Tag: fines
Double Fine’s new documentary about making Psychonauts 2 is a must-watch
I like a lot of Double Fine’s games, but none as much as I like the documentary which charted the development of Broken Age. I can’t get enough of watching funny, smart, creative people work, and Double Fine Adventure offered a one-of-a-kind, candid and thorough glimpse of game development.
It was one-of-a-kind until yesterday, when Double Fine released PsychOdyssey, a 32-episode documentary series charting the creation of Psychonauts 2. Each episode is typically between 20 minutes and an hour long, and I’ve had a great time watching the first three so far.
More OSHA Fines for Amazon Over Warehouse Safety – CNET
Hundreds of thousands paying wrong tax fines
France Fines Apple €8 Million for Targeted App Store Ads
Apple was collecting information and using that data for ads by default, and CNIL says that users had to undertake a “large number of actions” to turn advertising off in the Privacy section of the Settings app. As a result, CNIL ruled that Apple breached Article 82 of the Data Protection Act, leading to a sanction of 8 million euros.
The CNIL services have found that under the old version 14.6 of the iPhone operating system, when a user went to the App Store, identifiers for several purposes, including purposes of customizing advertising ads displayed on the App Store, were by default automatically read on the terminal without collecting consent.
In a statement to Fortune‘s Patrick McGee, Apple said that it is “disappointed” with the decision and plans to appeal, noting that it only uses its own data for personalized ads.
We are disappointed with this decision given the CNIL has previously recognized that how we serve search ads in the App Store prioritizes user privacy, and we will appeal.
Apple Search Ads goes further than any other digital advertising platform we are aware of by providing users with a clear choice as to whether or not they would like personalized ads. Additionally, Apple Search Ads never tracks users across 3rd party apps and websites, and only uses first-party data to personalize ads. We believe privacy is a fundamental human right and a user should always get to decide whether to share their data and with whom.
Today’s fine dates back to a 2021 investigation that CNIL launched after a complaint from the France Digitale association. France Digitale, a lobbying group that represents startups and venture capital firms, said that the iOS 14 update did not comply with European protections for personal data. Apple has since changed how targeted advertising works, and the opt-in and opt-out procedures.
This article, “France Fines Apple €8 Million for Targeted App Store Ads” first appeared on MacRumors.com
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Meta’s New Year Kicks Off With Over $410 Million in Fresh EU Privacy Fines
These new sanctions add to a pile of privacy fines for Meta in Europe last year — including a $281 million penalty for a Facebook data-scraping breach; $429 million for an Instagram violation of children’s privacy; $18 million for several historical Facebook data breaches; and a $63.6 million penalty over Facebook cookie consent violations — making for a total of $792 million in (publicly disclosed) EU data protection and privacy fines handed down to the adtech giant in 2022. But now, in the first few days of 2023, Meta has landed financial penalties worth more than half last year’s regional total — and more sanctions could be coming shortly.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile could avoid $200 million in fines thanks to FCC deadlock
Mobile carriers, including AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, could temporarily avoid paying $200 million in privacy penalties because of the Federal Communications Commission’s partisan split, according to a report from The Wall Street Journal. Sources familiar with the situation told the WSJ that the FCC, which has two Democratic commissioners and two Republican ones, needs one more vote of approval to levy the fines, and both Republican members haven’t voted yet.
Although Gigi Sohn, the person the Biden administration nominated to fill the FCC’s empty seat over a year ago, could potentially provide the tie-breaking vote to fine the companies, the Senate has yet to vote on her nomination. Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile may be able to avoid…