Skip to content
Enforcement
EN

Meta Platforms Ireland Limited: Insufficient technical and organisational measures to ensure information security

€251,000,000 fine - Data Protection Authority of Ireland

Content

The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) has fined Meta Platforms Ireland Limited EUR 251 million. The fine was imposed for data protection violations related to a data breach that occurred in 2018 and affected 29 million Facebook accounts worldwide, including 3 million in the EU/EEA. Compromised data included names, email addresses, phone numbers, and children's data. The breach resulted from the exploitation of user tokens on the platform by unauthorized third parties. The DPC found that Meta had violated Art. 33 GDPR (EUR 11 million), as information was missing from the data breach notification, for example. The DPC also found violations of Art. 25 GDPR (EUR 240 million), concluding that Meta had failed to ensure that data protection principles were protected in the design of processing systems and had failed in its obligations as a controller to ensure that, by default, only personal data that are necessary for specific purposes are processed.

GDPR Articles: Art. 33 (3), (5) GDPR, Art. 25 (1), (2) GDPR
Industry: Media, Telecoms and Broadcasting

Key Excerpts from Decision

Irish Data Protection Commission fines Meta €251 Million 17th December 2024 The Irish Data Protection Commission (DPC) has today announced its final decisions following two inquiries into Meta Platforms Ireland Limited (‘MPIL’). These own-volition inquiries were launched by the DPC following a personal data breach, which was reported by MPIL in September 2018. This data breach impacted approximately 29 million Facebook accounts globally, of which approximately 3 million were based in the EU/EEA. The categories of personal data affected included: user’s full name; email address; phone number; location; place of work; date of birth; religion; gender; posts on timelines; groups of which a user was a member; and children’s personal data. The breach arose from the exploitation by unauthorised third parties of user tokens[1] on the Facebook platform. The breach was remedied by MPIL and its US parent company shortly after its discovery. The decisions, which were made by the Commissioners for Data Protection, Dr. Des Hogan and Dale Sunderland, included a number of reprimands and an order to pay administrative fines totalling €251 million. The DPC submitted a draft decision to the GDPR cooperation mechanism in Sept 2024, as required under Article 60 of the GDPR[2]. No objections to the DPC’s draft decision were raised. The DPC is grateful for the cooperation and assistance of its peer EU/EEA supervisory authorities in this case. The DPC’s final decisions record the following findings of infringement of the GDPR: Decision 1 Article 33(3) GDPR - By not including in its breach notification all the information required by that provision that it could and should have included. The DPC reprimanded MPIL for failures in regards to this provision and ordered it to pay administrative fines of €8 million. Article 33(5) GDPR - By failing to document the facts relating to each breach, the steps taken to remedy them, and to do so in a way that allows the Supervisory Authority to verify compliance. The DPC reprimanded MPIL for failures in regards to this provision and ordered it to pay administrative fines of €3 million. Decision 2 Article 25(1) GDPR - By failing to ensure that data protection principles were protected in the design of processing systems. The DPC found that MPIL had infringed this provision, reprimanded MPIL, and ordered it to pay administrative fines of €130 million. Article 25(2) - By failing in their obligations as controllers to ensure that, by default, only personal data that are necessary for specific purposes are processed. The DPC found that MPIL had infringed these provisions, reprimanded MPIL, and ordered it to pay administrative fines of €110 million. DPC Deputy Commissioner Graham Doyle commented: “This enforcement action highlights how the failure to build in data protection requirements throughout the design and development cycle can expose individuals to very serious risks and harms, including a risk to the fundamental rights and freedoms of individuals. Facebook profiles can, and often do, contain information about matters such as religious or political beliefs, sexual life or orientation, and similar matters that

View Full Original Decision (English)