Ireland's Data Protection Commission Investigation into WhatsApp Ireland Limited

€225,000,000 in fines

Excerpt

The Irish DPC held WhatsApp liable for failure to provide non-users with the necessary information and making it difficult to access by excessively spreading it out across several documents.

Our analysis

WhatsApp came under investigation by the DPC in December 2018 after several individuals lodged complaints about its data processing activities. The DPC's investigation revealed that WhatsApp had violated several laws regarding data protection transparency. Firstly, WhatsApp failed to provide non-users with the necessary information prescribed by Article 14 GDPR, which denied them their right to exercise control over their personal data. This violation involved the use of hidden information, as WhatsApp did not disclose the necessary details to non-users.
Secondly, WhatsApp violated Article 13 GDPR by not providing users with sufficiently meaningful information regarding every category of information. This violation involved obstruction, as the information provided by WhatsApp was difficult to access, excessively spread out across several documents, and contained overlapping but slightly different information. The DPC determined that WhatsApp did not comply with its transparency obligations under the GDPR, which resulted in users being unable to adequately consider and exercise their data rights.
Moreover, WhatsApp did not identify the legal basis for each processing activity, as required by Article 13(1)(c) of the GDPR. Additionally, with respect to transfers of personal data to non-EEA jurisdictions, the DPC found that WhatsApp's statement that transfers "may" rely on adequacy determinations was insufficient to comply with Article 13(1)(f) of the GDPR. WhatsApp should have definitively identified whether or not an adequacy decision existed to support the transfer of specific categories of data.

Outcome

The DPC utilized various corrective measures to address the violations committed by WhatsApp. These included a reprimand under Article 58(2)(b), an order to bring processing operations into compliance within three months under Article 58(2)(d), and an administrative fine of €225,000,000 under Articles 58(2)(i) and 83. The fine was broken down into four separate fines for each violation committed by WhatsApp. The first violation, which was the infringement of Article 5(1)(a) of the GDPR, resulted in a fine of €90,000,000. The second violation, which was the infringement of Article 12 of the GDPR, resulted in a fine of €30,000,000. The third violation, which was the infringement of Article 13 of the GDPR, resulted in a fine of €30,000,000. The fourth violation, which was the infringement of Article 14 of the GDPR, resulted in a fine of €75,000,000. Overall, the DPC utilized a range of corrective measures to ensure that WhatsApp complied with the GDPR and imposed significant fines to address the various violations committed by the company.

Parties

Irish DPC (Data Protection Commission) and WhatsApp Ireland Limited

Case number

Press Release - 02nd September 2021

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