The social network giant said it sought a judicial review of the Irish Data Protection Commission’s preliminary decision that the company may have to halt trans-Atlantic data transfers using the most commonly used EU tool still available to firms.
“A lack of safe, secure and legal international data transfers would have damaging consequences for the European economy,” Facebook said in a statement Friday. “We urge regulators to adopt a pragmatic and proportionate approach until a sustainable long-term solution can be reached.”
Privacy campaigner Max Schrems has been complaining to the Irish watchdog that Facebook’s data transfers were as a result no longer safe, because EU citizens’ data is at risk the moment it gets transferred to the U.S.
See Facebook Fights Irish Privacy Watchdog’s Data-Transfer Curbs
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Facebook Inc. sought to derail proposals by the Irish data protection watchdog that the tech giant warns could curb transfers of vast amounts of commercial data across the Atlantic.