Largest GDPR Fines to Date Will Impact Online Platforms, Businesses that Use Them

By: - July 12, 2019

The GDPR fines hitting major corporations are serving as warnings to some of the biggest global companies.

The two big stories today involve record penalties for what European regulators have determined negligence in the handling of data.

The first is the infamous Marriott breach which affected some 500 million customers at the end of 2018. At the time, the effects of the breach were immediate. The company’s stock fell more than 5.5 percent and several lawsuits were filed in the days after reports of the breach. It was only a matter of time until the day of reckoning with GDPR administrators would come. The British Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) that is in charge of implementing GDPR in the U.K. proposed a £99.2 million fine (USD $124,376,960.) for Marriott. The ICO reported that approximately 30 million of the hacked guest records related to residents of countries in the European Economic Area. Seven million related to U.K. residents.

The second instance occurred only a few days earlier when the ICO slapped a £183 million fine (USD $229,390,500.) on British Airways for a major breach last year. The ICO said that “poor security arrangements” at the company lead to the breach of credit card information, names, addresses, travel booking details, and logins for around 500,000 customers.

If executed, these will be the largest GDPR fines to date. The fine that held that record until now, one issued to Google earlier this year, was almost half of even the smaller Marriott fine. Experts are pointing out that these penalties are causing major concern in the top offices of the likes of Facebook and Google, companies whose entire service relies heavily on untold volumes of personal data. The clamping down of regulators will almost certainly have an effect on the way these and other similar firms govern their services.

  • RSS WND

    • Mike Johnson: Victim of Stockholm Syndrome?
      By Paul Blanchfield In the congressional football game between the American Patriots and the Globalists, the AmPats had pulled the failed McCarthy and replaced him with new QB Mike Johnson on whom they now pinned their hopes for a safer America. They were gobsmacked when on the first snap from center, Johnson tucked the football… […]
    • Do anti-Semitic protesters still get student-debt 'forgiveness'?
      As to the signs held by and the slogans chanted by the "pro-Palestinian" protesters, switch out the words "Jew" or "Jewish" and insert the word "black." The nationwide George Floyd/Black Lives Matter protests of the summer of 2020 would then look like a knitting circle. President Joe Biden condemned "the anti-Semitic protests," but added, "I… […]
    • Another boneheaded move by House Republicans
      It was a bad day for First Amendment purists in the House of Representatives when, in bipartisan fashion, it voted to foist a definition of anti-Semitism by something called the "International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance" on the U.S. Department of Education, one of the Cabinet "deep state" posts marked for dropping by Donald Trump should he… […]
    • You want 'revolution,' kids? Brush up on your history
      The pro-Palestinian, pro-Hamas, anti-Israel protests have spread to university campuses across the country, just as the agitators hoped (and planned) for them to do. As was also expected, some of these protests have turned violent. A Jewish student was poked in the face with a flagpole at Yale University and hospitalized; another Jewish student was… […]
    • Can the public's distrust of media get much worse?
      The national media consider themselves essential in educating the electorate, so what happens when the electorate does not consider them a trustworthy guardian of democracy? The Associated Press and the American Press Institute just released a poll on the 2024 election and found only 14% of their sample expressed "a great deal of confidence in… […]
    • The 'Biden bump' didn't last long
      "The election is clearly changing now, moving towards Biden," the influential Democratic strategist Simon Rosenberg declared on March 26. "The Biden bump is real." For Republicans, Rosenberg is someone worth listening to; he was right about the nonexistent "red wave" many in the GOP expected back in 2022. When he said the election was moving,… […]
    • The C's wreak havoc on 'COEXIST' bumper stickers
      In their weekly podcast, Hollywood veteran Loy Edge and longtime WND columnist Jack Cashill skirt the everyday politics downstream and travel merrily upstream to the source of our extraordinary culture. The post The C's wreak havoc on 'COEXIST' bumper stickers appeared first on WND.
    • Taxpayers are subsidizing college radicalism
      Mohamed Abdou is a pro-Hamas "anarchist interdisciplinary activist-scholar of Indigenous, Black, critical race, and Islamic studies, as well as gender, sexuality, abolition, and decolonization" at Columbia University. Now, I don't mean to pick on Abdou. It's just that he happens to teach virtually every trendy pseudo-intellectual identitarian twaddle concocted by modern man. Ultimately, we make… […]
    • IRS: Worst creditor on the planet
      Dear Dave, My husband and I are following your plan, and we're on Baby Step 2. We just learned that the person who has done our taxes for the last three years made mistakes on all our returns. They were really nice and did our taxes for free, but now we owe back taxes in… […]
    • South Dakota puppy killer
      The post South Dakota puppy killer appeared first on WND.
  • Enter My WorldView