The Privacy Monthly is back and the news is as juicy as ever. The EU Commission weighs in on the pay-or-ok saga, Meta delay AI features, Julian Assange is back home, the Clearview AI settlement sets a terrible precedent, and more.

  1. Meta delays AI features.
  2. Congress questions Microsoft over data breach
  3. Meta under fire over pay-or-ok and DMA compliance
  4. Unorthodox privacy settlement sets bad precedent
  5. Biden administration bans Kaspersky
  6. Bad news from US Courts
  7. Julian Assange freed after guilty plea
  8. France imposed TikTok black-out in New Caledonia
  9. Massive AT&T insider attack comes to light

The UK Government chose Simple AnalyticsJoin them

Let’s dive in!

Meta delayed the implementation of AI-powered features on Facebook and Instagram upon request of the Irish privacy watchdog. The Irish request relates to a legal challenge from privacy NGO noyb over the allegedly illegal use of user data for AI training. Shortly thereafter, the Brazilian privacy watchdog halted Meta from training its models on the personal data of Brazilian users over similar concerns.

AI is a hot topic in the privacy community, and not just because of the AI Act. Last May an EDPB report highlighted some crucial and yet unsolved privacy issues with ChatGPT. Between the line, the report hinted at a somewhat hard stance from privacy regulators. The next few months may be crucial to the commercial future of generative AI across the EU bloc and EU privacy watchdogs will likely play a key role.

Congress questions Microsoft over data breach

On June 13 a House homeland security panel questioned Microsoft president Brad Smith over the 2023 hack of State Department officials. Smith came under fire during the hearing over “avoidable errors” that facilitated the alleged Chinese hack and took responsibility for the cybersecurity mistakes of the tech giant.

Despite being a key contractor for the US government and many other governments around the world, Microsoft’s track record for cybersecurity has been quite questionable lately. According to a recent investigation by Propublica, the devastating Solarwind attack of 2020 was enabled by an irresponsible corporate culture that prioritized the company’s positioning on the key cloud computing market over security- including the security of the US government.

The European Commission believes that Meta breaches the Digital Markets Act by forcing users to consent to the combination of their data across Instagram and Facebook. The findings of the investigation are still preliminary but could lead to a fine up to 10% of Meta’s yearly global turnover.

Meta’s handling of user consent is also being challenged by civil society organizations. There are, however, some differences at play in that the Commission’s preliminary findings are grounded in the DMA and only concern the combination of user data across platforms.

Feel free to check out our blog on pay-or-ok if you are curious about the challenge to Meta’s business model and its (enormous) implications for privacy law.

Unorthodox privacy settlement sets bad precedent

Facial recognition company Clearview AI proposed an unprecedented agreement in a class action over the allegedly illegal scraping of pictures from the Internet. Under the terms of the agreement, the company will essentially pay the plaintiffs based on a share of the company's potential value.

I believe this settlement sends an incredibly dangerous message to a tech industry that is already... struggling with compliance, so to speak. Allowing companies to shoulder compliance risks by leveraging their (often inflated) projections for growth, is a recipe for disaster if I’ve ever seen one.

Clearview AI is not new to privacy violations: the company has been forbidden from collecting personal data of Australian, Italian, French, and Greek citizens over non-compliance with privacy legislation. It probably ignores all of these orders, as it openaly admitted that it [cannot sort data by nationality] (https://www.crikey.com.au/2024/02/08/clearview-ai-australia-facial-recognition-data/]).

Biden administration bans Kaspersky

The US Administration banned Russian company Kaspersky Lab from distributing its widely used antivirus software in the US. As a result, the company is shutting down its US operations.

The administration fears that Russia could leverage its influence over the company to endanger US cybersecurity. Much like every antivirus, Kaspersky needs privileged access to systems, which opens up countless avenues for attack for the antivirus’ developer.

Bad news from US Courts

In a case involving Google, the US Court of Appeals ruled that **geofencing (that is, using device location data to identify all the people in a specific area) is not a search under US law and does not require a warrant.

In the meantime, HIPAA guidelines of the US Health and Human Services were declared illegal by a Texas court. As a result, health-related websites will have more leeway to track users with web analytics tools- even when doing so could expose health information. This is especially worrisome for women, as their health data have become insanely sensitive after the Dobbs v. Jackson ruling of the Supreme Court.

Julian Assange freed after guilty plea

Following a deal with the US Department of Justice, Julian Assange pleaded guilty to a charge of espionage and was sentenced to 62 months- a time he already served in UK prisons. The Australian born journalist and Wikileaks founder has since returned to his home country as a free man.

The deal with the DOJ marks the end of a long-running legal battle that started with the 2010 Wikileaks scandal. Julian Assange has since spent seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy and five years imprisoned in the UK.

France imposed TikTok black-out in New Caledonia

The French government shut down TikTok for two weeks in the oversea territory of New Caledonia. The block was imposed during a state of emergency in order to counter the spread of rioting.

Partial or total Internet shutdowns are not uncommon around the world but are relatively infrequent for EU countries- although New Caledonia is not formally part of the EU.

Massive AT&T insider attack comes to light

US telecom giant AT&T said call logs for 109 million customers were breached in a 2022 insider attack. According to the company, the logs only contain communication metadata. The company declared that the FBI is on the case and that one person has been arrested so far.