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LinkedIn Ireland faces €310 Million fine for GDPR violations in data processing

LinkedIn Ireland faces €310 Million fine
LinkedIn Ireland faces €310 Million fine

The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) imposed a €310 million fine on LinkedIn Ireland on October 24, 2024, following an investigation into the company's data processing practices. The inquiry, which began after a complaint from a French non-profit organization, revealed multiple violations of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) regarding behavioral analysis and targeted advertising of LinkedIn members' personal data.

The investigation commenced on August 20, 2018, following a complaint by La Quadrature Du Net to the French Data Protection Authority. The complaint was subsequently transferred to the Irish DPC, which serves as LinkedIn's lead supervisory authority in the European Union. The investigation focused on examining the lawfulness, fairness, and transparency of LinkedIn's processing of both first-party and third-party personal data of its members.

According to the DPC's findings, LinkedIn violated multiple GDPR articles:

  1. Article 6 and Article 5(1)(a) violations:
  1. Articles 13(1)(c) and 14(1)(c) violations regarding information provided to users about legal bases for data processing
  2. Article 5(1)(a) violation concerning the principle of fairness in data processing

The DPC submitted its draft decision through the GDPR cooperation mechanism in July 2024. No objections were raised by other EU/EEA supervisory authorities. The final decision, issued by Commissioners Dr Des Hogan and Dale Sunderland, was notified to LinkedIn on October 22, 2024.

The DPC implemented three primary corrective measures:

  1. A formal reprimand
  2. Administrative fines totaling €310 million
  3. An order requiring LinkedIn to bring its processing operations into GDPR compliance

According to LinkedIn's corporate communications statement released on October 24, 2024, the company maintains its belief in GDPR compliance but commits to adjusting its advertising practices to meet the IDPC's requirements within the specified deadline. The statement addresses claims dating back to 2018 regarding the platform's digital advertising efforts in the EU.

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